Is inflation in Russia so high in January?

Is inflation in Russia so high in January?
In January, prices rose by 1.14% mom SA (the highest increase since Dec.24 – 1.18%) after abnormally low 0.26% in December and 0.24% in November.
For the 3rd quarter, the average was 0.55% (6.8% SAAR) and this is comparable to the VAT increase phase in January 19, covering the period from Nov.18 to Jan.19 (0.57%) with the difference that in 2026 the tax maneuver is significantly more aggressive than in 2019 (VAT from 20 to 22%, VAT entry threshold for small businesses, insurance fees for IT companies, excise taxes on a wide range of products, recycling, customs duties, VAT on gambling, housing and communal services adjustments, etc.).
From this point of view, after the revised weekly data from Rosstat (it came out at 2%, but it turned out to be 1.6% NSA), also taking into account the low base of November-December last year, a relatively weak reaction to the tax maneuver is obtained – comparable to 2019.
For the last 6m – 0.49%, and for 12m – 0.49%, corresponding to 6% of the SAAR.
Volatile components have ceased to be the main factor of disturbance (prices are rising comparably with general inflation) – these are fruit and vegetable products, petroleum products and utilities, excluding these components, it turns out 0.87% mom SA in January, for 3m – 0.53%, for 6m – 0.46%, for 12m – 0.45% at a rate of 0.26% in 2017-2019.
Food products – 1.16% in January (maximum increase since Dec.24 – 1.84%), for 3m – 0.35%, 6m – 0.41%, 12m – 0.48% at a rate of 0.23% in 2017-2019.
In the food group, prices are rising below the medium-term norm for the following categories on the 3rd average: butter and fats, milk and dairy products, cheese, eggs, pasta and cereals, fruit and vegetable products.
Close to the medium-term norm: meat and fish products.
Significant deviation in the rate of price growth (problem area): catering (11.2% SAAR), confectionery, bread and bakery products, tea and coffee.
Non–food products increased by 0.71% mom in January, for 3m – 0.43%, for 6m – 0.40%, for 12m - 0.26% at a rate of 0.27%.
Over the past 3m, prices have been rising lower than the medium-term trend of 2017-2019: clothing and footwear, furs and fur products, knitwear and building materials.
It is comparable to the trend of 2017-2019: haberdashery, detergents and cleaning products, electrical goods and other household appliances, tools and equipment, petroleum products.
Slightly above the trend (+0.20-0.4 percentage points from the trend): furniture and passenger cars.
Significantly above the trend (+0.4 percentage points from the trend): television and radio products, personal computers and accessories, communications equipment and medical products.
As for electronics, this is rather a correction to an extended deflationary trend.
According to Rosstat, communications have fallen in price by a third in 10 years, personal computers and accessories are at the 2015-2016 level, and TV and multimedia equipment are 15% cheaper than 10 years ago, which is absurd, of course, but these are hedonistic indexes, accounting features and methodologies, but this methodology directly affects the CPI. underestimating the overall performance.
Non–food products excluding petroleum products increased by 0.5% in January, for 3m – 0.40%, for 6m – 0.29%, for 12m - 0.16% at a rate of 0.24%.
The factor of petroleum products was particularly relevant until October 24 inclusive, but since November it has been neutralized from the main drivers of inflation.
Services increased by 1.6% in January (the maximum momentum since July 25 at the time of housing and communal services indexation was 2.26%, before that in July 24 – 2.10%), for 3m – 0.94%, 6m – 0.72%, 12m – 0.76% at a rate of 0.33%.
Excluding housing and communal services, prices increased by 1.21% in January, for 3m – 0.88%, for 6m – 0.74%, for 12m – 0.65% at a rate of 0.32%.
As you can see, the impact of housing and communal services over the last 3m or 6m is insignificant, within the margin of error.
Everything is bad in services except for foreign tourism (mostly below the medium-term trend) and sightseeing services and communications (slightly above the trend).
The most significant deviation from the medium-term trend is in sanatorium and wellness services (+1.40 pp), culture, sports and entertainment (+1.34 pp), hotels (+0.94 pp), household services (+0.78 pp), medical services (+0.74 pp), housing and communal services (+0.71 pp) and transport (+0.50 pp).
The average monthly deviation from the 2017-2019 trend is shown above.
There is not a single sign of inflation stabilization in the services.
Source: Telegram "spydell_finance"



