3 Numbers: German Import Prices On Track For 7% Yearly Rise

 | Mar 29, 2017 01:29AM ET

  • German import prices data are expected to show inflation heating up
  • US Pending Home Sales Index to rebound
  • Oil bulls waiting (hoping) for Opec to extend deal on production cuts
  • Inflation in Europe will be topical today with the release of Germany’s import price data for February. Meanwhile, economists expect that the US Pending Home Sales Index will rebound after tumbling in January. In the oil market, all eyes continue to focus on Opec, which is considering an extension of its pact to cut production.

    Germany: Import Price Index (0600 GMT): Inflation in the Eurozone jumped to a four-year high in February, rising above the European Central Bank ’s (ECB) target rate. The acceleration in pricing pressure is largely due to higher energy prices, which suggests that the ECB won’t be pressured to raise interest rates. The outlook for monetary policy could change, however, if the incoming inflation data continues to run hot.

    Today’s update on import prices for Germany offers an early clue on what to expect for consumer prices in March for the euro area. Recent history suggests that reflation will roll on.

    Germany’s import price index has accelerated sharply in recent months, rising 6% in January compared with the year-earlier level, a six-year high. The trend is expected to edge even higher in February, advancing 7% in annual terms, according to TradingEconomics.com’s consensus forecast.

    Inflation is a politically and economically sensitive subject in Germany. Not surprisingly, firmer pricing is inspiring new calls for monetary tightening. “It's high time for the ECB to move away from its ultra-loose monetary policy,” the Bavarian Finance Minister, Markus Soeder, said earlier this month.

    Such sentiment is likely to strengthen if the crowd is right about today’s price data.