Swiss Inflation Hits Zero as Strong Franc Dampens Import Costs
April inflation rate drops to lowest level in four years, driven by strong franc and declining costs of imported goods, while core inflation slows to 0.6%.
April inflation rate drops to lowest level in four years, driven by strong franc and declining costs of imported goods, while core inflation slows to 0.6%.

"Against this backdrop, we expect the SNB to lower its policy rate to 0% at its June meeting."
"The SNB shouldnât panic about 0% inflation. We have been there before and we will get out of there as well."
Consumer price growth in Switzerland has ground to a complete halt. In a dramatic shift that underscores the cooling of the national economy, annual inflation plummeted to exactly 0% in April, erasing the modest 0.3% gain seen in March. This marks the weakest reading in over four years, defying the expectations of nearly every analyst surveyed by Bloomberg.
The stagnation is absolute. While the rest of the world grapples with sticky prices, Switzerland is confronting the opposite problem: a total evaporation of inflationary pressure. The statistics are starkâprices for consumer goods remain unchanged year-on-year, driven down relentlessly by cheaper imported goods. This isn't just a dip; it is a signal that the economic engine is sputtering under the weight of external forces. As global trade wars loom and uncertainty reigns, the Swiss consumer price index stands frozen, raising immediate questions about the health of the broader economy.
The culprit behind this plummet is clear: a Swiss Franc on steroids. The national currency surged against every major peer in April, acting as a sledgehammer to import costs. As US President Donald Trumpâs volatile tariff policies and fiscal maneuvers send shockwaves through global markets, investors are fleeing to the safety of the Franc. This rush to safety has a double-edged effectâit shields Swiss consumers from global price hikes but crushes domestic inflation dynamics.
Imported goods, particularly energy and fuels, are dragging the index down with brutal efficiency. According to Arthur Jurus of Oddo BHF, the slowdown is almost entirely imported. The Franc's appreciation is effectively subsidizing Swiss consumption, making foreign goods cheaper but simultaneously threatening the competitiveness of Swiss exporters. The currency is no longer just a store of value; it is an economic wrecking ball, smashing inflation targets and complicating the Swiss National Bank's roadmap.
While headline inflation hits rock bottom, a deeper look reveals a fractured economy. Core inflationâstripping out volatile fresh produce and energyâslowed to a mere 0.6%. However, one sector refuses to buckle: housing. Residential rents remain the only major source of structural consumer-price growth. Without the relentless climb in rental costs, Switzerland would already be staring down the barrel of deflation.
In stark contrast, the manufacturing sector is bleeding. Fridayâs data revealed the sharpest drop in factory activity in four years, a casualty of the 'twin shock' of US tariffs and the unyielding Franc. While landlords hike prices, manufacturers are cutting back, squeezed by a currency that makes their products too expensive abroad. This divergence creates a perilous tightrope for policymakers: how to stimulate a manufacturing base in freefall without exacerbating the housing affordability crisis?
The Swiss National Bank (SNB) is now under immense pressure to act. Having already slashed the benchmark rate by 150 basis points in five consecutive cuts to a low of 0.25%, the central bank is running out of room. Markets are now fully pricing in a cut to 0% at the upcoming June 19 meeting. With inflation evaporating, the argument for maintaining positive interest rates is crumbling.
"Against this backdrop, we expect the SNB to lower its policy rate to 0%," asserts UBS economist Maxime Botteron. The threat is real: SNB President Martin Schlegel has warned inflation could dip below zero. While some economists, like Karsten Junius of Bank J Safra Sarasin, argue against panicânoting we have "been there before"âthe momentum is undeniable. A return to sub-zero interest rates, once thought a relic of the past, is now a distinct possibility as the SNB fights to keep the economy from freezing over.
Switzerland stands as a solitary island of stagnation amidst a continent of rising prices. While Swiss inflation flatlines at 0%, the surrounding Euro area is grappling with a rate of 2.2%. This dramatic divergence highlights the unique, almost hermetic nature of the Swiss economy, insulated by its currency but also suffocated by it.
Looking ahead, the outlook is precarious. With energy prices remaining low and the Franc showing no signs of weakening, next monthâs reading could easily slip into negative territoryâofficial deflation. The government has already downgraded growth forecasts, and the trade war reprieve from the US expires in July. Switzerland is navigating uncharted waters, and without a shift in global winds or a decisive intervention from the SNB, the country risks drifting from price stability into economic stagnation.