The European Central Bank has cut interest rates for the first time in nearly five years in response to receding inflation, bringing the benchmark rate down to 3.75% from 4%. This move aims to provide relief to companies and consumers who have faced financial strain due to rising interest rates since late 2021. Despite the rate cut, the ECB cautioned that the fight against rising prices is not over, citing strong domestic price pressures and elevated wage growth that could keep inflation above target. ECB President Christine Lagarde emphasized that the central bank would continue to take a data-dependent and meeting-by-meeting approach, refraining from precommitting to a specific rate path.

Major central banks around the world had started raising borrowing costs as inflation spiked following the end of the pandemic and energy shock caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. However, inflation in the eurozone, the United States, and the United Kingdom has since slowed, moving closer to the respective central banks’ target of 2%. The ECB’s decision to cut rates follows similar moves by central banks in Canada, Switzerland, and Sweden. Analysts note that the ECB may not cut rates again at its next meeting in July, as the bank’s tone has been described as “hawkish” despite the recent rate cut.

Eurozone inflation unexpectedly increased in May to 2.6%, while core inflation, excluding volatile food and energy prices, also rose as wages grew rapidly. The ECB raised its inflation forecast for the year to 2.5% from 2.3% predicted in March, stating that interest rates would remain restrictive enough to bring inflation back to the 2% target. The European economy, which narrowly avoided a recession last year, is showing signs of recovery with strong business confidence, low unemployment, and improved economic growth projections.

The ECB’s decision to cut rates could also be influenced by the timing of potential rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve later in the year. Policymakers in Frankfurt may be cautious about moving too far ahead of the Fed to avoid the euro losing value against the dollar, which could push up inflation in Europe by increasing import prices. Traders are expecting the Fed to maintain rates at its upcoming meeting, while the Bank of England is not anticipated to cut rates ahead of the UK general election. The article has been updated to reflect additional information on the central bank’s decision-making process and economic factors affecting their policy decisions.

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