Euro zone inflation rises by 0.4% in October as expected
(Reuters) – Inflation in the 18 countries sharing the euro edged up slightly in October, reinforcing the view that the European Central Bank will hold fire on any additional policy action at its meeting next week.
A first estimate on Friday from the European Union’s statistics office showed consumer prices in the euro zone rose by 0.4 percent in October, in line with market expectations. A day earlier, German data showed inflation in Europe’s largest economy slowing in October to 0.7 percent, its lowest reading since May.
Nick Kounis, head of macro research at ABN AMRO, said a number of factors meant ECB action as early as next week was unlikely, but that he expected further measures by the first quarter of next year.
“We still think that the ECB is likely to further step up its monetary easing,” he said “If you get any kind of economic shock with inflation this low, there is a risk, albeit a small risk, of deflation.”
ECB policymakers still appear somewhat divided on the likelihood of deflation in the euro area.
The central bank’s chief economist Peter Praet told Belgian media earlier this week that the possibility was limited, but Governing Council Member Ignazio Visco said on Friday that policymakers needed to remain cautious.
“We are not in deflation but we cannot ignore the concrete risk of it,” the Italian said in a speech to a conference in Rome shortly after Eurostat published its data.
The statistics office said prices rose fastest for services, up 1.2 percent, followed by a 0.5 percent increase in food, alcohol and tobacco costs.
Unprocessed food prices fell 0.1 percent year-on-year in October while energy was 1.8 percent cheaper, a slowdown in the rate of decline from September when prices for these goods dropped 0.9 and 2.3 percent respectively.
Excluding unprocessed food and energy, prices rose 0.8 percent in October, a stable rate from September. This number is referred to as core inflation by the European Central Bank.