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ECB wary of premature hike at March meeting, accounts show

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on April 16, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: April 17, 2026

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ECB wary of premature hike at March meeting, accounts show
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FRANKFURT, April 16 (Reuters) - European Central Bank policymakers were wary of raising interest rates prematurely when they met last month amid growing fears of a new energy-driven surge in euro zone

ECB Hesitates on Early Rate Hike as Energy-Driven Inflation Threatens Outlook

ECB Policy Meeting and Inflation Concerns

FRANKFURT, April 16 (Reuters) - European Central Bank policymakers were wary of raising interest rates prematurely when they met last month amid growing fears of a new energy-driven surge in euro zone inflation, accounts of the gathering showed on Thursday.

The ECB kept its key interest rate at 2% at the March 18-19 meeting and policymakers are inclined to do so again this month, judging they don't have enough evidence to conclude that the Iran war would durably raise inflation in the bloc.

Baseline Projections and Scenario Planning

The central bank's baseline projections, published at the time of the March meeting, assumed the hit from the Iran war would be short-lived. But they were accompanied by adverse and severe scenarios that incorporate a sharper increase in energy prices, greater uncertainty and international spillover.

Monitoring Data and Policy Response

"Incoming data could then be monitored to assess which scenario seemed to be crystallising, thereby facilitating swift policy action if necessary," the ECB said in its account of the meeting.

"At the same time, it was important not to act prematurely on the basis of adverse or severe scenarios, unless incoming data suggested that they were becoming increasingly likely."

Market Reactions and Analyst Commentary

ING's global head of macro Carsten Brzeski said the accounts showed the ECB had turned "hawkish" - minded to raise rates - but "in no hurry to react".

April Policy Outlook

Uncertainty Over Timing of Rate Hike

APRIL MAY BE TOO EARLY

Policymakers hoped they would have more information about the duration and extent of the war at their following April 29-30 meeting but acknowledged it may still be too early to draw conclusions about the implications for inflation.

Key Indicators to Watch

They said they would monitor inflation expectations, selling prices, companies' profits, labour market data, underlying inflation figures and supply chain disruptions among key factors.

"All of this would help to assess whether developments were moving in line with the baseline outlook or one of the scenarios, even though it might still be difficult to judge whether there was a threat to the price stability objective," the ECB said.

ECB's Future Stance

ECB President Christine Lagarde has since said the central bank would respond in a forceful or persistent way if inflation looked set to sit well above its 2% target for an extended period, but even a more modest overshoot could call for a "measured" rate move.

(Reporting by Francesco CanepaEditing by Peter Graff)

Key Takeaways

  • The ECB maintained its key rates (deposit facility 2%, MRO 2.15%, marginal lending 2.40%) at the March 18‑19 meeting, citing significant uncertainty from the Iran war and energy price volatility. (finance.yahoo.com)
  • New staff projections revised baseline inflation higher—2.6% in 2026—while stressing that deviations in inflation could arise depending on the conflict’s trajectory, prompting contingency planning under adverse or severe scenarios. (ecb.europa.eu)
  • ECB officials signaled readiness to respond forcefully or persistently if inflation overshoots the 2% target durably, yet remain cautious about premature tightening without confirming data alignment with stress scenarios. (apnews.com)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did the ECB hold interest rates at 2% in March?
The ECB kept rates unchanged due to uncertainty about whether the Iran war's impact on inflation would be long-lasting.
What risks influenced the ECB’s March policy decision?
Rising energy prices and potential spillover from international events, including the Iran war, were key risks.
What data will the ECB monitor before changing rates?
The ECB will track inflation expectations, selling prices, company profits, labor market data, underlying inflation, and supply chain disruptions.
When might the ECB reconsider its rate policy?
Policymakers hope to have more information at the April 29-30 meeting, though even then it may be too early for a decision.
How could the ECB react if inflation stays above target?
The ECB could respond forcefully or persistently, or make a measured rate move depending on the extent of inflation overshoot.

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