logo
May inflation still below 3%, but meat and other food much pricier

May inflation still below 3%, but meat and other food much pricier

News2418-06-2025

• For more financial news, go to the News24 Business front page.
For the third month in a row, consumer price index (CPI) inflation remained below 3% - the bottom level of the SA Reserve Bank's target band.
CPI came in at 2.8% for May – unchanged from April and exactly in line with the expectations of economists polled by Reuters.
But food prices are heating up.
In May, food and non-alcoholic beverages were 4.8% more expensive than a year ago - the biggest annual increase in more than a year.
Beef was a big contributor, as foot-and-mouth disease, combined with higher feed prices, fuelled price hikes, Statistics SA says.
In a single month, from April to May, large price hikes were seen in beef steak (+4.5%), stewing beef (+2.5%) and beef mince (+1.7%).
Annual inflation for meat surged from 3.0% in April to 4.4% in May.
Fish prices are also on the rise, with hake now 9.1% and fish fingers 6.1% pricier than a year ago.
Maize meal (+14%) and samp (21%) are also still much more expensive than a year ago.
After prices for oils and other fats cooled in recent months, this picked up in May again. Sunflower oil was 7.6% pricier than a year ago and brick margarine 7.9%.
Statistics SA noted that vegetable prices were volatile, but that May saw the biggest annual price increase (more than 10%) in 18 months. While coffee and tea prices are cooling, prices are still 12.4% higher than a year ago - from 15% in April.
Statistics SA
In May, electrician rates were updated, with services 7.9% more expensive than a year ago.
Much cheaper fuel kept May's inflation number in check. Petrol prices were 16% and diesel almost 13% lower than a year before.
Fuel has benefitted from falling oil prices, but this came to an abrupt halt on Friday after Israel's attacks on Iran. Traders are nervous that oil supplies from the Middle East may be disrupted by escalating tensions.
On Wednesday morning, Brent oil was trading at around $75 a barrel – from an average of below $64 in May.
SA diesel and fuel prices are currently on track for small hikes in the first week of July.
The SA Reserve Bank has been pushing hard to lower SA's inflation target to 3% (from a band of 3% to 6%), and recently pointed out that the current inflation rate is lower than that of Japan (3.6%), making this an opportune time.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rare event could derail S&P 500 record-setting rally
Rare event could derail S&P 500 record-setting rally

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Rare event could derail S&P 500 record-setting rally

Rare event could derail S&P 500 record-setting rally originally appeared on TheStreet. The stock market has had a record-setting run following President Trump's decision to pause reciprocal tariffs on April 9. The move to de-escalate trade tensions reversed a brutal selloff in the S&P 500 that at its worst had sent the benchmark index tumbling 19%, nearly into bear market drop territory. The market decline was severe enough to trigger oversold readings on most sentiment measures, and many market watchers were savvy enough to recommend buying into the fear. However, far fewer likely expected the rally to persist amid a tidal wave of economic concerns and global uncertainty. Yet, that's precisely what the S&P 500 has done. Rather than backfill gains, it has essentially beelined higher, creating a V-shaped bottom that has surprised many who remain with cash on the sidelines watching, hoping for a chance to buy. The index's advance is remarkable, but stocks don't rise or fall in a straight line, and mounting evidence suggests that the S&P rally could stall soon, especially after one particularly rare signal flashed on Friday. A raging bull market lifted the S&P 500 by over 20% in back-to-back years in 2023 and 2024, including a robust 24% gain last year. The gains were fueled by optimism that the Federal Reserve would switch to market-friendly interest rate cuts, thanks to falling inflation, and abandon the hawkish monetary policy it adopted in 2022 in its war against inflation.A tsunami of artificial intelligence spending also supported gains as companies raced to develop AI chatbots and agentic AI apps. Those bullish arguments looked much flimsier this spring. The Fed cut interest rates in September, November, and December last year; however, it paused additional reductions this year because it feared tariffs would spark price increases. In May, Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, excluding energy and food because of their volatility, showed inflation was 2.7%, up from 2.6% in April, and over the Fed's 2% inflation target. The Fed's pause removed some excitement that lower rates would spark business investment and lower interest expenses on variable debt—bad news for corporate sales and earnings growth that contributes to higher stock prices. Similarly, earlier this year, fears mounted that major hyperscalers, including Amazon's AWS, Meta Platforms, Google Cloud, and Microsoft's Azure, would pare back AI spending on servers and AI chips after two years of huge spending growth. Those concerns strengthened after the launch of the Chinese-built Deepseek-R1, a rival to OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Gemini, in January. DeepSeek was reportedly built for only $6 million using cheaper, legacy semiconductor chips, rather than Nvidia's latest fastest Blackwell lineup of graphic processing units (GPUs). However, concerns over the Fed and AI spending have decreased since April. Cloud network providers, including hyperscalers, have mostly reinforced their capex plans for this year. Amazon has affirmed a capex run rate of over $100 billion. Meta Platforms increased its planned spend to as much as $72 billion from $65 billion previously. Microsoft confirmed in June that it still plans to spend $80 billion. And Google will likely spend about $75 billion. More Experts Analyst makes bold call on stocks, bonds, and gold TheStreet Stocks & Markets Podcast #8: Common Sense Investing With David Miller Veteran fund manager sends dire message on stocks Meanwhile, while the Fed didn't cut rates again in June, it maintained its closely-watched dot-plot forecast plans to cut rates twice before year-end. Some Fed members have also recently expressed interest in cutting as soon as July, and most believe a Fed cut will likely happen in September, suggesting lower rates are getting closer by the day. With rates potentially heading lower soon and AI spending mostly intact, tariff worries are the last remaining hurdle, and those concerns have also ratcheted back following trade progress with the UK and China. The S&P 500 has clearly climbed the proverbial wall of worry, closing at a new all-time high of 6,173.07 on June 27. The bad news, however, is that the rally has lifted the S&P 500's valuation back toward levels seen when the index made its previous all-time high in February. The S&P 500's forward price to earnings (P/E) ratio is 21.9, up from about 19 in April. In February, it was above 22, according to index's average P/E ratio over the past five and ten years is 19.9 and 18.4, respectively. Unfortunately, it's historically harder to come by gains in the year following a P/E ratio above 22 Clearly, the S&P 500 isn't as cheap as it was in April, and that could create a headwind for stocks, particularly given sentiment measures aren't oversold like they were then. CNN's Fear/Greed Index registered "Extreme Fear" in April, but it's at "Greed" now. The American Association of Individual Investors survey saw bearish outlooks for the coming six months surge to 61.9% in April, the third highest on record and the highest reading since the stock market bottomed in March 2009 during the Great Financial Crisis. Now, bearishness is more neutral at 40%. Increasing investor giddiness may make it harder for the S&P 500 to continue rallying, at least in the short term. This is especially true given that another relatively rare signal, a relative strength index (RSI) (14) reading above 70, flashed a warning on Friday. RSI (14) measures price action over the preceding 14 trading periods and can signal when stocks become overbought and oversold. An RSI above 70 on the S&P 500 signals buyer beware, while a reading below 30, like in April when the RSI on the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust () dropped to about 21, suggests selling is overdone. Currently, the RSI on the S&P 500 is 70.2. For perspective, it last exceeded 70 on December 4, before a 4% retreat through January 10. It reached 69.97 on May 19, before a short-and-fast 2.7% drop. Of course, nothing is guaranteed. Stocks can always fall further than anyone expects and remain overbought for a while. John Maynard Keynes famously wrote, "Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent." Nevertheless, the high RSI reading may suggest that the S&P 500 rally may stall in the coming weeks. In the intermediate or long term, well, gains or losses will likely depend on whether high tariffs fuel inflation, causing the Fed to stay on the sidelines, and whether business spending forecasts stay strong or event could derail S&P 500 record-setting rally first appeared on TheStreet on Jun 28, 2025 This story was originally reported by TheStreet on Jun 28, 2025, where it first appeared. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

UK terminates $34B subsea cable energy agreement in North Africa
UK terminates $34B subsea cable energy agreement in North Africa

Business Insider

time5 hours ago

  • Business Insider

UK terminates $34B subsea cable energy agreement in North Africa

The UK government has officially withdrawn its support for the £25 billion ($34.4 billion) Morocco-UK Power Project, a pioneering plan to harness solar and wind energy from the Sahara Desert and transmit it to Britain via the world's longest subsea power cable. The UK government has withdrawn support for the £25 billion Morocco-UK Power Project due to national interest concerns. This project aimed to transmit renewable energy from Morocco to the UK via a 3,800 km subsea power cable. The lack of government-backed contracts reduced investment attractiveness, leading to project termination. The ambitious project, led by British clean energy company, Xlinks, involved laying over 3,800 kilometers of high-voltage subsea cables from Morocco's Guelmim-Oued Noun region to Devon in southwest England, to generate enough electricity to power over 7 million UK homes, accounting for up to 8% of the country's energy needs. Prior to its termination, the inter-continental energy project, which would have harnessed over 10.5 gigawatts of solar and wind power to deliver a steady 3.6 gigawatts of baseload energy, had reportedly cleared environmental permits and was scheduled for construction as early as 2027. Reuters report that over £100 million ($137 million) has already been spent on development and feasibility studies, with significant interest from lenders to fund the construction phase. However, the lack of a government-backed contract for difference and a guaranteed minimum price for electricity made the project riskier and less attractive to investors. Michael Shanks, UK Energy Minister highlighted the reasons for the decision; he said the government had concluded that, 'it is not in the UK national interest at this time to continue further consideration of support for the Morocco-UK Power Project. ' He also cited concerns over economic alignment and a shift toward ' homegrown power ' as part of a broader energy security strategy, adding that the government had concluded that it preferred domestic renewable investments with greater economic and energy security benefits. Reacting to the news of cancellation, Xlinks, Chairman, Dave Lewis said, 'We are hugely surprised and bitterly disappointed that the UK government would choose to walk away from an opportunity to unlock the substantial value that a large-scale renewable energy project like this would bring,' 'We are now working to unlock the potential of the project and maximize its value for all parties in a different way.' He added. The Morocco-UK Power Project At its core, the Morocco-UK Power Project was envisioned as a transcontinental clean energy solution; designed to tap into North Africa 's abundant sunshine and wind to help the UK meet its 2030 net-zero grid ambitions while easing reliance on natural gas. It would have featured 11.5 gigawatts of solar and wind capacity with battery storage to deliver 3.6 gigawatts of steady baseload power. Despite backing from major investors like TAQA, TotalEnergies, Octopus Energy, and GE Vernova, concerns over the project's complexity, transmission length, geopolitical risks, and dependency on a non-European partner ultimately led to the UK's decision to pull back. As global clean energy investment is projected to reach $3.3 trillion in 2025, with two-thirds going towards renewables and storage, the UK's move signals a shift towards resilient, domestic systems over cross-border mega-deals.

South Africa's DA Stays in Coalition; to Boycott Dialogue
South Africa's DA Stays in Coalition; to Boycott Dialogue

Bloomberg

time6 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

South Africa's DA Stays in Coalition; to Boycott Dialogue

South Africa's fractious coalition government survived after the second-largest party opted against leaving following its ultimatum to President Cyril Ramaphosa for firing one of its members from his executive, while saying it will boycott his national dialogue. Ramaphosa set up a panel that includes business leaders, actors and the captain of its national rugby team to guide the talks on the country's development path amid a weak economy. The project is set to cost about 740 million rand ($42 million).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store