The US Dollar has ticked up to session highs, right above 0.8050, on Monday's early European session, extending gains for the fourth consecutive day. The Swiss Franc's weakness has provided additional support for an already buoyant Greenback, as the Swiss Consumer Prices Index (CPI) data revealed stronger-than-expected deflationary pressures in October.
Consumer inflation contracted at a 0.3% pace last month, following a -0.2% reading in September, against market expectations of a mild improvement to -0.1%. Likewise, yearly inflation eased to 0.1% from 0.2% in the previous month, undershooting the market consensus of an acceleration to 0.3%.
The disinflationary figures keep pressure on the Swiss National Bank (SNB) to cut rates further below the current 0% level. SNB President, Martin Schlegel, has been reluctant to accept that possibility, but the growing deflationary pressures and the soft economic momentum amid the steep US tariffs are pointing in that direction.
The US Federal Reserve (Fed), cut interest rates last week, but Chairman Jerome Powell warned that a December rate cut is far from a done deal, which has triggered some monetary policy divergence with the SNB, which is underpinning support for the Greenback.
Investors will be observing US private data this week to confirm those views with manufacturing data in focus today. US S&P Global Manufacturing PMI is expected to corroborate that business activity in the sector improved to 52.2 in October, from 52.0 in September. The US ISM PMI, however, is forecast to reveal further contraction, with the PMI little changed, –49.2 from the previous month's 49.1 level– and with the prices subindex showing increasing inflationary pressures; 62.6 in October, from 61.9 in September.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI), released by the Swiss Federal Statistical Office on a monthly basis, measures the change in prices of goods and services which are representative of the private households’ consumption in Switzerland. The CPI is the main indicator to measure inflation and changes in purchasing trends. The MoM figure compares the prices of goods in the reference month to the previous month. Generally, a high reading is seen as bullish for the Swiss Franc (CHF), while a low reading is seen as bearish.
Read more.Last release: Mon Nov 03, 2025 07:30
Frequency: Monthly
Actual: -0.3%
Consensus: -0.1%
Previous: -0.2%
Source: Federal Statistical Office of Switzerland
The Consumer Price Index (CPI), released by the Swiss Federal Statistical Office on a monthly basis, measures the change in prices of goods and services which are representative of the private households’ consumption in Switzerland. The CPI is the main indicator to measure inflation and changes in purchasing trends. The YoY reading compares prices in the reference month to the same month a year earlier. Generally, a high reading is seen as bullish for the Swiss Franc (CHF), while a low reading is seen as bearish.
Read more.Last release: Mon Nov 03, 2025 07:30
Frequency: Monthly
Actual: 0.1%
Consensus: 0.3%
Previous: 0.2%
Source: Federal Statistical Office of Switzerland