Philippines core inflation hits 31-month high as headline CPI eases in June

People buy groceries at a store in Manila. — PHILIPPINE STAR/RYAN BALDEMOR

By Katherine K. Chan, Reporter

PHILIPPINE headline inflation eased for a second straight month in June on lower transport and food prices, but pass-through effects pushed core inflation to its fastest pace in 31 months, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said.

Based on PSA data released on Tuesday, headline inflation slowed to six.4% from 6.8% in May, but accelerated from 1.4% a 12 months ago.

The June inflation print got here in below the 6.6% median forecast in a BusinessWorld poll of 18 analysts, but throughout the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ (BSP) 6%-7% projection for the month.

This was the slowest headline inflation in three months or since 4.1% in March.

As of the primary half of the 12 months, inflation averaged 4.8%, still above the BSP’s 4% ceiling. The BSP expects the headline print to settle at 6.4% by yearend.

“Inflation slowed in June as easing oil price pressures and continued government measures to strengthen food supply helped temper price increases,” the Department of Economy, Planning, and Development  said in a separate statement, likewise noting easing tensions within the Middle East. 

National Statistician Claire Dennis S. Mapa said inflation in transport cooled to 12.8% in June from 16.2% in May, while food and nonalcoholic beverages eased to five.2% from 5.7%.

Local fuel retailers cut the value of gasoline by as much as P7.50 per liter and diesel by as much as P21.19 per liter last month. Alternatively, kerosene climbed by P1.98 per liter.

This led inflation for gasoline to ease to 39.2% in June from 51.6% in May, and diesel slowed to 39% from 58.5%.

Food inflation cooled amid lower meat and fish prices as easing oil costs helped boost fishing activity within the country, the BSP said.

The value of meat products declined at a faster pace of -4.2% in June from the two.5% drop a month ago. Inflation for cereals and cereal products slowed to 12.1% from 12.6%, while fish and other seafood eased to 7.8% from 8.8%.

Rice inflation likewise slowed to fifteen% in June from 15.6% in May as prices declined month on month, which the BSP attributed to the arrival of imports and temporary price ceiling set throughout the period.

The value of normal milled rice slipped by 2.67% to P49.67 a kilo within the second half of the month from P51.03 in the identical period in May, while well-milled rice was nearly 3% cheaper at P56.15 a kilo from P57.88 within the prior month.

“Nonetheless, higher vegetable prices as a consequence of limited supply throughout the off-season tempered the slowdown in headline inflation,” the BSP added.

STICKY CORE INFLATION
Meanwhile, core inflation, which discounts volatile fuel and food prices, bucked the headline trend because it quickened for a sixth consecutive month to 4.4% in June from 4.1% in May and a couple of.2% last 12 months.

This matched the December 2023 reading and was the fastest pace in 31 months or since 4.7% in November 2023.

In a separate statement, the Philippine central bank said still elevated global oil and fertilizer prices proceed to feed into the associated fee of fuel and food within the Philippines, showing “inflationary pressures remain strong.”

“Rising core inflation indicates broadening price pressures and second-round effects, including higher inflation expectations,” the BSP said.

In line with PSA’s Mr. Mapa, faster price increases in utilities, restaurants and accommodation services, and education services, amongst others pushed the core print to an over two-year high.

In June, inflation for housing, water, electricity, gas, and other fuels picked as much as 8% from 7.8% in May, largely driven by the 12% electricity inflation from 8.8% within the prior month.

This got here after Manila Electric Co. hiked its electricity rate by 14.88 centavos per kilowatt-hour (kWh) to P14.4833 per kWh last month, which meant households consuming 200 kWh monthly needed to pay P30 more of their total electricity bills.

Meanwhile, inflation for restaurants and accommodation services quickened to 7% from 6.7% a month earlier, while inflation for education services accelerated to three.9% from 2.9%.

Mr. Mapa said they’ll monitor price movements within the National Capital Region (NCR) in relation to the upcoming wage hike within the region this month, because the labor component also weighs on the country’s inflation.

The minimum wage in NCR is ready to extend by P60 on July 19, bringing it to P755 for nonagricultural employees and to P718 for agricultural employees and employees of retail, service, and small manufacturing establishments. The second tranche of the wage hike or P25 will probably be implemented in January next 12 months.

PSA data also showed inflation in NCR was slower at 4.9% in June from 5% in May, but picked up from 2.6% a 12 months ago.

Outside NCR, it eased to six.7% from 7.1% within the previous month, but was faster than 1.1% last 12 months.

For the underside 30% of income households, inflation cooled to eight% in June from 8.4% in May. Nevertheless, this was significantly faster than  -0.4% recorded in June 2025.

BSP TO REMAIN HAWKISH?
The BSP said the most recent local and international developments, particularly within the oil market, will guide their decision for his or her next monetary policy review on Aug. 27.

“The Monetary Board will proceed to be guided by incoming data and is ready to take further monetary motion as needed to make sure that inflation returns to the three% goal,” it added.

The BSP has raised its benchmark rate by a complete of fifty basis points (bps) since April, bringing it to 4.75%.

ING Regional Head of Research for Asia-Pacific Deepali Bhargava noted that looming inflationary risks from the recent wage hike and the upcoming El Niño season give the BSP reason to proceed tightening.

“Taken together, while headline inflation has eased, we don’t consider the BSP has enough evidence yet to declare victory,” she said in a report.

“Persistent core inflation, rising wages and lingering food price risks should keep policymakers focused on ensuring inflation expectations remain anchored, supporting our expectation of further rate hikes by the BSP.”

Chinabank Research also sees a 3rd straight BSP rate hike in August because the faster core inflation reflects that the Middle East war’s impact on energy prices is “becoming more entrenched.”

“Key upside risks to inflation remain, which could keep the BSP on a hawkish footing,” it added.

Meanwhile, HSBC Global Investment Research Senior ASEAN Economist Aris D. Dacanay expects the BSP to be more hawkish and deliver 75 bps more in hikes by end-2026.

“As a consequence of the upside surprise in wage hikes, we expect the BSP to remain on a mountain climbing path for the remainder of 2026 despite inflation being below expectations over the past two months,” Mr. Dacanay said in a separate report.

“We expect the BSP to extend rates to five.5% by the top of the 12 months,” he added, noting that the central bank may reverse its path to ease borrowing costs by the second half of 2027.

In a separate commentary, Citigroup, Inc. (Citi) said moderating headline inflation and prospects of gradual economic recovery by the second half of the 12 months signal weaker threats of stagflation for the Philippines, although risks remain.

Citi economists Wei Zheng Kit and Helmi Arman noted that the Philippine economy may barely rebound starting within the second half of the 12 months until 2028, but with growth to stay weaker than its performance lately.

“The Philippines is more likely to achieve only a gradual, below-trend growth recovery within the second half of 2026 and into 2027-28,” they said. “The recovery will probably be uneven: Public construction resuming regularly, consumption recovering as inflation moderates, and investment cautious pending political resolution.”

Citi also noted that an August hike stays likely, with a pause in October to return provided that lower oil prices prompt the BSP to materially cut its inflation and growth estimates.

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