| Prices for fresh fruit rose at a faster pace year over year in May (+5.3%) compared with April (-0.5%). Berries and grapes mostly drove the acceleration. On a year-over-year basis, prices for fresh vegetables increased 9.0% in May, following a 4.1% rise in April. The upward movement was attributed to higher prices for broccoli, cauliflower, tomatoes and lettuce. Tomato prices rose 45.2% in May due to supply contractions in Mexico, stemming from poor weather and a reduction in planted acreage following the implementation of US tariffs.
On a month-over-month basis, prices for fresh vegetables rose 5.5% in May following a decline of 3.9% in April. This is the largest monthly increase in May since 2008 and is attributed to reduced supply and higher fuel costs.
Collectively, higher prices for fresh fruit and fresh vegetables contributed to an acceleration in inflation for food purchased from stores, rising 4.3% year over year in May, the 16th consecutive month it has outpaced headline inflation on a year-over-year basis. Food prices will continue to rise, reflecting a 40% increase in nitrogen fertilizer prices during the planting season.
Shelter inflation continued to moderate in May, with prices rising 1.7% year-over-year, down slightly from 1.8% in April. The homeowners’ replacement cost index fell 2.5%, marking its 13th consecutive decline. Other owned accommodation expenses, including real estate commissions, decreased 2.1% following a 2.7% drop in April. Meanwhile, mortgage interest costs edged lower, declining 0.2% year-over-year compared with a 0.1% decline in April, extending a 33-month trend of slowing mortgage cost inflation.
Rent inflation also eased modestly, rising 3.5% from a year earlier versus 3.6% in April, the slowest pace of rent growth since January 2022.
Price growth for durable goods was unchanged at 1.9% year-over-year in both April and May. A notable source of upward pressure came from computer equipment, software, and supplies, where prices rose 3.9% after declining 0.2% in April. Higher costs for key components such as random-access memory (RAM) and solid-state drives (SSDs), driven by strong demand from artificial intelligence data centres and limited production capacity, contributed to the increase.
Offsetting some of these gains, price growth slowed across several other durable goods categories. Increases were more modest for tools and household equipment (+1.1%) and passenger vehicles (+2.5%), while prices for household appliances fell 5.7% year-over-year, a steeper decline than previously recorded.
Bottom Line
Today’s inflation report reinforces our view that higher gasoline prices will temporarily boost headline inflation while further eroding household purchasing power. However, these energy-driven increases, largely tied to geopolitical tensions, are unlikely to trigger a broader surge in underlying inflation. While food and transportation continue to account for a disproportionate share of price growth, inflationary pressures across the economy are generally moderating amid a softer labour market and slowing domestic demand.
May data support our base-case scenario that the Bank of Canada will remain on hold through the remainder of 2026. Policymakers will continue to closely monitor incoming inflation data and stand ready to tighten policy if price pressures broaden and become more persistent, but for now, underlying inflation trends remain consistent with a patient, wait-and-see approach. |