ECB's eighth interest rate cut brings eurozone down to 2%

Source Cryptopolitan

The ECB just dropped its main deposit rate again—by 25 basis points, this time down to 2%, from the 4% high it hit back in mid-2023. This is the eighth straight cut in its tightening cycle.

Traders saw it coming. Ahead of the decision, data from LSEG showed there was a 99% probability priced in for the cut.

What the ECB actually said in its statement was that the cut was based on “its updated assessment of the inflation outlook, the dynamics of underlying inflation and the strength of monetary policy transmission.”

That’s code for: inflation is coming down, but growth still sucks, so we’re doing this whether you like it or not.

ECB reacts to falling inflation, but weak growth stays

Inflation across the euro zone hit 1.9% in May. That’s slightly below the ECB’s target of 2%, and the reason they pulled the trigger. But growth? Still crawling. In the first quarter of 2025, eurozone GDP only rose by 0.3%. Basically, prices cooled off, but the economy didn’t heat up.

The ECB’s rate cuts haven’t managed to light a fire under economic activity yet. Businesses are cautious. Policymakers are nervous. Add in Donald Trump’s tariffs, and you’ve got a recipe for slow motion pain. His tariff strategy has rattled nerves, especially in Europe, where big sectors like steel and automobiles are in the direct line of fire.

Nobody’s really sure how those tariffs will affect prices. The impact on inflation depends on whether the EU decides to hit back. So far, the EU is keeping things calm, holding off on retaliation.

But they’ve made it clear they’re not afraid to strike back if things go south. Meanwhile, Europe’s sudden obsession with defense spending is raising more questions than answers. How that plays into economic stability is still a mystery.

Markets hold steady as ECB moves again

Despite the rate cut, the euro didn’t flinch. It stayed flat against the US dollar, last sitting at $1.1423, right where it was before the news dropped. Eurozone bond yields barely budged either. Germany’s 10-year yield slid just 4 basis points, now resting at 2.48%. In short, markets saw this coming and didn’t blink.

What’s weird is how investors aren’t pouring into the euro. You’d think with the US acting all unstable—tariffs, trade threats, whatever—people would bail on the dollar. They are, but not for euros. Gold has been getting the love instead. Nobody sees the euro as a strong enough Plan B.

Why? It’s simple. The euro’s global influence hasn’t really changed in years. It’s stuck. The European Union’s financial system is still half-baked. Governments aren’t keen on finishing the job. No one wants to take the political risk to actually integrate more deeply.

That’s exactly what Christine Lagarde, the head of the ECB, said on May 26: “The ongoing changes create the opening for a ‘global euro moment.’ The euro will not gain influence by default—it will have to earn it.”

Basically, Europe has the chance to make the euro a real player globally, but it needs to put in serious work to get there.

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