Mexico Inflation Rate Seen Rising in April but Within Target Range - Reuters Poll

  • Mexico's annual inflation rate likely ticked up in April, but remained within the central bank's target, a Reuters poll of analysts showed on Monday, supporting expectations that the central bank will continue cutting its benchmark interest rate.
  • The median estimate from 16 analysts was for the year-on-year headline inflation rate for April to rise to 3.90% from 3.80% in March. Mexico's central bank has an official target rate of 3%, plus or minus a percentage point.
  • Core inflation, considered a better indicator of price trends, likely also accelerated in April, to 3.92% from 3.64% in March. In April alone, consumer prices likely edged up 0.30% from the previous month while core prices are expected to have risen 0.47%, according to the poll.
  • In March, the central bank (Banxico) cut its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points, bringing it down to 9%. The bank's board said it expects the inflationary environment to keep cutting borrowing costs.
  • Banxico will announce its next monetary policy decision on May 15. Although economic growth is not part of Banxico's mandate, analysts believe a weak economic outlook stemming from global trade tensions could encourage policy makers to continue monetary easing.
  • Mexico's economy avoided a technical recession by surprisingly growing by 0.2% between January and March, compared to a 0.6% contraction the previous quarter. The government sees the economy growing between 1.5% and 2.3% this year, according to a draft budget from the finance ministry. Private sector analysts polled by the central bank late last month lowered their growth forecast to just 0.20% from 0.50% previously. They also nudged up their year-end inflation estimate