Sweden's CPI came in flat for December—0.0% month-over-month, which is honestly a bit of a surprise. Consensus was betting on 0.2%, but we got a miss there. What's interesting? Last month it was -0.4%, so we've swung from deflation to neutral territory. Could mean price pressures are cooling down, or it's just noise. Either way, this kind of data matters if you're thinking about how central banks might react on rate decisions. Softer inflation readings usually don't scream for rate hikes.
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DataBartender
· 01-11 05:46
Swedish inflation shifts from negative to flat, are expectations of interest rate cuts from the central bank about to rise again?
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CrossChainMessenger
· 01-11 05:04
Sweden's CPI remains unchanged. What is the central bank thinking?
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PumpDetector
· 01-08 20:07
zero? lmao that's the kind of technical divergence nobody sees coming. deflation to flat in one month... yeah, smart money already priced this in weeks ago. riksbank's probably sweating rn ngl
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NftBankruptcyClub
· 01-08 07:30
Swedish inflation data disappoints, the central bank is probably going to be conflicted again.
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PrivateKeyParanoia
· 01-08 07:28
Swedish inflation data once again played a trick, and the market expectations were slapped in the face. This shift from negative to flat seems a bit strange no matter how you look at it.
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ServantOfSatoshi
· 01-08 07:25
Swedish inflation is playing tricks again, jumping directly from -0.4% to 0%... The central banks can no longer stay calm.
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TestnetNomad
· 01-08 07:23
Swedish inflation data drags down, the central bank might hold steady now
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fomo_fighter
· 01-08 07:22
Swedish prices haven't moved, the central bank probably needs to hold back a bit.
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GasOptimizer
· 01-08 07:17
0.0%?This gap rebounded from -0.4% back to the median, and the data pattern is very suspicious. If you ask me, it's just noise, and the central bank may not buy it.
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AllInAlice
· 01-08 07:09
Sweden inflation 0.0%? This is quite a show, the central bank should ease up.
Sweden's CPI came in flat for December—0.0% month-over-month, which is honestly a bit of a surprise. Consensus was betting on 0.2%, but we got a miss there. What's interesting? Last month it was -0.4%, so we've swung from deflation to neutral territory. Could mean price pressures are cooling down, or it's just noise. Either way, this kind of data matters if you're thinking about how central banks might react on rate decisions. Softer inflation readings usually don't scream for rate hikes.