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A rate hike and then what? Our ECB preview in World Economy News 05/06/2026 Anything but a rate hike at the 11 June ECB meeting would be a big surprise. The ECB is not facing a textbook case of de-anchoring inflation expectations (yet) but rather the expected scenario of increasing actual headline inflation, with higher energy prices showing knock-on effects on other parts of the economy. At the same time, however, actual headline inflation developments are still broadly in line with the ECB’s March projections, while core inflation has turned out somewhat higher. Looking ahead, for inflation in the eurozone, the only way is currently up. Not a sharp up but a rather moderate and gradual lift. While the knock-on effects of higher energy prices on other prices, like transportation and food, will be hard to avoid, the latest survey-based inflation expectations have come down a bit. Selling price expectations in both industry and services, but also the ECB’s own longer-term consumer inflation expectations, all dropped slightly in May. Definitely not enough to give an all-clear but surely sufficient to support our view of only a gradual and limited increase in inflation over the coming months. Reasons for this view are still the absence of substantial fiscal support against higher energy prices (compared with 2022) and much lower saving ratios than in 2022. In short, the pass-through of higher energy and input prices to final consumption will be limited due to a lack of ability and willingness of consumers to actually pay for these higher prices. Even as some critics argue the ECB risks repeating its 2022 mistake of reacting too late to an obvious inflation shock, the comparison with that period is flawed – not least in terms of fiscal stimulus and savings. Back in 2022, eurozone inflation was already above 4% YoY when the energy price shock hit. The ECB’s infamous late reaction came with the first rate hike in July 2022, when headline inflation was actually above 8% YoY
A rate hike and then what? Our ECB preview
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