Swiss Producer and Import Prices Extend Decline

2026-07-14 06:48 By Joshua Ferrer 1 min. read

Switzerland’s producer and import prices dropped by 2.1% year-on-year in June 2026, accelerating from a 1.8% fall in the previous month and extending a three-year deflationary streak.

The latest reading also marked the steepest annual decline since March, reflecting continued weakness in both domestic and imported prices.

Producer prices fell further (-2.7% vs -2.5% in May), driven by lower prices for electricity and gas supply (-7%), water treatment and distribution (-3.4%), and manufactured goods (-2.5%), particularly chemical and pharmaceutical products (-6.8%) and computer, electronic and optical products, including watches (-2.4%).

Import prices also declined 0.8% (vs -0.2%), as cheaper costs for agricultural products (-1.1%) and manufactured goods (-0.8%) outweighed an increase in mining and quarrying (7.7%).

On a monthly basis, producer and import prices fell 0.3%, following a 0.4% loss in May, mainly due to lower petroleum-related prices.



News Stream
Swiss Producer and Import Prices Extend Decline
Switzerland’s producer and import prices dropped by 2.1% year-on-year in June 2026, accelerating from a 1.8% fall in the previous month and extending a three-year deflationary streak. The latest reading also marked the steepest annual decline since March, reflecting continued weakness in both domestic and imported prices. Producer prices fell further (-2.7% vs -2.5% in May), driven by lower prices for electricity and gas supply (-7%), water treatment and distribution (-3.4%), and manufactured goods (-2.5%), particularly chemical and pharmaceutical products (-6.8%) and computer, electronic and optical products, including watches (-2.4%). Import prices also declined 0.8% (vs -0.2%), as cheaper costs for agricultural products (-1.1%) and manufactured goods (-0.8%) outweighed an increase in mining and quarrying (7.7%). On a monthly basis, producer and import prices fell 0.3%, following a 0.4% loss in May, mainly due to lower petroleum-related prices.
2026-07-14
Swiss Producer and Import Deflation Eases
Swiss producer and import prices fell 1.8% year-on-year in May 2026, easing from a 2.0% decline in April and marking the softest pace of deflation in five months, though extending a three-year streak of falling prices. The moderation was driven by a slower decline in import prices, which fell 0.2% after dropping 1.0% in April, while producer prices fell 2.5%, slightly deeper than the previous month's 2.4% decline. On a monthly basis, the producer and import price index fell 0.4%, missing expectations for a 0.4% increase and reversing April's 0.8% gain. Lower prices for pharmaceutical products, petroleum and natural gas, petroleum products, and electricity weighed on the index, while plastic products, basic metals, and other chemical products became more expensive.
2026-06-15
Swiss Producer and Import Prices Fall 2.0%
Switzerland’s producer and import prices fell by 2.0% year-on-year in April 2026, following a 2.7% decline in the previous month, extending the country’s nearly three-year deflationary streak. The drop was driven by continued decline in producer prices, which remained unchanged at -2.4%, reflecting lower costs for manufactured goods (-2.1%), particularly computer, electronic and optical products, as well as watches (-2.4%). Import prices also continued to drop, though at a slower pace (-1.0% vs -3.2% in March), as a sharp increase in mining and quarrying products (+37.9%) partly offset lower prices for agricultural products (-2.2%) and manufactured goods (-1.4%). On a monthly basis, producer and import prices rose 0.8%, accelerating from a 0.2% gain in March, and well above the expected 0.1% increase, mainly driven by higher prices of petroleum products and natural gas. Basic metals and semi-finished metal products likewise recorded price increases.
2026-05-12