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German inflation jumps in April as energy costs surge

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Consumer prices in Germany - Europe's biggest economy - rose 2.9% compared with the same month a year earlier

German inflation jumped to its highest level in over two years in April as the Middle East war triggered a surge in energy costs, official data showed today.

Consumer prices in Europe's biggest economy rose 2.9% compared with the same month a year earlier, according to preliminary data from the federal statistics agency Destatis.

It was the highest inflation recorded in Germany since January 2024.

The figure was up from 2.7% in March and in line with a forecast from analysts surveyed by financial data firm FactSet.

Energy prices jumped over 10% in April from a year earlier, their biggest increase for over three years, although services inflation eased slightly, Destatis said.

The inflation rate was also 2.9% under the harmonised metric favoured by the European Central Bank.

The ECB is due to hold a meeting tomorrow and, although it is not expected to lift interest rates this time, investors will be looking for hints that hikes could be in the cards for future meetings.

Dirk Schumacher, chief economist at German public lender KfW, said the decline in services inflation had stopped costs from surging too strongly in April.

Prices would however continue to rise in coming months as the energy shock accelerates, he said, while predicting that "the inflation rate will remain well below the peaks seen in 2022".

The energy shock triggered by Russia's f ull-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 helped push euro zone inflation to a record high of 10.6% in October of that year.