Drag of lower food prices helps slow inflation to 1.2%, while retail sales rise
OTTAWA — The country’s annual inflation rate rang in below expectations last month at 1.2 per cent, largely under the weight of lower food costs, Statistics Canada said Thursday.
The national inflation reading for November was weaker than October’s rate of 1.5 per cent, the federal agency’s latest consumer price index found. A consensus of economists had predicted 1.4 per cent inflation for November, according to Thomson Reuters.
Statistics Canada also released unexpectedly strong retail trade figures Thursday that showed October sales were up 1.1 per cent compared to September — a third straight monthly gain.
Taken together, the fresh numbers for retail sales and inflation should be seen as a positive, said CIBC chief economist Avery Shenfeld.


