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Final May inflation data confirms rising price pressures across Europe

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  • France’s INSEE confirmed May EU-harmonised inflation at 2.8%, the highest since February 2024, driven by energy costs up nearly 17% year-over-year.usnews
  • Germany’s headline rate eased to 2.7% thanks to fuel-tax cuts, but core inflation rose to 2.6%, signaling persistent underlying price pressures.bundesbank
  • Romania’s inflation hit 10.9%, while Brazil’s 12-month rate reached 4.72%, adding to a global picture that complicates central bank easing plans.tradingeconomics

Wave of May Inflation Data Shows Persistent Price Pressures Across Europe, Asia, and Latin America

A cluster of final inflation readings released Friday confirmed that consumer price pressures remain elevated across multiple major economies, complicating the path for central banks weighing rate decisions amid geopolitical uncertainty and energy-market volatility.

Europe: France and Germany Confirm Estimates Amid Energy-Driven Pressures

France’s statistics agency INSEE confirmed that EU-harmonised consumer prices rose 2.8% year-on-year in May, the highest rate since February 2024 and up from 2.5% in April. The national measure came in at 2.4%, driven largely by surging energy costs — up 16.8% annually — tied in part to fallout from the conflict with Iran. Germany’s Federal Statistical Office confirmed its EU-harmonised inflation at 2.7% in May, down from 2.9% in April, as government fuel-tax reductions helped ease energy prices. Core inflation, however, ticked higher, rising to 2.5% nationally and 2.6% on the harmonised measure.ouest-france

Spain’s National Statistics Institute confirmed its annual CPI rate held at 3.2% in May, unchanged from April, while the EU-harmonised rate edged up to 2.9%. Romania continued to stand out as an outlier in the European Union, with annual inflation accelerating to 10.9% in May from 10.7% in April — its highest since April 2023 — driven by electricity prices up over 54% and fuel costs surging more than 20%.tradingeconomics

Brazil and South Korea Face Diverging Policy Dilemmas

In Latin America, Brazil’s IBGE statistics agency reported that the benchmark IPCA index rose 0.58% month-on-month in May, bringing the 12-month rate to 4.72%. That figure, the highest in eight months, exceeds the upper bound of the central bank’s 3% target with its 1.5 percentage point tolerance band, adding pressure on policymakers who had been pursuing a cautious easing cycle.r7

Meanwhile, Bank of Korea Governor Shin Hyun-song signaled that conditions have “matured” for a rate hike following the central bank’s eighth consecutive hold at 2.5% in late May. Two board members dissented in favor of an immediate 25-basis-point increase, as higher GDP and inflation forecasts for 2026 — underpinned by strong semiconductor exports and rising global oil prices — shifted the policy debate toward tightening.ing

Outlook

The breadth of Friday’s data underscored how energy costs linked to the Iran conflict and persistent services inflation continue to limit central banks’ room to ease. The European Central Bank, which next meets later this month, faces a eurozone where headline inflation is forecast to rise to around 3%. For Brazil and South Korea, the question has shifted from how fast to cut to whether tightening may be necessary to keep expectations anchored.reuters

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