Europe's economy was just starting to shake off the sting of high energy prices. Now a fresh blow has landed.
The ECB had already raised its key interest rate in June, and further increases were on the table before the truce fell apart. Now, with oil prices rising, the central bank faces a tougher choice between fighting inflation and supporting growth. Over the past year the bank has tightened policy aggressively, but the recent oil price surge hits at a moment when the economy was beginning to recover from the earlier stages of the US-Iran conflict. Traders have already increased their wagers on additional ECB rate increases following the collapse of the ceasefire, betting that the central bank will need to act again.
Valdis Dombrovskis, the European Commission's top economic official, said the outlook is "still clouded with high uncertainty and volatility." Dutch Finance Minister Eelco Heinen put it plainly: "When energy prices go up … That's not a good development." Higher energy bills cause consumers and businesses to trim spending, making it harder for the region to grow.
The European Central Bank targets inflation at 2%. That poses a problem.
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The 2.8% figure surprised many economists, who had predicted a higher reading. This suggests that underlying price pressures may be easing in some areas, yet the fresh energy cost shock from the collapsing US-Iran truce threatens to reverse that progress. The ECB now faces a delicate balancing act between reining in inflation and supporting economic growth.
Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel said policymakers are "back where we started." That signals that the hard-won progress on fighting inflation may be slipping away.
Despite the headwinds, Dombrovskis offered a note of optimism: "all in all we see the European economy is proving resilient in the face of this oil and gas supply shock." But resilience does not mean immunity. The longer energy prices stay elevated, the more they will weigh on spending and investment.
The ECB's previous tightening cycle has already slowed lending and dampened business confidence. Now, with oil costs climbing again, the central bank must decide whether to keep raising rates to choke off inflation or pause to avoid tipping the region into recession. The outcome of this balancing act will ripple through borrowing costs, consumer demand, and corporate earnings across the euro area.
That exemption lets governments spend on energy relief without breaching the EU's 3% deficit threshold, but some nations are pushing for even more room to support households and businesses as oil costs rise.
What to Watch
The ECB's next move on interest rates and the outcome of the finance ministers' budget talks will determine how Europe weathers this new wave of uncertainty. Oil prices remain the wild card - if they stay high, the pressure will only build.
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