Brazil's inflation slowed to an annual 5.32pc in May, snapping a three-month upswing since February, according to government statistics agency IBGE.
The country's annualized inflation slowed from 5.53pc in April but was up from 4.56pc in January.
Shelter costs, which include utilities, posted the largest gain in May, rising to an annual 4.53pc from 4pc in April. The acceleration took place thanks to a federal increase in power tariffs last month because of dry weather hampering hydroelectric power generation, which is Brazil's main power source.
Transportation costs decelerated to 4.64pc in May from 5.49pc in April, in part driven by an annualized 13.16pc contraction in airplane tickets. Motor fuels also decelerated to 7.95pc in May from a 9.23pc gain in the month prior. Gasoline, ethanol, diesel and compressed natural gas (CNG) prices all fell in May, following some readjustments by state-controlled Petrobras.
Food and beverage costs slowed to an annual 7.33pc in May from 7.81pc in April. Soybean oil prices eased to 21.1pc from 22.83pc.
Brazil's monthly inflation slowed to 0.26pc in May from 0.43pc in April. That is the third monthly decline and the lowest rate since January.
The country's decelerating inflation is partially thanks to the central bank's course of tightening, hiking its target rate to 14.75pc in early May. That was the sixth increase in a row since September, aimed at cooling the economy and boosting the real currency following sharp depreciation last year.