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Euro Zone Inflation could Stay High Despite Peace: Lane

  • Inflation may stay above target well into 2027
  • Oil prices moving towards milder scenario
  • Market sees at least one more rate hike
  • 'Fair amount of momentum in the economy' -Lane

FRANKFURT, June 23 (Reuters) - Euro ​zone inflation could stay above the European Central Bank's 2% target for some time, even ‌if peace in the Middle East holds, but this shock still only requires a measured policy response, ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane said on Tuesday.

The ECB raised interest rates this month to prevent higher energy prices from pushing up longer-term inflation expectations, and financial markets ​see at least one more move towards the end of the year, even as energy prices ​have fallen well below recent highs.

Speaking to European lawmakers in Brussels, Lane said inflation ⁠could remain well above target into the first half of 2027 after it rose above 3% last month.

"While ​recent progress towards a resolution of the conflict in the Middle East is welcome, uncertainty remains elevated and ​there are continued risks for inflation to stay above our 2% medium-term target for quite some time," Lane said.

"We're taking a measured approach," he told the European Parliament's ECON committee. "This is not a kind of huge, gigantic response. It's a calibrated response ​to what we see."

However, charts published along with Lane's speech also showed that the recent fall in prices ​now puts oil more firmly between the bank's 'baseline' and 'milder' scenarios.

While these scenarios do not directly foreshadow the next policy decision, ‌a move ⁠towards the milder outcome lowers any urgency for the ECB to follow its June hike already next month.

Indeed, markets see just a one in five chance of a hike in July and the next move is fully priced in only for December.

Still, Peter Kazimir, Slovakia's central bank chief and one of the most hawkish voices on ​the ECB's Governing Council, ​said the ECB's job was ⁠not yet done because peace will not instantly reverse the inflation damage.

"I think the direction is clear and I think we still have work to do," he ​said at a Slovak central bank news conference.

An argument for early action is ​that unless inflation ⁠is nipped in the bud, it risked setting off a self-reinforcing wage-price spiral that could be harder to extinguish later.

Lane added that high inflation and expensive energy will weigh on economic activity but the impact will be muted ⁠given a ​solid labour market, heavy investment into AI, and public spending on ​defence and infrastructure.

"It’s lower growth than we had hoped for but this is far above a stagnating economy," Lane said. "There is a ​fair amount of momentum in the economy."

Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Susan Fenton

Source: Reuters


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