Euro zone inflation slows, vindicating ECB's easy policy choice

Reuters

Published Jan 05, 2018 06:00AM ET

Updated Jan 05, 2018 06:10AM ET

Euro zone inflation slows, vindicating ECB's easy policy choice

BRUSSELS/FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Inflation in the euro zone slowed as expected in December, vindicating the European Central Bank's decision to keep its policy easy despite growing pressure from Germany and other richer euro zone countries.

The ECB has said it would continue buying bonds at least until September and keep rates low well after to raise inflation to its two percent target. But policymakers from the Netherlands, Germany and other northern countries have voiced their worries about an overly easy policy while economic growth is strong.

Prices in the euro zone grew by just 1.4 percent year on year last month, or 10 basis points slower than in the previous month due to smaller increases in food and energy prices. Once those components are stripped out, so called "core" inflation was stable at 1.1 percent.

"There is no great pressure on the ECB to unwind QE," Kenneth Broux, a market strategist at Societe Generale (PA:SOGN), said.

The slight deceleration in headline inflation had been expected by the ECB and by market economists polled by Reuters.

But a stronger-than-expected German inflation reading of 1.6 percent last week raised market speculation about an upside surprise in euro zone price growth on Friday.

After the data the euro traded just below a four-month high of $1.2089 hit on Thursday, consolidating a rally that may prove a headache to the ECB by making euro zone imports cheaper and exports dearer.

"The euro is not helping above $1.20 because it should delay inflation returning to target," Societe Generale's Broux said.