ECB Hikes Rates 25bps, Targets 3% Inflation for 2026
The European Central Bank (ECB) raised its three key policy rates by 25-basis points at its June 2026 meeting, marking its first hike since 2023.
The widely anticipated decision reflects growing concern over renewed inflationary pressures, driven largely by rising energy costs linked to the Iran conflict and disruptions in oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz.
Policymakers stressed their commitment to anchoring inflation at the 2% medium-term target, noting that the current geopolitical environment is amplifying risks.
The move was broadly supported across different economic scenarios, making the ECB the first major central bank to tighten policy in response to the latest inflation shock, with others such as the Bank of Japan expected to follow while the Federal Reserve and Bank of England are likely to remain on hold until later in the year.
Alongside the rate hike, the bank also revised its macroeconomic projections, signalling a weaker growth outlook and higher inflation than previously anticipated. Headline inflation is now expected to average 3.0% in 2026 and 2.3% in 2027, while core inflation is projected at 2.5% for both years.
At the same time, GDP growth forecasts were slightly downgraded to 0.8% for 2026 and 1.2% for 2027, reflecting the lingering drag from a prolonged energy shock.
Looking further ahead, the ECB expects inflation to ease to 2.0% by 2028 and growth to recover modestly to 1.5%, underscoring a gradual normalisation as geopolitical pressures subside.
Moving forward, the ECB emphasised that the economic outlook remains highly uncertain, with upside risks to inflation and downside risks to growth, largely dependent on the intensity and duration of the energy shock stemming from the war.
It highlighted that the broader impact will also be shaped by indirect and second-round effects across the economy.
While the Governing Council believes it is well positioned to navigate these challenges and will continue to monitor developments closely, officials stressed that they are not pre-committing to any specific future path for interest rates. Wall St, European Markets Surge on AI Stock Rally Ahead of SpaceX Debut

