Falling prices in Germany

Expert market comment from senior analyst Alex Kuptsikevich of the FxPro Analyst Team: Falling prices in Germany
FxPro | 1257 dias atrás

Inflation data from Germany yesterday and today reinforce hopes that the inflation wave is rolling back faster than expected. Whilst the early success does not promise a quick win, it does raise prospects that high inflation expectations have been avoided.

According to a provisional estimate, consumer prices for December in Germany fell by 0.8% after falling by 0.5% the month before. Notably, we are seeing a fall rather than simple exhaustion of growth. Vendors have begun to reduce prices actively following the fall in raw materials and energy costs. Annual inflation has slowed from 10.4% in October to 8.6%. However, the high-base effect will begin to be felt in February.

Import prices, an early indicator of inflation, accelerated their fall in November, losing 4.5% after decreasing by 1.2% and 0.9% in the previous two months. Import prices are 14.9% higher than a year earlier - a significant retreat after staying close to 20% y/y for the seven months to September.

Generally, weak inflation figures are bearish news for the currency as they suggest a sluggish economy and lead to lower interest rate forecasts. In this case, however, such an essential sigh of relief could support capital inflows into the euro. With lower inflation, the single currency retains more purchasing power. Furthermore, assuming less shock therapy from the ECB, investors may look more closely at purchases of European assets, expecting less dramatic degradation of local company earnings and not so steep a rise of debt service costs.

By the FxPro Analyst Team

FxPro
Digitar: NDD
Regulamento: FCA (UK), SCB (The Bahamas)
read more
Markets Split:  Middle East De-escalation or Fed Hawkish Pause?

Markets Split: Middle East De-escalation or Fed Hawkish Pause?

Global markets are caught between easing geopolitical tensions and persistent tight monetary conditions from the Federal Reserve. This creates conflicting sentiment across assets including USD, oil, gold, and Bitcoin, leading to elevated uncertainty and volatile price action.
IUX | 36 minutos atrás
US500 – Peace Deal Lifts Stocks, But the Fed Is Next

US500 – Peace Deal Lifts Stocks, But the Fed Is Next

The S&P 500 surged on a US-Iran peace deal, but the rally might not last. The Fed meets Wednesday under new chair Kevin Warsh—his first decision. Peace could cool inflation and support stocks, yet inflation remains at a three-year high of 4.2%. Will Warsh signal rate cuts, or stay cautious?
Born2trade | 3h 3min atrás