A hypermarket in Seoul on Nov. 17, 2022 (Courtesy of Yonhap) South Korea’s headline inflation hit a seven-month low in November as rises in agricultural and petroleum product prices slowed, adding to expectations that the central bank is likely to moderate its interest rate hike pace on a slowdown in Asia’s fourth-largest economy.
Consumer prices rose 5.0% last month from a year earlier, the lowest since April, government data showed on Friday. That compared with 5.7% in October and 5.6% in September.
Agricultural product prices fell 2.0% in November on-year due to improving supply conditions after a 5.2% increase in the previous month, while growth in petroleum product costs nearly halved to 5.6% from 10.7%, the finance ministry said in a statement.
But annual core inflation, which excludes those prices, stood at 4.8% last month, unchanged from October, the fastest level since February 2009, indicating inflationary pressure in the local economy persists.
GROWTH, INFLATION TO SOFTEN
The Bank of Korea said inflation is likely to stay around the 5% level until early next year, noting the slowdown in November was due to high base effects.
Given the expectation, the BOK may raise interest rates further, but at a slower pace, analysts said.
“Today's lower-than-expected inflation is unlikely to change the BOK's policy stance… We expect the BOK to stay on a hiking path until early next year,” said Min Joo Kang, a senior economist at ING in a note, adding a market consensus for November inflation was 5.2%.
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