The ECB raised rates — its first hike since 2023
To tame energy-driven inflation, Frankfurt tightened again. Here's what changes for savers and for anyone paying a mortgage.
After months of cutting, the European Central Bank changed gear. At its 11 June meeting it lifted the deposit rate by 0.25 points to 2.25% — the first increase since 2023.
Why now? Two words: energy and inflation. Middle East tension and worries about oil moving through the Strait of Hormuz pushed prices up, and Frankfurt revised its inflation forecasts higher — close to 3% this year. When inflation digs in, the central-bank playbook says tighten.
What it means for you
If you’ve got cash sitting still, there’s an upside: term deposits tend to pay a little more. If you’ve got a mortgage tied to Euribor, it’s the other way round — your monthly payment likely stops easing and may creep up a few euros. It’s not an earthquake, but it’s worth doing the sums before taking on anything new.
The honest read: nobody knows yet whether this was a one-off adjustment or the start of something bigger. The ECB itself was careful. For now, patience — and keep an eye on the bill.
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