Main upward pressure came from: housing and energy (0.3 percent, the same pace as in August); restaurants and hotels (0.7 percent, unchanged from a month earlier); and other goods and services (1.1 percent vs 0.9 percent).
On the other hand, prices declined for: food and non-alcoholic beverages (-0.3 percent vs 0.3 percent) and transport (-0.2 percent vs 0.4 percent). Meantime, cost continued to drop for healthcare (-0.6 percent, the same pace as in August) and recreation and culture (-1.2 percent vs -0.8 percent).
Annual core inflation, which strips out volatile price components like fresh and seasonal products, energy and fuels, stood at 0.4 percent in September, unchanged from the previous month's five-month low.
On a monthly basis, consumer prices edged down 0.1 percent in September, after flat reading in August and missing market consensus of a 0.1 percent gain. Airfares, as well as prices for international package holidays, hotel accommodation, and fuels declined; while prices for clothing, and heating oil increased.
