German industry rebounds in January

Germany: Consumer price index shrank by 0.5%

Germany's consumer price index fell by 0.5% in November, slowing the year-on-year gain to 10.0%, according to the published Destatis preliminary estimate. The fall exceeded the expected 0.2% m/m decline and maintained the year-over-year rate at 10.4%.

We previously pointed out that the October data was the peak of inflation in the eurozone. Fresh data from Germany strengthens this hypothesis. However, this reversal will draw more attention to the ECB's stance. Is this data a reason to lower the rate hike step? Recent comments from ECB members suggest that this is unlikely.

Read next: Steen Jakobsen: ECB strategy is praying, hoping and waiting... not exactly action which gives hope for real economy| FXMAG.COM

Central banks in the G7 are working to contain the unwinding of inflation. By starting too late, they have faced a rise in core inflation, excluding volatile and problematic food and energy, rising 21% and 38.4% y/y, respectively. In such circumstances, monetary policy at the central bank must remain restrained for an extended period. That means raising rates above neutral (around 2% in the eurozone) for an extended period.

History has ample examples where policy easing too early led to repeated inflation shocks, which further strengthened consumer confidence in perpetually high inflation and changed consumer behaviour accordingly.

German industry rebounds in January

Alex Kuptsikevich

Financial market professional with 16-years' experience and Senior financial analyst at FxPro. Author of daily reviews on the impact of economic events with comments regularly featured in top international and Russian media. Covers fundamental analysis, global markets, foreign exchange market, gold, oil, cryptocurrencies.

Alex Kuptsikevich is a regular contributor to both digital and print media including CNBC, Forbes, Reuters, MarketWatch, BBC and Coindesk.