Consensus | Actual | Previous | |
---|---|---|---|
HICP - Y/Y | 5.7% | 5.5% | 6.1% |
Narrow Core - Y/Y | 5.4% | 5.4% | 5.3% |
Highlights
More importantly, the slide in the headline rate was not mirrored in the narrowest core rate, which rose 0.1 percentage points from May's final 5.3 percent to 5.4 percent. However, excluding just energy and unprocessed food, the rate dropped from 6.9 percent to 6.8 percent.
Energy prices did much of the work for the headline rate decline, dropping from May's minus 1.8 percent to minus 5.6 percent. Non-energy industrial goods also contributed (5.5 percent after 5.8 percent) as did food, alcohol and tobacco (11.7 percent after 12.5 percent). But prices for services pulled in the opposite direction and their annual inflation rate rose from May's 5.0 percent to 5.4 percent.
Market Consensus Before Announcement
Definition
Description
Inflation is an increase in the overall prices of goods and services. The relationship between inflation and interest rates is the key to understanding how indicators such as the CPI influence the markets - and your investments.
Inflation (along with various risks) basically explains how interest rates are set on everything from your mortgage and auto loans to Treasury bills, notes and bonds. As the rate of inflation changes and as expectations on inflation change, the markets adjust interest rates. The effect ripples across stocks, bonds, commodities, and your portfolio, often in a dramatic fashion.
By tracking inflation, whether high or low, rising or falling, investors can anticipate how different types of investments will perform. Over the long run, the bond market will rally (fall) when increases in the HICP are small (large). The equity market rallies with the bond market because low inflation promises low interest rates and is good for profits.