Consumer prices were stable in MoM terms for the second month in a row. Food prices went down by 0.5% MoM and fuel prices were 0.4% MoM cheaper. At the same time, central heating prices jumped by 1.1% MoM in September and the upward trend is likely to continue as authorities unfroze prices in July. Price growth in core categories eased to 0.2-0.3% MoM in recent months from 0.4-0.6% MoM seen at the beginning of this year. We estimate that in September, core inflation (excluding food and energy prices) moderated to 3.1% YoY vs. 3.2% YoY reported in August.

    Disinflationary trends are visible in the Polish economy and in the coming months, headline inflation should continue running within a 2.5-3.0% YoY range, i.e. close to the National Bank of Poland’s target of 2.5% (+/- 1 percentage point). The beginning of the new year will bring a higher excise duty on alcohol and tobacco and a hike in sugar charges. At the same time, administrative prices of electricity for households are expected to be reduced, however distribution charges may increase somewhat. In 2026, we see inflation close to the central bank target, which means that there is still room for further interest rate cuts. The upcoming data releases and the new macroeconomic projection from the NBP’s staff may convince the Monetary Policy Council to cut rates already in November, but this is not our baseline scenario. We expect policy rates to be kept on hold this year and the MPC to resume its “cycle of adjustments” to the policy stance in 2026. At the end of next year, we see the main policy rate at 4.00% vs. 4.50% currently.

    Share.

    Comments are closed.