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Canadian Inflation Tumbles, Easing Concern About Price Pressures

Canadian Inflation Tumbles, Easing Concern About Price Pressures

(Bloomberg) -- Canadian inflation unexpectedly tumbled in September on a sharp reversal of price hikes in the travel industry, which should knock down concerns that pressures are building in an economy near full capacity.

The consumer price index recorded an annual pace of 2.2 percent, the lowest in four months and a drop from 2.8 percent in August, Statistics Canada said Friday from Ottawa. Economists had expected inflation of 2.7 percent. Core measures of inflation -- considered a better indicator of underlying pressures -- also ticked lower and averaged 2 percent last month.

Slower headline inflation and easing core numbers will reassure policy makers the recent spike in gasoline prices and other products like air transportation is transitory. The 2 percent core rate is consistent with an economy at full capacity -- but not one that is overheating and that should give the Bank of Canada scope to proceed with gradual interest-rate increases. An unexpected drop in retail sales numbers for August will reinforce the view the central bank can take its time on rates.

“Soft is the word of the day for Canadian economy watchers,” Avery Shenfeld, Toronto-based chief economist at CIBC World Markets, wrote in a note to clients. “Not soft enough to forestall an October rate hike, but enough to lower expectations that had been building, erroneously in our view, for a follow up hike in December.”

Canadian Inflation Tumbles, Easing Concern About Price Pressures

Inflation had hit 3 percent in July -- the highest in seven years -- on the back of gasoline and a jump in prices for air transportation and other travel-related services.

The Canadian dollar reversed gains on the report, declining as much as 0.3 percent and was trading little changed at C$1.3099 against its U.S. counterpart at 8:59 a.m. in Toronto.

Air transportation costs, which jumped 16 percent in July, plunged 17 percent in September. Traveler accommodation service prices were down 6.2 percent last month. Statistics Canada has changed the methodology in measuring prices in that sector that is capturing more of the seasonal variation in costs.

In its most recent forecasts released in July, the central bank estimated inflation would average 2.5 percent in the third quarter -- which ends in September -- before returning back to near the 2 percent target by 2019. Inflation actually averaged 2.7 percent in the third quarter.

Other CPI Highlights
  • Monthly inflation dropped 0.4 percent in September, versus analyst expectations for a 0.1 percent gain. It’s the largest monthly drop this year and the first back-to-back monthly declines since 2016 after prices fell 0.1 percent in August
  • On a seasonally adjusted basis, prices were down 0.1 percent, the first month over month drop since May 2017
  • All three measures of core inflation fell. The “common” rate dropped to 1.9 percent from 2.0 percent, the “median” declined to 2.0 percent from 2.1 percent and the “trim” rate fell to 2.1 percent from 2.2 percent
  • Gasoline prices were down 1.1 percent in September from August, paring year-over-year gains to 12 percent. Excluding gasoline, annual inflation in Canada was 1.9 percent

--With assistance from Erik Hertzberg and Stephen Wicary.

To contact the reporter on this story: Theophilos Argitis in Ottawa at targitis@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Theophilos Argitis at targitis@bloomberg.net, Greg Quinn, Chris Fournier

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.