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Inflation threats heat up but ECB to keep rates on ice this year, say economists: Reuters poll

By Thomson Reuters Mar 13, 2026 | 5:59 AM

By Indradip Ghosh

BENGALURU, March 13 (Reuters) – Long-held expectations the European Central Bank will keep its deposit rate steady through the end of this year remain intact among economists polled by Reuters, despite rising inflation threats from war in the Middle East.

Global oil prices surged as much ​as around 70% after the U.S.-Israel war on Iran began on the last day of ‌February, putting the euro zone’s steady inflation outlook on notice and reviving memories of the cost-of-living crisis during the pandemic.

Policymakers have acknowledged the threat from rising energy costs and signalled they were ready to act if inflation shows signs of sticking. Germany’s rate‑sensitive 2-year Schatz yield has jumped around 40 basis points, hinting markets are expecting tighter policy soon.

Interest rate futures are fully pricing ‌a ​rate hike by end-July and about a 55% chance of a second ⁠one by end-December. But economists polled ⁠by Reuters March 9-13 stuck to their long‑held view of steady rates.

Over 90% – 67 of 72 – expected the ECB to hold its deposit rate at 2% through 2026 – an outlook unchanged since October. Only three predicted a hike this year while two expected at least one cut.

However, that outlook is ​on shaky ground.

“There is still no reason for the ECB to panic but installing a panic room within that ‘good place’ might not seem like such a bad idea for now,” said Carsten Brzeski, global head ⁠of macro at ING.

“At this point anything is possible from ⁠a short-lived episode of higher oil prices and some supply chain frictions to a ​full-blown energy crisis. The big question for the ECB is therefore no longer how to react to an inflation ​undershooting but rather how to react to another oil price shock.”

With oil prices still ‌up around 45%, economists have nudged up their just-below-2% inflation outlook to reflect the energy shock.

Headline inflation, which rose to 1.9% last month from 1.7% in January, is expected to average 2.3% next quarter, up from 1.9% in this one – an uptick from 1.9% and 1.7% predicted last month. For the whole year it was ⁠predicted to average 2.0% compared to 1.8% in last month’s poll.

A weakening euro, down nearly 3% against the dollar since the war began, might add to inflationary pressures.

The central bank is also due to provide updated economic ⁠forecasts on March 19.

“The ECB is ‌ready and willing to act to avoid a repeat of the 2022-2023 inflation ⁠shock. Saying this loudly and clearly might be the best way of ensuring ​that inflation ‌expectations remain well anchored,” noted Mark Wall, chief economist at Deutsche Bank.

“2026 ​is not 2022, ⁠but the risk of persistence is not negligible.”

The growth outlook was steady. The euro zone economy, which grew 0.2% in the final quarter of 2025, is expected to expand between 0.3%-0.4% through 2026, according to the latest poll.

Full-year growth is forecast at 1.2% in 2026 and 1.4% in 2027, an outlook broadly unchanged since August.

(Other stories from the Reuters global economic poll)

(Reporting by Indradip Ghosh; Polling by Jaiganesh Mahesh and Debrah Gomes; Editing by Hari ​Kishan, Ross Finley, Peter Graff)