BERLIN (Reuters) - Annual inflation in Europe's largest economy looks set to sink in November to the lowest rate in up to five years, according to data from some German states on Thursday.
Data from three federal states showed yearly inflation easing, while price pressure remained stable in a fourth. The yearly readings were all well below the European Central Bank's target for close to but just under 2 percent over the medium term in the euro zone.
In North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany's most populous state and a bellwether for the national rate, consumer price inflation eased to 0.7 percent year-on-year from 1.0 percent in October, hitting the lowest level since February 2010.
A Reuters poll conducted ahead of the states' data releases found economists expected national inflation harmonised to compare with other European countries - the ECB's preferred measure - to slow to 0.6 percent from 0.7 percent.
Analyst Jennifer McKeown from Capital Economics said the state data released so far pointed to a fall to 0.4 percent, which she said would be the lowest reading in five years.
"With inflation set to remain far below target in the euro-zone's largest and arguably strongest economy, the ECB will remain under intense pressure to provide more policy support," she said.
Earlier, Spain reported prices falling for the fifth month running.
Preliminary euro zone inflation data, due out on Friday, is expected to show the annual rate slowing to 0.3 percent from 0.4 percent, according to a Reuters poll. The ECB considers anything below 1 percent to be in its deflation "danger zone".
The ECB has started buying covered bonds and asset-backed securities to revive the euro zone economy and keep deflation at bay. It may decide as soon as the first quarter of next year whether to begin buying sovereign bonds.
The Pan-German inflation figures are due to be published at 1300 GMT.
(Reporting by Stephen Brown and Michael Nienaber Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)