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Spanish Headline Inflation Sees Second Consecutive Monthly Increase, Driven by Rising Fuel Prices

Spanish Headline Inflation Sees Second Consecutive Monthly Increase, Driven by Rising Fuel Prices
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Table of contents

  1. Spanish headline inflation rises for second month in a row
    1. Rising fuel prices main driver behind uptick in headline inflation
      1. Rising oil prices push headline inflation higher
        1. Inflation likely to rise further

          Spanish headline inflation rises for second month in a row

          Spanish headline inflation rose to 2.6% in August from 2.3% in July, the second consecutive increase. Core inflation, however, did drop slightly to 6.1% last month from 6.2% in July.

           

          Rising fuel prices main driver behind uptick in headline inflation

          Spanish headline inflation rose to 2.6% in August from 2.3% in July, the second consecutive increase. Core inflation, excluding volatile food and energy prices, did cool slightly to 6.1% in August from 6.2% the month before. The strong tourism season has probably kept core inflation rather high.

           

          Rising oil prices push headline inflation higher

          Rising oil prices are putting upward pressure on inflation, which could intensify in the coming months. Since the beginning of summer, oil prices have risen sharply. While a barrel of oil was worth $72 at the end of June, the price has now risen to $86. Oil prices could rise further to above $90 a barrel by the end of this year. Much, of course, will depend on how global oil demand evolves in the coming months. If the Chinese economy continues to languish, oil demand may weaken again.

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          The US economy also remains an uncertain factor. Most analysts were expecting a sharp slowdown of the American economy on the back of the interest rate hikes, but it has been holding up well so far.

           

          Inflation likely to rise further

          We expect headline inflation to stabilise in the coming months. Gas prices rose further in September last year, which creates a favourable base effect for this year’s inflation. On the other hand, rising oil prices and expiring inflation-inhibiting measures may cause headline inflation to edge higher. Inflation could still increase at the start of 2024 before moving back towards 2%. For the whole of 2023, we assume an average inflation rate of 3.6%, and 2.7% for 2024.


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