News Economics: Euro-Zone Inflation Soars to New Record as Economy Fades Prices jumped by record 10.7% in October as ECB hikes rates

Euro-area inflation surged to a fresh all-time high, while the bloc’s economy lost momentum -- reinforcing fears that a recession is now all-but unavoidable. Consumer prices jumped by 10.7% from a year ago in October, far exceeding the 10.3% median estimate in a Bloomberg survey. Third-quarter output, meanwhile, slowed to 0.2% from the previous three months -- more than analysts estimated but much less than the 0.8% advance recorded between April and June. With the energy crisis continuing to ravage businesses and households, the expansion is widely expected to shift into reverse during the winter. “Recession risks are spreading,” Spanish central bank Governor Pablo Hernandez De Cos told an event Monday in Turkey. “Decisive action by us in the current juncture will support medium-term growth, by reducing inflationary pressures and avoiding a de-anchoring of inflation expectations.” Monday’s inflation figures offered scant encouragement. While the headline number continued to be driven by energy and food costs, an underlying gauge that excludes those two elements also ticked up to a record. Italy on Friday revealed an all-time high that was far more than any economist surveyed by Bloomberg had anticipated. The outlook remains extraordinarily uncertain. Mild weather and stronger-than-expected supplies of natural gas have led to a significant drop in some wholesale energy costs, but the trajectory of future supply and Russia’s war in Ukraine still pose risks. ECB officials maintain that the priority is to fight inflation. While acknowledging that a euro-area recession “is becoming more and more likely,” Dutch central bank chief Klaas Knot said Sunday that he favors a rate hike of 50 or 75 basis points at the final policy meeting of the year in December. “The danger that the deterioration of the economic outlook will turn out to be worse than expected, making an excessively rapid step in the normalization of interest rates disproportionate, shouldn’t be underestimated,” Italy’s Ignazio Visco said Monday. via: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-31/euro-zone-inflation-soars-to-new-record-as-economic-growth-fades?srnd=economics-v2&leadSource=uverify%20wall&sref=3REHEaVI

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