Mexico's inflation eases less than expected in early April

April 23, 2026 8:22 AM EDT

FILE PHOTO: A woman buys vegetables at a market following March's inflation surge driven by rising food and energy prices, in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, April 15, 2026. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez/File Photo

By Aida Pelaez-Fernandez

MEXICO CITY, ‌April 23 (Reuters) - ​Mexico's 12-month ​inflation stood at 4.53% in the first half of April, data from statistics agency INEGI showed on Thursday, ‌above expectations but slowing from the previous month.

Annual inflation ⁠in Latin America's second-largest economy eased from 4.63% in early March, but came ‌in slightly above the 4.5% ‌expected by economists polled by Reuters.

Inflation remains above the Bank of Mexico's target of 3%, plus or minus one percentage ​point, fueling uncertainty over future monetary policy decisions.

"Mexico's high inflation rate for the first half of April (4.53%) occurred despite the ⁠scheduled downward adjustment of electricity rates," said Gabriela Siller, Banco Base's economic analysis director.

The analyst ​also questioned on X if the Bank of Mexico now put interest rate cuts on hold, or if ​the entity will use the inflation ‌slowdown to justify further cuts.

Banxico's board members showed discrepancies about the impact that the conflict in the ⁠Middle East poses to Mexican prices, differing perspectives that became tangible in the 3-2 split decision to resume the bank's rate easing cycle last ⁠month cutting the benchmark rate by 25 basis points to 6.75%, minutes from ​the latest meeting showed.

The closely watched core price index, which strips out some volatile food and energy prices, reached 4.27% in the 12 months through ‌early April, compared with 4.46% in the first half of March.

Month-on-month consumer prices rose 0.11% during the ‌first half of April, also slightly above the 0.09% increase expected ⁠by economists in the poll, ‌while the core price ​index landed at 0.18%.

(Reporting by Aida Pelaez-Fernandez, Jorge Ollero and Ricardo Figueroa; Editing by Gabriel Araujo and ‌Nick Zieminski)



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