Economy June 11, 2026 08:20 AM

ECB lifts rates as energy-driven inflation risks mount

Policy move aims to contain spillover from Middle East conflict while navigating a slowing euro-area economy

By Sofia Navarro
Share
Twitter Reddit Facebook LinkedIn

The European Central Bank raised interest rates on Thursday in a widely signalled step aimed at preventing a surge in energy costs tied to the Iran war from translating into broader inflation. The bank upgraded its inflation outlook and trimmed growth forecasts, underscoring a delicate balance between reining in price pressures and avoiding a deeper economic slowdown.

ECB lifts rates as energy-driven inflation risks mount
Summarize with
ChatGPT Perplexity Claude Grok Gemini

Key Points

  • ECB raised benchmark rates - deposit rate to 2.25% and refinancing rate to 2.4%.
  • Inflation projections were increased: 2026 forecast to 3.0% (from 2.6%) and 2027 to 2.3% (from 2.0%); growth outlook for 2026 was lowered to 0.8% (from 0.9%) with 1.2% growth expected the following year.
  • Sectors and markets affected include energy (oil and gas price dynamics), financial markets (interest-rate expectations), and households and firms facing higher borrowing costs.

The European Central Bank increased interest rates on Thursday, responding to inflationary pressures linked to rising oil and gas costs as a result of the Iran war. The bank said the move, long anticipated by markets and economic actors, was intended to curb the risk that a spike in energy prices would lead to sustained higher inflation across the euro area.

Surging oil and gas prices have contributed to inflation above 3% across the 21-nation euro zone in the most recent month - well above the ECB's 2% objective - and the central bank said further increases in inflation were likely if the conflict persists longer than many had expected. "The war in the Middle East is generating inflation pressures, and the decision to raise rates is robust across a range of scenarios mapping out how the shock might evolve and affect the medium-term outlook for the euro area," the ECB said in its statement.

At the same time, the ECB updated its inflation forecasts upward. The bank raised its 2026 inflation projection to 3.0% from 2.6% projected in March, and moved its 2027 outlook to 2.3% from 2.0%. Those revisions accompany a modest downgrade in growth expectations: the ECB lowered its 2026 economic growth forecast to 0.8% from 0.9% three months ago and projected growth of 1.2% for the following year.

Policy makers signalled the rate increase well in advance, in part to anchor longer-term price expectations among firms and households. Despite financial markets pricing in the possibility of two additional hikes over the coming year on the back of the deteriorating price outlook, the ECB cautioned that any further tightening would likely be measured because the bloc's economy is already weakening and sharply higher borrowing costs could raise the risk of a recession.

With this decision, the ECB's main policy rates were raised: the benchmark deposit rate now stands at 2.25% and the refinancing rate at 2.4%. The central bank highlighted that the outlook remains uncertain, with upside risks to inflation and downside risks to economic growth.

Attention is expected to focus on the 1245 GMT press conference by ECB President Christine Lagarde and newly inaugurated Vice President Boris Vujcic, where officials will outline how they see the path ahead given the competing pressures of elevated inflation and slowing activity.

The policymaker statement and the altered projections make clear the challenge facing the ECB - tempering inflation expectations without inflicting disproportionate harm on an already stuttering economy. The bank described the decision as robust across multiple scenarios mapping the potential evolution of the shock and its medium-term implications for the euro area.


Summary

The ECB raised interest rates and revised up its inflation projections while trimming growth forecasts, citing energy-price pressures tied to the Iran war and signalling a cautious approach to further policy tightening.

Risks

  • The Iran war-induced surge in energy prices could broaden into sustained higher inflation, putting further upward pressure on consumer prices - impacting energy markets and household budgets.
  • Sharper increases in borrowing costs risk tipping the already stuttering euro-area economy into recession, affecting firms and financial markets sensitive to credit conditions.
  • The economic outlook is uncertain with upside risks to inflation and downside risks to growth, complicating policy choices for the ECB and creating volatility in rate-sensitive sectors.

More from Economy

World Bank trims 2026 global growth forecast to 2.5% amid Middle East conflict Jun 11, 2026 Kenya pares back 2026 growth outlook, cites Middle East conflict Jun 11, 2026 Romania's National Bank Seeks Clarification from Competition Authority Over Antitrust Findings Jun 11, 2026 Emaar Unveils Plan for 4.5 Million Sq m Dubai District Valued at 200 Billion Dirhams Jun 11, 2026 Elevated U.S. Mortgage Rates Set to Keep Housing Activity Muted Through 2028, Poll Shows Jun 11, 2026