Spain’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 2.3% year-on-year in February. This matched the forecast of 2.3%.
The update relates to Spain’s annual inflation rate for February. No further figures were provided in the text.
Eurozone Inflation Remains Predictable
Spain’s February inflation figure coming in exactly as expected at 2.3% confirms a trend of predictability we’ve been seeing across the Eurozone. This lack of surprise dampens the potential for sharp, unexpected market moves. For us, this means the environment in the coming weeks will likely be defined by lower volatility.
This stability greatly reduces the odds of an unexpected policy shift from the European Central Bank in the near future. We see market pricing now implying just a 10% chance of a rate cut before the third quarter, a significant drop from expectations earlier in the year. Therefore, strategies that profit from stable interest rates, such as selling volatility on Euribor futures, look increasingly attractive.
The calm inflation reading is also soothing equity markets, with the Euro Stoxx Volatility Index (VSTOXX) dipping below 14 for the first time since the third quarter of 2025. This suggests traders should consider income-generating strategies on major European indices. Selling covered calls on existing holdings or implementing range-bound option strategies like iron condors could perform well.
This environment is also suppressing currency fluctuations, with one-month implied volatility in the EUR/USD pair falling to around 5.2%, a level historically associated with quiet markets. The pair has been stuck in a tight 1.08 to 1.09 range for weeks, a pattern this data supports. We believe selling option strangles on the Euro could be a prudent way to capitalize on this expected lack of movement.