Eurozone inflation jumps amid Iran conflict, ECB rate cut unlikely

1 hour ago 1



Euro-area companies expect significantly higher selling prices and input costs due to the ongoing Iran conflict, and the likelihood of the ECB announcing a 50+ basis points rate cut at the April meeting sits at just 0.1% YES.

Market reaction

The 50+ bps rate cut market is effectively unchanged despite escalated inflation expectations. Eurozone inflation jumped to 2.6% in March from 1.9% in February, and traders see minimal chance of a cut at the upcoming meeting. The market is thin, trading at $1/day actual USDC, with just $54 needed to move odds by 5 percentage points.

Why it matters

The ECB is caught between rising inflation and economic contraction. Gas prices are up 70% and oil 60% since the conflict began, making aggressive rate cuts unlikely. The eurozone’s April PMI of 48.6, the weakest in 18 months, adds pressure from the other direction: the economy is shrinking while prices climb.

What to watch

Inflation pressures from the Iran war suggest the ECB may hold rates steady or hike. Buying YES at 0.1¢ would pay $1 if a 50+ bps cut happens, a 1,000x return. For that bet to make sense, traders would need to believe in a rapid and dramatic economic shift.

Key signals: ECB President Christine Lagarde’s upcoming statements and eurozone inflation data releases. Any indication of policy shifts or new economic data could move expectations.

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