Persistent Price Pressures In The Eurozone’s Periphery
Spain’s inflation coming in at an expected 3.6% confirms our view that price pressures in the Eurozone’s periphery remain persistent. With the data offering no surprises, we do not anticipate immediate market volatility. Instead, this reinforces the narrative that the European Central Bank’s job is far from over. We are noting that this Spanish figure is significantly above the latest flash estimate for overall Eurozone inflation, which stood at 2.9% last week. This divergence complicates the path for the ECB, which is trying to set a single monetary policy for the entire bloc. A more cautious stance on further rate cuts is now more likely in the upcoming July and September meetings.Implications For Rates, Equity, And Currency Markets
Given this outlook, we are considering options on Euribor futures that would profit if the market reduces its bets on aggressive rate cuts later this year. Historically, such inflation divergences, like the one seen between Germany and southern states in late 2024, led the ECB to pause its easing cycle. We expect a similar, data-dependent caution to take hold now. For equity traders, persistent inflation could be a headwind, so we are looking at buying put options on the Euro Stoxx 50 to hedge our portfolios. In the currency market, a more hesitant ECB could support the euro. The EUR/USD pair has already climbed from 1.08 to just under 1.10 over the past month, and this trend could find new strength.Start trading now — click here to create your real VT Markets account.