Last month, economists thought the ECB would hike rates once this year. They just doubled the call.
A new Bloomberg survey done May 4-7 now sees two quarter-point hikes coming. One in June. One in September.
The reason: the Iran war is pushing oil prices up and inflation along with it.
Why The Outlook Flipped
The ECB has held its deposit rate at 2% all year. Inflation kept easing, growth was slow, and most of Europe expected a cutting cycle.
The Iran war ended that talk. Oil prices jumped. The ECB's own team now sees euro area inflation at 2.7% in 2026 - a real overshoot of the 2% target.
When inflation moves that fast in one quarter, central banks tend to act. Markets have already started pricing it in.
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Two Hikes In Six Months
The market had been pricing in at least two moves. Now economists agree.
ECB official Peter Kazimir said this month that a June hike is "all but inevitable." Bundesbank chief Joachim Nagel said the outlook has shifted to a worse case because of the war.
For European investors, two hikes in six months tightens money in a real way. Loan rates rise. Home refinance slows. Bank stocks tend to gain from wider net interest margins.
A simple read: anything that pays a yield gets a lift. Anything that needs to borrow takes a hit.
Why It Matters For US Investors
The euro area is the second-biggest bond market in the world. When the ECB shifts gears, money flows shift with it.
Higher rates in Europe tend to lift the euro too. That can pull cash out of US Treasuries and into Bund yields. It pushes US rates up too.
The read for US investors is simple. A hawkish ECB means higher rates for longer than the market thought six months ago.
The Sector Read
Two hikes won't crush growth. They will pinch borrowing costs.
Real estate and small caps tend to feel ECB hikes first. European bank shares often gain. The euro tends to climb against the dollar.
For US-listed European ETFs, that's a mixed bag. Currency gains help unhedged funds. Rate-sensitive holdings inside them can drag.
The iShares MSCI Eurozone ETF (EZU) is the most direct way to play it. The big euro bank names like Banco Santander and BNP Paribas have already started to move.
What's Next
Inflation is set to fall back to 2.1% in 2027 if the war pressure eases. The rate hikes could be one-and-done this cycle. Cuts could be back on the table next year.
The bigger swing factor is oil. If crude pulls back, so does the case for two hikes. If the war drags on, the ECB could have to do more than two.
For now, the path from here runs through Frankfurt in June. The ECB meets on the 5th.
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