European Central Bank leaves key interest rate at 3.75%, waits for signs inflation is under control
The
The decision leaves the deposit rate at 3.75%, where it has stood after a single quarter-point cut rate at the previous meeting on
“Domestic price pressures are still high, services inflation is elevated and headline inflation is likely to remain above the target well into next year," the bank said in a statement accompanying the decision.
That means home buyers and businesses hoping for lower interest rates in
The
The
Higher rates make it more expensive to borrow money, spend and invest, cooling off demand for goods and, historically, the upward trend for consumer prices.
Inflation in the eurozone has fallen from a peak of 11.6% in
Workers have been negotiating higher wages to make up for lost purchasing power during the inflation spike and annual prices increases remain too high at 4.1% last month in the crucial services sector - a broad swath of the economy that includes movie tickets, restaurants, medical treatment, and haircuts.
Meanwhile higher rates have slowed growth, which is in short supply in the eurozone. Gross domestic product grew a tepid 0.3 in the first three months of the year after months of stagnation around zero.
The anti-inflation campaign has killed off a years-long rally in eurozone house prices, as mortgage costs weigh on home sales. Several eurozone countries including
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In the
Most economists foresee at first cut occurring in September, and after Powell’s remarks
Fed’s Beige Book shows economy, inflation cooling
Federal reserve Retired 'hawk' eyes rate cuts
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