
Euro zone headline inflation remains below the 3% mark
European Central Bank cuts rates again, says policy is becoming 'meaningfully less restrictive'

The European Central Bank on Thursday cut interest rates by 25 basis points and updated the language in its decision to say monetary policy was becoming "meaningfully less restrictive."
The cut brings the ECB's deposit facility rate, its key rate, to 2.5% — a move that markets had widely priced in before the announcement.
"Monetary policy is becoming meaningfully less restrictive, as the interest rate cuts are making new borrowing less expensive for firms and households and loan growth is picking up," the central bank said in a statement Thursday.
This marked a change from the ECB's January comments, when the central bank had still characterized its monetary policy stance as restrictive.
The central bank's six rate cuts over the past nine months have come amid lackluster economic growth in the region, and as the specter of tariffs on EU imports to the U.S. looms large.
Euro zone headline inflation remains below the 3% mark, despite picking up in the last few months of 2024.
Data published earlier this week showed that inflation in the region eased to 2.4% in February, down from January's reading but coming in slightly higher than expected. So-called core inflation — which strips out food, energy, alcohol and tobacco costs — as well as services inflation also dipped after proving sticky for several months.
The ECB on Thursday reiterated that the disinflation process was "well on track," but noted that domestic inflation remained "high."
"Most measures of underlying inflation suggest that inflation will settle at around the Governing Council's 2% medium-term target on a sustained basis," it added.
The central bank also released its latest economic projections Thursday.
"Staff now see headline inflation averaging 2.3% in 2025, 1.9% in 2026 and 2.0% in 2027. The upward revision in headline inflation for 2025 reflects stronger energy price dynamics," the bank said.
The euro area's seasonally adjusted gross domestic product, meanwhile, eked out a 0.1% increase in the fourth quarter, the latest reading from statistics agency Eurostat showed.