Inflation Levels and Risks
We are seeing inflation stabilize near the 2% target, but underlying risks are clearly still significant. The latest August 2025 flash HICP data for the Eurozone showed a 2.1% headline figure, but core inflation remains stickier at 2.8%, which keeps policymakers on edge. This echoes the sentiment from the great inflation battle of 2022-2023, making the European Central Bank extremely cautious about declaring victory.
The economic picture is stronger than we previously forecast, which complicates the inflation outlook. Recent data showed the Eurozone Composite PMI unexpectedly climbing to 51.5, indicating a pickup in business activity. A robust labour market, with unemployment holding at a multi-decade low of 6.3% as of July 2025, further supports the case for underlying economic strength.
Opportunities for Derivative Traders
For derivative traders, this suggests that implied volatility on euro interest rate options is likely undervalued. The market is currently pricing in a prolonged pause, but any surprisingly strong inflation or wage data in the coming months could force a rapid repricing for the December meeting. We believe positioning for a spike in volatility, rather than taking a strong directional view, is the prudent approach.
This means strategies like buying short-dated straddles or strangles on EURIBOR futures expiring after the October and November inflation prints could be effective. The main takeaway is that the ECB’s “pause mode” is fragile and data-dependent. We must be prepared for the market to react sharply to any signs that the inflation risks are materializing.