German Producer Prices Post Surprise Record Jump in August

German Producer Prices Post Surprise Record Jump in August
A worker wears a protective mask at the Volkswagen assembly line after VW re-starts Europe's largest car factory after coronavirus shutdown in Wolfsburg, Germany, on April 27, 2020. Swen Pfoertner/Pool via Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

BERLIN—German producer prices rose in August at their strongest rate since records began both in annual and monthly terms, driven mainly by soaring energy prices, raising the chances that headline inflation will surge even higher.

Producer prices of industrial products increased by 45.8 percent on the same month last year, the Federal Statistical Office reported on Tuesday. Compared to July 2022, prices rose 7.9 percent, it added.

The surge was considerably stronger than expected, with analysts having forecast a 37.1 percent year-on-year rise and a 1.6 percent monthly rise, according to a Reuters poll.

In July, the year-on-year increase had been 37.2 percent and in June 32.7 percent.

Energy prices in August on average were over double the same period last year, up 139 percent, and 20.4 percent higher than the previous month, the office reported.

Inflation in Europe’s largest economy is running at 8.8 percent, as a dearth in Russian fossil fuel deliveries following the invasion of Ukraine and imposition of Western sanctions has led to skyrocketing energy prices.

Now, surging costs are seen in not only oil and gas but also electricity, said LBBW economist Jens-Oliver Niklasch.

Producer prices for electricity rose 174.9 percent compared with August 2021 and by 26.4 percent compared with the previous month.

Excluding energy, the year-on-year rise in producer prices came in at 14 percent in August.

Producer prices for intermediate goods also rose significantly, up 17.5 percent on the year, driven mainly by a 19.9 percent surge in metals prices.

“While declining momentum in intermediate goods prices gives reason to believe that consumer price inflation will peak in the coming months, the recent surge in energy prices shows that there is considerable potential for uncertainty here,” Commerzbank economist Ralph Solveen said.

Consumer price inflation is likely to reach new record levels in the months ahead, he added.

By Rachel More and Rene Wagner