Article
- Consumer prices jumped 11.6% in October; median est. 10.9%
- Data also came in above analyst estimates in Italy and France
German inflation unexpectedly accelerated this month, following a trend already seen in France and Italy that will increase pressure on the European Central Bank to raise interest rates even as a recession looms.
Consumer prices in Europe’s largest economy rose 11.6% from a year earlier -- far exceeding all estimates in a Bloomberg survey whose median forecast was 10.9%. Comparable rates were last recorded in the early 1950s in West Germany.
Inflation in Italy, meanwhile, surged to 12.8% -- way ahead of all estimates. France surpassed expectations, too, with a 7.1% advance. Spain was the only major euro-area nation to see price pressures ease. Data for the 19-nation bloc are due Monday.
The figures are likely to feed the ECB’s enthusiasm to confront inflation that’s five times its 2% target. Officials on Thursday doubled their main rate to 1.5%, the highest in more than a decade. But with Europe at risk of a recession, the ECB dropped an earlier reference to rate increases continuing for “several meetings,” saying simply it expect borrowing costs to be raised “further.”