Mexico’s core inflation was higher than expected in early November

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Mexico’s annual consumer prices slowed more than expected during the first half of November, but the core inflation index – which remains a main concern in the country as it grapples with high costs – came in above market forecasts.

Data from national statistics agency INEGI showed on Thursday that annual headline inflation in Mexico hit 8.14% in the period, down from 8.53% a month ago and also below the consensus of 8.24% in a Reuters poll of economists.

However, the closely watched core price index, which strips out some volatile food and energy prices and was recently dubbed “the greatest concern” by Bank of Mexico board member Jonathan Heath, continued to trend up, reaching 8.66% on an annual basis.

Economists polled by Reuters had expected it to come in at 8.60%, after hitting 8.39% in mid-October.

The latest inflation figures backed expectations that the local central bank, known as Banxico, would keep hiking interest rates.

“Overall, headline inflation continues to edge down in Mexico, but core inflation remains sticky, which will continue to keep policymakers uneasy,” said Pantheon Macroeconomics’ chief Latin America economist, Andres Abadia.

In a podcast published on Wednesday, Banxico’s Heath said the central bank was “not ready yet to decouple” from the U.S. Federal Reserve and that more rate hikes were needed to control inflation.

On a monthly basis, Mexico’s headline inflation rose 0.56% while the core index was up by 0.34% in mid-November, the statistics agency said. Economists had projected increases of 0.65% and 0.30%, respectively.

The fresh core inflation uptick is set to “strengthen the hand of the hawks at Banxico in the debate over how much more tightening to deliver,” said Jason Tuvey, senior emerging markets economist at Capital Economics.

Borrowing costs in Latin America’s second-largest economy currently stand at 10% after a monetary tightening cycle started in mid-2021.

Source: El Financiero

Mexico Daily Post