Spain’s producer price index (PPI) registered a sharper year-over-year decline in February 2026, underscoring persistent disinflationary forces at the factory gate. According to data updated on 25 March 2026, Spanish PPI fell by 7.0% in February compared with the same month a year earlier, a significantly steeper drop than January’s 2.9% year-over-year decline.
The acceleration in the fall of producer prices suggests weakening cost pressures in the industrial sector, which could, over time, feed into lower consumer price inflation. The February reading, measured on a year-over-year basis, indicates that producers are facing notably lower input and output prices than in February of the previous year, extending the downward trend seen at the start of 2026.
For policymakers and markets, the deeper negative PPI reading may be interpreted as additional evidence that inflationary pressures in Spain are cooling from the production side. While this may relieve pressure on margins for some energy- and input-intensive industries, it can also reflect softer demand dynamics, raising questions about the strength of the broader economic recovery.