While we are all grateful that gasoline prices declined from record highs in July, today’s release of the July inflation data shows that the underlying inflation momentum remains too strong for comfort. Governor Macklem will likely continue to hike the policy rate aggressively when they next announce their decision on September 7th. Judging from the swaps market, traders are betting evenly on a 50 bps vs. 75 bps increase next month.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 7.6% in July from a year earlier, compared to 8.1% in June. The dip reflected the largest drop in gasoline prices since the pandemic’s beginning.
On a monthly basis, however, inflation increased 0.1% from the June reading, the seventh consecutive rise. Excluding gasoline, prices rose 6.6% y/y last month, following a 6.5% increase in June, as upward pressure on prices remained broadly based.Consumers paid 9.2% less for gasoline in July compared with the previous month, the largest monthly decline since April 2020. Ongoing concerns related to a slowing global economy, as well as increased COVID-19 pandemic public health restrictions in China and slowing demand for gasoline in the United States, led to lower worldwide demand for crude oil, putting downward pressure on prices at the pump.
On a monthly basis, gasoline prices fell the most in Ontario (-12.2%), where the provincial government temporarily lowered the gasoline tax. |