Consumer prices in the 19-nation euro area fell more than economists forecast in September, keeping up pressure on the European Central Bank as it debates whether to add stimulus to support the recovery from the coronavirus recession. The inflation rate came in at -0.3%, slightly below the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey. Prices for services were a particular drag in September, with some food and energy also cheaper than during the previous month. Core inflation fell to a record-low 0.2%.

The euro-area inflation rate came in at -0.3%

While weak inflation can in part be explained by technical reasons, such as a temporary sales-tax cut in Germany, it also highlights the risks of subdued demand and an appreciation of the euro, which damps import costs. German two-year bonds held gains, keeping the yield at a one-week low of minus 0.71%.

ECB President Christine Lagarde has flagged that prices in the region will decline in coming months, but said they should turn up again in early 2021. Earlier this week, she said the anchoring of longer-term market-based inflation expectations might have “softened,” in what might be a signal that more monetary stimulus is in the pipeline.

What Bloomberg’s Economists Say…

“Weak demand, especially for travel-related services, and currency appreciation are creating some more persistent deflationary risks. The readings will jangle nerves at the European Central Bank and add fuel to the argument for more stimulus.

–Maeva Cousin. Read the full REACT

The ECB sees inflation averaging just 1.3% in 2022, far below its goal of just under 2%. It’s currently looking into adjusting this target as part of its strategic review.