China’s headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) rebounded to 0.2% y/y in October (Bloomberg est: -0.1%, September: -0.3%) after two consecutive months of negative prints. Core CPI (excluding food & energy) continued to rise to a 20-month high of 1.2% y/y from 1.0% y/y in September. Services inflation strengthened to 0.8% y/y (September: 0.6%) while consumer goods price deflation eased to -0.2% y/y (September: - 0.8%), UOB Group's Economist Ho Woei Chen notes.
"The improvement in October was due to stronger holiday demand for hotel accommodations, airfares and tourism as well as a low base effect. The sequential gains picked up to 0.2% m/m from 0.1% m/m in September with services rebounding 0.2% m/m (September: -0.3%) and food prices continuing to rise 0.3% m/m (September: 0.7%)."
"The food price deflation eased to -2.9% y/y from -4.4% y/y in September. While most of the key food products in the basket continued to fall, the pace has narrowed, including pork (-16.0% y/y, -0.23 ppt), eggs (-11.6% y/y, -0.08 ppt), fresh vegetables (-7.3% y/y, -0.18 ppt), fresh fruits (-2.0% y/y, -0.04 ppt) while prices for aquatic products rose (+2.0% y/y, +0.04 ppt)."
"China’s Producer Price Index (PPI) deflation narrowed for the third consecutive month to -2.1% y/y in October (Bloomberg est: -2.2%; September: -2.3%), marking the 37th consecutive month of y/y contraction."