ECONOMY

Swiss Inflation Returned Below SNB's 2% Ceiling in June

Swiss inflation slowed to below the 2% ceiling targeted by the Swiss National Bank, offering limited reassurance to officials who have already signaled further tightening is likely.

Consumer prices rose 1.7% in June from a year earlier, down from 2.2% the previous month, as energy costs fell. Underlying inflation, which strips out such volatile elements, also slowed to 1.8%, according to Switzerland's statistics agency.

The so-called core gauge had already fallen below the central bank's ceiling last month, while the headline number now shows the weakest pace of price growth since January last year.

While Switzerland has already enjoyed some of the lowest inflation rates of the OECD since the energy crisis first began, the data will still provide some comfort to central bank officials that consumer prices aren't yet spiraling out of control.

Even so, the SNB has said that another increase in borrowing costs is likely. Policymakers have forecast inflation to rebound to 2% by the end of the year, and then stay above that level until early 2026. That's because of a wave of rent increases and electricity price hikes in the pipeline, as well as the rising cost of services.

Source: Bloomberg

Related News

DISCLAIMER

Seluruh materi atau konten yang tersaji di dalam website ini hanya bersifat informatif saja, dan tidak dimaksudkan sebagai pegangan serta keputusan dalam investasi atau jenis transaksi lainnya. Kami tidak bertanggung jawab atas segala akibat yang timbul dari penyajian konten tersebut. Semua pihak yang mengunjungi website ini harus membaca Terms of Service (Syarat dan Ketentuan Layanan) terlebih dahulu dan dihimbau untuk melakukan analisis secara independen serta memperoleh saran dari para ahli dibidangnya.

World Time