Most central banks want to cut rates. Iceland just did the other thing.
The Central Bank of Iceland raised its main rate a quarter point on Wednesday. The new level is 7.75%.
That marks the second hike in two months.
Two months ago, the bank made the same move. It took the rate from 7.25% to 7.50%.
The pace is steady, with two hikes back to back. That puts Iceland alone among western European central banks raising rates this year.
The big banks in the region are still on hold. While those peers wait, the bank's message to markets is simple.
It would rather defend prices now than pay more later.
What's Pushing Prices Up
The bank said price forecasts have climbed. Short-term forecasts are rising the fastest.
Two forces are pushing those forecasts up. Oil and commodity prices are rising as the Middle East war drags on.
Local demand is also keeping prices high inside Iceland.
The bank framed the move as a defense against those pressures. It was not a reply to one inflation print.
Why it matters: A small country with its own money feels import prices fast. The krona moves quickly.
That means rising import costs hit shoppers in Iceland before they hit shoppers in bigger countries.
Price forecasts also feed wage talks. Strong wage growth can push real inflation higher.
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Growth Is Already Slowing
Hiking into a slowdown is a hard call. The bank now sees weaker growth and higher unemployment than it saw in February.
Most banks would pause in that spot. Iceland chose to defend prices instead.
Think of it like a ship sailing into a storm because the other choice is running aground.
Iceland is a small country with a small currency. Its toolbox for slowing import prices is also small.
Raising rates is one of the few levers it has. That holds true even when growth is fading.
Still, higher rates have real costs at home. Mortgage payments and business loans both move with the policy rate.
That trade-off is why the bank moves while bigger peers stand still.
What To Watch
The next rate decision lands in August. By then, oil prices, the krona, and the next inflation print will tell most of the story.
A few things to track between now and then:
- Brent crude. A move back to $120 a barrel keeps the heat on import costs.
- The krona. A weaker krona makes imports more costly.
- Wage talks. Strong wage growth feeds price forecasts.
All three signals point back to the same question. Other banks in western Europe are watching to see if a third hike follows, since Iceland tends to move first and other small economies often follow.
The Bank of England and the ECB both held rates in their last meetings, and neither has signaled a hike yet.
With those two still on hold, Iceland's central bank has been clear. It will raise more if inflation does not cool.
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