The cooling of oil prices below $73 a barrel has outperformed the ECB’s initial projections, yet the central bank’s leadership warns that the energy shock remains embedded in the system. Chief economist Philip Lane noted that prices hovering above pre-conflict levels act as a sustained cost-increasing impulse. Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel echoed this sentiment, admitting the rapid decline caught officials off guard but cautioning that supply constraints and inventory replenishment will likely keep inflation significantly above target.
Market expectations for a July rate increase have softened, currently sitting at roughly 33%. While another tightening move remains under consideration, the urgency has shifted. Belgian central bank chief Pierre Wunsch suggested that the case for immediate action has diminished, indicating that if a further hike is necessary, it is unlikely to materialize as early as next month. Investors now view a full-point increase as a certainty only by December, leaving the ECB to weigh the benefits of patience against the risk of entrenched inflationary cycles.

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