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MONEY

Why 2024 could be a good year for your Swedish finances

After a painful year for many Swedish households, it looks like things may be set to change in 2024, if these experts’ predictions are correct.

Why 2024 could be a good year for your Swedish finances
Things are looking brighter for Swedes' personal finances next year. Photo: Henrik Montgomery/TT

No more key interest rate hikes

Will the key interest rate peak at 4 percent, or will the Riksbank central bank need to hike the rate again to battle inflation? If there aren’t any nasty surprises, most indicators seem to predict that mortgage rates will start to drop next year, with some experts predicting that rates could start to drop as soon as the spring.

Sweden’s National Institute of Economic Research (KI) predicts in its most recent forecast that inflation will drop considerably next year, with the central bank starting to lower interest rates in the summer.

The banks also seem to hold this view – SEB predicts three drops in the key interest rate during 2024, and Nordea is also optimistic.

“Interest rates have peaked,” Nordea economist Anders Stenkrona said.

From crisis management to public spending

The government may also shift focus from crisis management to public spending once inflation starts to fall, economist Shoka Åhrman from pension fund SPP predicts.

This wasn’t possible while inflation was rising, but the situation could change now that things seem to have changed for the better.

“Inflation going down is important, there’ll be a shift there,” she said.

Some crisis management policies will remain, she admitted, like the additional benefit offered to families with young children, which has been extended to June 2024.

It will be possible to start planning again

“When finances become a bit more predictable households have a chance to catch up,” Anders Stenkrona from Nordea said.

It will be possible to plan ahead again, as households are no longer in survival mode trying to cover ever increasing costs. This will make households both better off and more optimistic, he predicts, as well as allowing us to start saving again.

“We’ve seen that saving money has decreased by 60 percent in 2023,” he said. “But now, multiple studies are showing a degree of optimism about the future.”

More stable property market

Lower mortgage rates could mean that the property market becomes more stable. Estate agent statistics predict that there will be more sales taking place in 2024, although other experts, like those at SEB bank, believe that prices will continue to drop slightly in the first half of the year.

“But then they’ll start increasing. In line with interest rates dropping, there’ll be a successive recovery,” SEB economist Amérmico Fernández predicts.

Stock market starts to improve

The stock market is always forward-looking, and often reacts well to positive predictions about the future. The prospect of lower interest rates has already seen improvements on many international stock exchanges, but there could be more to come.

“The markets are tricky and may already have adapted to coming interest rate cuts. But they should react positively to drops to the key interest rate,” Fernández said.

Tax cuts

The Swedish government has also promised various types of tax cuts in 2024, such as cuts to working tax and lowered tax for pensioners.

In addition to this, people born in 1957 will also be given compensation this summer for tax cuts they were promised but did not receive, due to an administrative error.

The cap for RUT and ROT deductions, which can be used to pay for renovations and domestic work such as cleaning and gardening services, will also be raised to 75,000 kronor, while cuts to fuel taxes and the biofuels obligation will lower the price of petrol and diesel, said Shoka Åhrman from SPP.

A stronger krona?

The value of the Swedish krona has already started to improve, and it may continue to rise, which will greatly affect Swedish households, Fernández said.

Many products bought by Swedish consumers are imported – both food and other items like clothes and technology – and a stronger krona increases buying power.

No nasty surprises for energy prices

It doesn’t look like energy prices will be as expensive in 2024 as they have been the past two winters, either. During the first quarter of 2024, the market has priced electricity at around 80 öre per kilowatt hour (kWh), compared with 90 öre for the same period in 2023 and 2.70 kronor in December 2022, according to energy analyst Christian Holz from Merlin & Metis.

“In winter we’ll have much lower energy prices, but not as low as we saw at the beginning of this decade,” he said.

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COST OF LIVING

Will the rise of food prices in Sweden slow down this year?

While food prices in Sweden have surged in recent years, inflation now seems to be slowing down. The Local talks to a financial expert for his predictions on price trends for the rest of the year.

Will the rise of food prices in Sweden slow down this year?

Between August 2021 and May 2024, food prices in Sweden have surged by around 25 percent, according to Statistics Sweden (SCB).

This increase has been especially pronounced in specific categories like fruits, vegetables, and dairy products.

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Some items, such as cauliflower and sugar, have become as much as 70 percent more expensive. Honeydew melon prices have increased by 65.3 percent, and fresh salmon has seen a 61.6 percent rise.

Inflation, which has remained above the central bank’s target of two percent for almost three years, is now approaching normal levels.

At the same time, the rapid increase in food prices has begun to slow down, with recent months showing stabilisation.

But will this development hold throughout 2024?

An expert’s take on 2024 food prices in Sweden

Despite the increases in food prices in recent years, Arturo Arques, a private economist at Swedbank, told The Local Sweden that the outlook for the rest of 2024 is currently more optimistic.

“We believe that food prices will follow the general price trend in Sweden,” Arques said.

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“While some factors like fuel, energy, grain, and mineral fertiliser costs typically lead to higher food prices, we expect relatively stable prices for the remainder of the year,” he added, noting that Swedbank expects food price development to align with the general price development in Sweden.

“We believe that inflation will continue to fall and land close to the Swedish central bank’s inflation target of two percent later this year.”

Lack of competition affecting prices

Last month, the Swedish Competition Authority (Konkurrensverket) announced that price increases for consumers in the country have been higher than those for grocery stores.

The lack of competition in the grocery industry is a significant factor behind this discrepancy, Martin Bäckström of the Swedish Competition Authority told Swedish national public television broadcaster SVT in late June.

“If the competition had worked better, we don’t think the prices would have been as high,” Bäckström said.

He highlighted that the Swedish grocery industry has too few players and too many obstacles for new entrants, which limits competition and keeps prices high.

Bäckström provided an example with butter: during the period measured, the trade price increased by 28 kronor, but the consumer price went up by 36 kronor.

According to the competition authorities, this difference indicates that the cost increases are not entirely justified by trade costs alone.

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