ECB officials have revised inflation forecasts upward due to the war’s impact on energy supplies. The likelihood of a 50+ bps rate decrease at the April 2026 meeting sits at
Market reaction
Markets are not pricing in any meaningful chance of a rate decrease despite the ongoing Middle East conflict. The odds for a 50+ bps cut are virtually unchanged, with inflation concerns dominating any case for easing. With inflation now projected to reach 2.6% in 2026, the ECB is expected to maintain or raise rates. Traders can explore this outlook further on Polymarket.
Why it matters
The market for a 50+ bps decrease in April is thin: only $2 in actual USDC traded against a face value of $3,767. It takes just $36 to move the market 5 percentage points, meaning even a modest trade could shift the odds significantly. The near-zero pricing reflects broad agreement that the ECB’s next move is more likely a hold or a hike than a cut.
The war-driven inflation picture could represent a lasting shift in ECB policy direction rather than a short-term disruption. The absence of a rate hike so far signals caution amid volatile conditions, but the upward revision to inflation forecasts narrows the ECB’s room for any future easing.
What to watch
Public statements from ECB President Christine Lagarde or Chief Economist Philip Lane on monetary policy direction. Changes in the geopolitical situation and energy markets that could move inflation expectations and, by extension, ECB decisions. Any shift in ECB communications language around the inflation target timeline.
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