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Canada January CPI +2.3% y/y vs +2.4% expected

  • Prior was +2.4%
  • CPM m/m 0.0% vs +0.2% expected
  • Prior CPI m/m -0.2%

Core measures:

  • BOC core 2.6% vs 2.8% prior
  • BOC core m/m +0.2% vs -0.4% prior
  • Core CPI % m/m +0.1% vs +0.3% prior
  • CPI median +2.5% vs 2.5% expected (prior was 2.6%)
  • CPI trim +2.4% vs 2.6% expected (prior was 2.7%)
  • CPI common +2.7% vs 2.8% prior
  • Gasoline prices -16.7% y/y and -13.8% m/m
  • Shelter +1.7% y/y (first time below 2% in five years)

This report on the headline isn’t quite as dovish as it looks as a drop in gasoline prices was the largeest contributor to the undershoot. Excluding gasoline the overall CPI rose 3.0% y/y, the same as in December.

Aside from that, the impact of the temporary sales tax break (GST/HST) continues to reverberate as it leaves the index. The CPI has seen an acceleration in prices for restaurant meals, and to a lesser degree,
prices for alcoholic beverages, toys and children’s clothing. Food from restaurants was up 12.3% y/y

On an annual basis in January, prices rose at a slower pace in nine
provinces compared with December. Year-over-year price growth
accelerated in British Columbia due to a base-year effect, as prices for
hotels declined on a monthly basis in January 2025 following an
increase in December 2024 coinciding with a series of Taylor Swift concerts.

This chart excludes the Dec 2024-Feb 2025 tax holiday and shows a declining trend.

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