Oil prices have risen by about 60% in a little over a week amid the war in Iran, a jump that has prompted market participants to ramp up expectations for ECB rate increases to offset energy-driven inflation. Traders are currently pricing roughly 40 basis points of rate hikes this year.
Key members of the European Central Bank have responded to the market reaction by underlining a cautious, data-dependent approach rather than endorsing swift tightening. Their recent remarks highlight an emphasis on the medium-term inflation path, the anchoring of inflation expectations and the uncertainty that the energy-price spike introduces to the outlook.
Isabel Schnabel, ECB board member, March 6
"With inflation projected to be at our target over the medium term and inflation expectations anchored, monetary policy remains in a good place."
"The recent spike in energy prices following the tensions in Iran makes the inflation path more uncertain."
"What matters for monetary policy is the medium-term outlook - that is, whether underlying price dynamics and wage developments are consistent with the target over the policy-relevant horizon. Judged on this basis, the lessons from the pandemic suggest that policymakers must tread carefully."
Christine Lagarde, ECB President, March 5
"The ECB will take its decisions 'in view of all the data that we can harness, and that we can analyse, and that we can scrutinize with sufficient confidence.'"
There is no "preset pace for our monetary policy stance."
"And I think that if you bring these two elements together, it places the ECB and the euro system in a good position to monitor very carefully and to try to understand what the consequences of the current shocks will be in the future."
Olaf Sleijpen, Dutch central bank Governor, March 6
"While I would not use the word nirvana or Goldilocks anymore, I haven’t dramatically changed my view on where we are, which is still a good place. I’m still in the good place ... but everything depends on how this conflict will develop. We are truly data dependent. So, it depends on how things will develop and how we are going to assess those developments going forward."
Jose Luis Escriva, Spanish central bank Governor, March 6
"With the information I have, I think it’s very unlikely that we will touch rates at the next meeting. We can already take it for granted that there will be effects (from the war). Our inflation target of 2% is a medium-term horizon, transitory movements should not necessarily lead us to make decisions. Instead, we must monitor the situation and assess to what extent this is having more persistent effects over time."
Luis de Guindos, ECB Vice President, March 5
"The baseline (is) that this is going to be short-lived. If it is longer, then there is a risk that inflation expectations will change."
Martins Kazaks, Latvia’s central bank governor, March 3
"We should sit tight. I don’t see that we need to rush to do something with policy rates."
Francois Villeroy de Galhau, French central bank Governor, March 5
"I don’t see any reason today why we at the ECB should raise our interest rates. We’ll see meeting after meeting, but today I don’t see any reason."
Joachim Nagel, Bundesbank President, March 5
"This right now is a somewhat different situation (than in 2021/2022)."
"Back then we just came out of the QE (quantitative easing) phase and there was one of the other asset purchase programmes still around that had to be stopped."
Taken together, the remarks from senior ECB officials show a consistent thread: while the energy price shock has increased uncertainty around the inflation path, policymakers broadly favor watching incoming data and assessing whether the recent moves will have lasting effects on underlying price dynamics and wage developments before adjusting policy. Several officials described the likely evolution as contingent on how long the energy-price spike persists and on the development of the conflict driving those prices.
Markets, for their part, have already adjusted expectations in response to the oil move, reflecting the immediate repricing of the potential for monetary tightening. Policymakers, however, repeatedly emphasized the medium-term target for inflation and the need to avoid reacting solely to transitory movements.
For observers and market participants, the central message from the ECB leadership and national central bank governors is clear: current signals warrant close monitoring and a data-driven stance rather than an automatic policy response to the recent surge in energy costs.