The Swiss economic system printed one other decline in inflation as anticipated, supporting expectations of additional easing by the SNB. Headline CPI fell 0.2% month-on-month in September, following the earlier 0.1% drop.
Key Takeaways from the September Swiss CPI
- Headline figures disappoint: The Swiss CPI fell 0.2% month-over-month in September, with annual inflation holding at 0.2% in comparison with the identical month final 12 months
- Core inflation stays subdued: Core inflation (excluding recent and seasonal merchandise, power, and gas) registered simply 0.7% year-over-year, whereas month-to-month core CPI declined 0.2%.
- Downward value pressures dominated: The month-to-month decline was pushed by decrease costs for supplementary lodging and resorts, worldwide bundle holidays, air transport, and rent of personal transport.
Hyperlink to official Swiss Client Value Index (September 2025)
The weak spot was in core inflation was broad-based, with home merchandise down 0.3% month-over-month and imported merchandise falling 0.1%. These decreases offset will increase in knitwear, berries, and lounge furnishings.
The report raised recent questions concerning the efficacy of the Swiss Nationwide Financial institution’s financial easing cycle, placing further strain on policymakers to contemplate intervention measures.
With the coverage charge already at zero and reviews indicating 5.1 billion CHF in international foreign money purchases by Q2, analysts recommend FX intervention stays the extra speedy coverage lever quite than pushing charges into detrimental territory.
Market Reactions
Swiss Franc vs. Main Currencies: 5-min

Overlay of CHF vs. Main Currencies Chart by TradingView
The Swiss franc, which was already treading progressively decrease main as much as the CPI launch, turned broadly decrease upon seeing the numbers affirm a steeper fall in value pressures in comparison with the earlier month.
CHF managed to recuperate briefly on profit-taking towards a few of its friends because the London session progressed, though it held on to losses towards NZD (+0.10%), GBP (+0.04%), and EUR (-0.04%) for a number of extra hours earlier than rebounding. The franc additionally erased its post-CPI dip versus AUD (+0.14%) and CAD (+0.02%) to wind up in constructive territory earlier than the session closed.