The European Central Bank (ECB) cut its policy rates today for the fourth time in this cycle, also marking its third consecutive cut. The interest rate on the main refinancing operations, the marginal lending facility, and the deposit facility were each lowered by 25 basis points to 3.15%, 3.40%, and 3.00%, respectively.
Although ECB President Christine Lagarde continued to avoid providing any solid forward-guidance, markets are expecting a further run of consecutive rate cuts over the coming few quarters, with a jumbo 50 bps rate cut now expected in January.
Recent developments
The ECB made notable dovish changes to its policy statement, dropping the references to restrictive policy settings and the need for inflation to return to target. Indeed, President Lagarde noted that these cuts signal their increased confidence on the future path of inflation, particularly in light of how much progress they’ve made in keeping policy restrictive.
That said, lingering wage pressures and sticky services inflation is giving them some pause around the inflation outlook, adding to still elevated levels of uncertainty. As a result, despite some discussion on a 50 bps rate cut, they deemed a 25 bps cut as the right call for this meeting. Moreover, while they continue to emphasize a data-dependent and meeting-by-meeting approach, their increasing focus on the downside risks to inflation suggests that the ECB will likely continue to recalibrate monetary policy to looser settings in the meetings ahead.
Finally, President Lagarde noted that they were looking through the temporary rebound in growth during the Q3 period—which was likely driven by the Paris Olympics—as underlying momentum remains relatively weak. There are also risks around potentially greater frictions to global trade amid U.S. president-elect Trump’s return to office, the impact of which have not yet been incorporated into any of the staff projections given their highly uncertain nature. Together with heightened geopolitical risks, growth risks remain tilted to the downside.
Forecast changes
The ECB published its updated full-year average staff projections and provided new projections for 2027. The GDP growth projection was revised lower over the next two years:
- 2025: 1.1% (downward revision from 1.3%)
- 2026: 1.4% (downward revision from 1.5%)
- 2027: 1.3%
The headline inflation outlook was revised slightly lower over the next two years:
- 2025: 2.1% (downward revision from 2.2%)
- 2026: 1.9% (downward revision from 1.9%)
- 2027: 2.1%
The core inflation outlook remained mostly unchanged, with a slight downward revision to 2026:
- 2025: 2.3% (unchanged)
- 2026: 1.9% (downward revision from 2.0%)
- 2027: 1.9%