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Euro zone inflation falls to 1.8% in September, below the European Central Bank's 2% target

Visitors pass shops on a pedestrianized street in the old town in A Coruna, Spain, on Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024.
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  • Euro zone inflation fell to 1.8% in September, coming in below the European Central Bank's 2% target, flash data from statistics agency Eurostat showed Tuesday.
  • The reading was in line with the expectations of economists previously polled by Reuters.
  • The core inflation rate, which excludes more volatile energy, food, alcohol and tobacco prices, came in at 2.7%, slightly below forecasts.

Euro zone inflation fell to 1.8% in September, coming in below the European Central Bank's 2% target, flash data from statistics agency Eurostat showed Tuesday.

The reading was in line with the expectations of economists polled by Reuters, after annual inflation hit a three-year-low of 2.2% in August.

The core inflation rate, which excludes more volatile energy, food, alcohol and tobacco prices, came in at 2.7%. It was forecast to remain unchanged from the August reading of 2.8%.

Services inflation in the euro zone eased to 4% in September, down from 4.1% in August, the data showed.

The figures come after September inflation eased below the 2% European Central Bank target in several key euro zone economies, including France and Germany. The harmonized inflation rate in Europe's leading economy dropped by more than expected to 1.8% on an annual basis, preliminary data showed Monday.

Inflation outlook

While there could be a "temporary rebound" of inflation in the coming months, the headline reading is likely to remain below 2% in the coming year, Franziska Palmas, senior Europe economist at Capital Economics, said in a note on Tuesday.

Bert Colijn, chief economist for the Netherlands at ING, meanwhile noted that a renewed pickup of inflation is also not entirely certain.

"While a bounce back in the fourth quarterย has been expected, the question is to what extent thisย can materialise as petrol prices have been dropping quickly on the back of falling oil prices," he said in a note on Tuesday.

Next ECB steps

European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde on Monday said that policymakers were becoming more confident about inflation returning to the 2% target.

"Looking ahead, inflation might temporarily increase in the fourth quarter of this year as previous sharp falls in energy prices drop out of the annual rates, but the latest developments strengthen our confidence that inflation will return to target in a timely manner," she said at a hearing of the European Parliament's Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs.

"We will take that into account in our next monetary policy meeting in October," Lagarde added. The ECB is next set to meet on Oct. 17.

Capital Economics' Palmas on Tuesday said that headline inflation dipping below 2% "should be sufficient to persuade the ECB to cut rates in October," even as the services inflation reading remains elevated.

Economic growth and inflation falling too far below the 2% target are two of the ECB's points of consideration, ING's Colijn added.

"If it [the ECB] keeps interest rates restrictive for too long with the economy already slowing, it risks pushing inflation below its 2% target. With growth under pressure now, it seems that the door is open for the ECB to move faster," he said, noting that a cut was however not yet a "done deal."

Bank of America Global Research economists had changed their expectations for the path ahead for ECB interest rate cuts following her comments, noting they are now anticipating a rate cut in October.

The economists had previously been forecasting that the central bank would hold rates steady this month, but now said that Lagarde's comments "the same justification she used for the September cut," which suggested a "a quasi-clear "go" for October."

Deutsche Bank economists on Tuesday also moved up their forecast for the next ECB rate cut from December to October.

LSEG data showed that markets were widely pricing a 25-basis-point cut in October, following the release of the latest euro zone inflation data on Tuesday.

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