Inflation fight isn’t over, warns Lagarde as eurozone cuts rates

Christine Lagarde wore a necklace bearing the words 'in charge' as the ECB cut interest rates before the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve - FRIEDEMANN VOGEL/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

In This Article:

The fight against inflation is not yet over, Christine Lagarde has warned, after the European Central Bank (ECB) cut interest rates for the first time in five years.

The ECB President refused to say that the eurozone has entered a period when it is “dialling back” interest rates.

She told a press conference in Frankfurt: “Are we today moving into a dialling back phase? I wouldn’t volunteer that because, as I said, we are making a decisions based on the confidence we have that we are on a path.”

Policymakers cut interest rates from their record highs of 4pc to 3.75pc as the eurozone gambles that the inflation crisis on the continent is under control.

It reduces eurozone borrowing costs for the first time since 2019 - and crucially before the Bank of England and US Federal Reserve.

However, the ECB has also increased its predictions for inflation over the next two years.

It projected inflation will average 2.5pc this year, up from previous estimates of 2.3pc, and would be 2.2pc in 2025, up from 2pc.

It comes as inflation in the eurozone has fallen to 2.6pc from a peak of 10.6pc in October 2022, although it has ticked up from 2.4pc in April.

Policymakers said they are “not pre-committing to a particular rate path” as they insisted future decisions on rate cuts would be “data dependent”.

Read the latest updates below.


06:17 PM BST

Good evening

That’s all from me today. Chris Price will be back tomorrow morning from 7am. Have a lovely evening


04:57 PM BST

World stocks hit record high

Global stocks hit an all-time high on Thursday after the European Central Bank’s first interest rate cut.

The MSCI All Country World Index jumped by 0.86pc on Thursday to 3,483.4, after the ECB cut interest rates for the first time in nearly five years.

The index, which tracks share prices across 47 countries, was up by a tenth since the start of this year.

Share prices typically rise when interest rates fall as bonds become less attractive for investors and borrowing becomes cheaper for companies.

The FTSE 100 Index rose by 0.47pc to 8285.34 on Thursday, while in the US the S&P 500 was flat at a near all-time high.


04:26 PM BST

Surprise jump in US jobless claims

Claims for US unemployment benefits jumped by more than expected at the end of May, bringing more evidence that labour market pressures are easing.

Initial jobless claims rose by 8,000 to 229,000 in the week ending June 1, according to Labor Department figures on Thursday.

This was 9,000 more than analysts had expected and shows the employment market is slowing down, but analysts warned this will not be enough to pave the way for Federal Reserve rate cuts yet.