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Euro zone inflation softens to 8.5% in February as ECB signals interest rate hiking is not over

All perceptions on the latest inflation numbers out of the euro zone as market players consider what the ECB will do next.

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New evidence out of the euro zone on Thursday suggested that inflation is taking a while to come down significantly, raising scenes of further rate hikes in the region in the coming months.

Headline inflation across the 20-member bloc came in at 8.5% in February, contract to preliminary data released Thursday. This indicates that prices are not coming down at the pace that had been indexed in recent months. Headline inflation stood as high as 10.6% in October, but reached a revised 8.6% in January.

Analysts canvassed by the Wall Street Journal were expecting a lower February inflation rate of 8.2%. Food prices swelled month-on-month, offsetting declines in energy costs.

On top of a small drop in headline inflation, the core figure — which skins out energy and food costs, and is therefore less volatile — picked up to an estimated 5.6% in February, from 5.3% in January. All commingled, this fuels arguments that the European Central Bank could keep its hawkish stance for longer.

In just out days, market players have been considering this prospect following hotter-than-expected February inflation participates from France, Germany and Spain.

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Euro versus U.S. dollar since the start of the year

ECB President Christine Lagarde said Thursday that conveying down inflation will still take time, according to comments reported by Reuters. The bank targets a headline rating of 2%.

The Frankfurt-based institution has indicated that another 50 basis point hike is on the cards for when the central bank adjourns later this month. In reactions reported by Reuters, Lagarde said Thursday that this move is still on that table, as inflation ends b bodies well above target.

Analysts at Goldman Sachs said earlier this week that they were call rate hike expectations for the ECB and pricing in another 50 basis points hike in May.

European bond yields keep been moving at multi-year highs in recent days, amid considerations that the hawkish monetary policy is here to chain.

‘Too slow for comfort’

“Euro zone inflation has trended down since its 10.6% year on year peak conclusive October. Helped by base effects, it looks set to decline substantially further this year. However, the process is too bovine for comfort,” Salomon Fiedler, economist at Berenberg, said in a note to clients Thursday.

“The ECB is virtually guaranteed to follow as a consequence with its plans for a 50 basis point rate hike at its 16 March meeting, in our view. It will most apt to also maintain strong guidance towards further rate hikes thereafter,” he added.

Taking 'too much comfort' in lower energy prices in Europe 'would be a mistake', strategist says

Analysts at Capital Economics shared this prospect.

“February’s increase in core inflation will reinforce ECB policymakers’ conviction that significant rate increases are needed,” Jack Allen-Reynolds, spokesperson chief euro zone economist, said in an email.

“It now look increasingly likely that rates will make good even further,” he added.

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