September inflation settling at 6.6 to 7.4% — BSP
This could be partially offset by the decline in local fuel prices and lower meat prices.
This could be partially offset by the decline in local fuel prices and lower meat prices.

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A weakened peso and rising commodities prices and electricity rates could drive the September inflation between 6.6 to 7.4 percent, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas forecasted Friday.
Last August, the country's consumer price index reached 6.3 percent after five consecutive months of acceleration.
The BSP said September inflation "is expected to be driven by the increase in electricity rates and prices of key food commodities, as well as by the depreciation of the peso."
During the intraday trading on 29 September, the Philippine peso touched P59:$1 from the P58.98 close on Wednesday.
"This could be partially offset by the decline in local fuel prices and lower meat prices. Looking ahead, the BSP will continue to monitor emerging price developments to enable timely intervention to prevent the further broadening of price pressures, following the BSP's price stability mandate," the BSP said in a statement Friday.
Still optimistic
Meanwhile, Finance Secretary Benjamin Diokno expressed optimism that the country's improving investment climate will enable the government to reach its medium-term goals.
"As we improve the investment attractiveness of our domestic economy, I am confident that we will be able to meet the growth targets indicated in our Medium-Term Fiscal Framework," said Secretary Diokno in a pre-recorded keynote during the Inside ASEAN: The Philippines forum organized by credit rater Moody's Investors Services.
The Inside ASEAN forum hosted discussions on the ongoing risks confronting the Philippines, such as inflation, rising energy prices, spillovers from the Russia-Ukraine crisis, and the country's economic recovery outlook, which investors graced, corporates, issuers, and multilateral banks.
Recently, Moody's reaffirmed the country's Baa2 rating with a stable outlook, citing the resilience of the country's economic recovery to external pressures and the government's commitment to policy continuity.