The ECB lines up another rate hike and Euribor bites again
Markets are pricing in two to three rate rises by year-end. Euribor is already at an 18-month high — and that moves both loans and savings.
After a long stretch of falling, interest rates have changed course again — and this time upward. Markets now expect two, possibly three, rate rises from the European Central Bank by the end of 2026, with the deposit rate potentially nearing 2.75% by December.
The practical translation comes through Euribor. In early June, the six-month rate, the one most used for home loans in Portugal, was around 2.59%, and the twelve-month rate near 2.85% — roughly 18-month highs. Anyone on a variable-rate loan will feel the difference at the next instalment review.
Two sides of the same coin
For borrowers, it is bad news: higher payments and less room in the household budget. For savers, there is finally an upside — term deposits and savings certificates are paying interest worth a look again, after years of returning almost nothing.
The ECB’s logic is the usual one: rein in inflation without strangling the economy. The balance is delicate, because raising rates too far risks cooling growth at a time when Europe is hardly in glowing health.
For Portugal, heavily indebted at variable rates, every tenth of a point counts. It is worth checking the Euribor term on your contract and comparing it with what banks pay on savings.
See also: the ECB’s first rate hike since 2023 and how Euribor moves home loans. Decisions and statements are on the ECB website.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons