In brief
- The European Central Bank (ECB) raised its three key interest rates by 25bps at its June Monetary Policy meeting, its first interest rate increase since September 2023.
- Notably, this was the first rate hike by a G-7 central bank since the start of the Middle East conflict.
- New staff forecasts revised inflation higher and growth lower through 2027, with the Middle East conflict cited as the primary driver.
- ECB’s President Lagarde rejected the “insurance hike” label, signalling this is unlikely to be a one-and-done move. We expect a follow up hike in September.
Policy decision
The ECB raised its three key interest rates by 25 basis points at its June 2026 meeting, the first increase since September 2023, reiterating its commitment to returning inflation to the 2% medium-term target. The Governing Council stressed a data-dependent, meeting-by-meeting approach, stating it is not pre-committing to any particular rate path, while reaffirming its readiness to adjust all instruments as needed to ensure inflation stabilises sustainably at target and to preserve smooth monetary policy transmission.
Inflation and growth forecasts
New staff macroeconomic projections revised inflation higher and growth lower across the forecast horizon relative to the March release.
The Governing Council attributed the majority of the upward inflation revisions to the war in the Middle East, noting that the outlook remains skewed to the upside. President Lagarde stopped short of explicitly citing second-round effects, but acknowledged that the energy shock is broadening into prices, most notably services. We interpret the June hike as a move to reduce the risk that higher energy costs become embedded in wages and broader service-sector inflation.
Financial conditions and stability
The ECB noted tighter financial conditions, with market-based debt issuance costs higher and lending rates broadly steady. It assessed the banking sector as resilient but cautioned that financial stability risks could rise if asset prices fall sharply amid persistent geopolitical conflict.
What comes next?
Following the Monetary Policy Committee meeting, at the press conference President Lagarde declined to signal the path for future rate decisions, describing today’s move as “correct and robust” and explicitly rejecting the characterisation of an insurance hike. That framing, combined with the upside inflation outlook, suggests this is unlikely to be a one-and-done move.
We believe the ECB will be reluctant to hike at consecutive meetings, to avoid cementing expectations of a steepening path. We expect another hike is likely, but not back-to-back, absent a material deterioration in activity or inflation dynamics, September appears the more probable timing. Markets seemed to agree: shortly after the press conference, pricing implied around 8bps of tightening for July and 26bps for September.
Strategy implications
The deposit rate increase takes effect on 17 June. The yield on the EUR Low Volatility Net Asset Value (LVNAV) strategy is expected to increase on this date by around 10 basis points. This reflects higher returns on overnight reverse repo and time deposits, as well as the contribution from floating‑rate assets held in the strategy. Yields are likely to rise further over the reserve period as maturing holdings are reinvested at higher prevailing rates.
Given the strategy’s target weighted average maturity (WAM) of around 45 days and its high liquidity profile, reinvestment can be implemented relatively quickly as market rates adjust. If policy rates increase further, reinvestment at higher levels could continue to support the strategy’s yield over the coming months.