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Carsten Brzeski, Chief Economist at ING, explains that the morning started with encouraging signals from German retail sales as the first hard data for the second quarter recorded an increase of 2.3% month-on-month in April, from -0.4% MoM in March.
Key Quotes
“This was the first increase in monthly retails sales since November last year, boding well for a re-acceleration of the German economy in the second quarter. The fact that German unemployment fell to a new record low of 5.2% in May also shows that the domestic momentum in the economy remains strong.”
“Headline inflation at 15-month high
The most imminent threat to domestic activity could be the recent surge in oil prices. Today’s inflation data are already providing some flavour as to how higher oil prices could dent purchasing power. Based on the results of several regional states, German headline inflation surged to 2.2% year-on-year in May, from 1.6% YoY in April, the highest level since February 2017. According to the harmonised European definition (HICP), the measure more relevant for ECB policy-making, headline inflation was even stronger and also stands at 2.2% YoY, from 1.4% in April.”
“German inflation data still tells a two-sided story: while prices for consumer goods have gradually accelerated in recent months, inflation on services has slowed down and has even been negative for a couple of months for communication and clothing. Where available, core inflation measures at the state level actually dropped in May.”
“What it means for the ECB