The European Central Bank raised interest rates for the first time in nearly three years, betting a quarter-point move can contain inflation before surging energy costs from the Iran war embed deeper into the euro zone economy.
The ECB lifted its benchmark rate to 2.25% from 2% on Thursday, its first increase since mid-2023, as policymakers sought to preempt a wage-price spiral from oil prices that have jumped 26% since the Iran conflict disrupted flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
"We will monitor the magnitude and persistence of energy price increases," ECB President Christine Lagarde told reporters in Frankfurt. "The indirect costs of the Iran war are beginning to show, and a sudden sharp drop in asset prices would pose risks to financial stability."
The decision comes with euro-area inflation at 3.2% in May, more than a percentage point above the ECB's 2% target, while Brent crude trades near $92 a barrel — up from about $73 before the war erupted. Lagarde said the central bank will release a milder scenario forecast, acknowledging that consumers burned by the post-pandemic price surge are reluctant to absorb higher costs. "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 pay," Carsten Brzeski, global chief of macro at ING, said in a note.
The hike places the ECB ahead of the Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan and Bank of England, all of which meet next week. The Fed is expected to hold its key rate steady while removing language that suggested its next move would be a cut, opening the door for a potential hike later this year. For the ECB, the question is whether Thursday's move is a one-off — analysts at ING and elsewhere expect only one or two increases — or the start of a tightening cycle that could choke an economy already showing signs of strain.
Manufacturing has held up so far, in part because firms built inventories to cope with supply-chain disruptions and because of higher defense spending, Lagarde said. The labor market remains resilient, with unemployment at 6.3% in April near historical lows, though surveys point to a slowdown, especially in services. "Labour demand has cooled further, and firms and households expect the labor market to weaken," she said. The first quarter saw additional jobs created, though at a slower pace than in the final three months of 2025.
The last time the ECB raised rates from this level was in mid-2023, when it pushed borrowing costs to a record high to combat the post-pandemic inflation surge. That cycle ended after 10 consecutive increases, and the central bank held at 2% for a full year before Thursday's move. Overnight index swaps now price roughly a 40% probability of another quarter-point hike by year-end, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Rate Differentials Widen Across Europe
The rate increase ripples across European financial markets. German two-year bond yields, the most sensitive to rate expectations, rose 6 basis points to 2.34% after the decision, while the euro strengthened 0.3% against the dollar to $1.0850. The Stoxx Europe 600 index fell 0.5% as investors weighed tighter monetary policy against an economy where services PMI has already slipped below the 50 expansion threshold. Higher borrowing costs also increase the burden on heavily indebted euro-zone governments — Italy's 10-year BTP yield climbed 8 basis points to 3.72%, widening the spread over German bunds to 138 basis points.
Lagarde also called for swift adoption of digital euro legislation, saying it is "essential" for the region's payments infrastructure. The comments came as the ECB balances its inflation mandate against the risk that higher borrowing costs deepen a slowdown in an economy already grappling with the fallout from the Middle East conflict. U.S. producer prices increased more than expected in May, data showed Thursday, leading to the largest annual gain in 3-1/2 years as energy costs surged — a parallel challenge for the Fed as it prepares its own rate decision next week.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.