The European Central Bank holds key interest rates steady, citing economic uncertainty caused by the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. The bank stated it remains well positioned to manage the current environment.
The European Central Bank announced today that it is maintaining its key interest rates at current levels, citing economic uncertainty stemming from the conflict in the Middle East.
What happened
The European Central Bank announced today that it is maintaining its key interest rates at current levels, citing economic uncertainty stemming from the conflict in the Middle East.
Quick reaction
One tap helps tune what we surface next.
Reader discussion
Public commentsNo comments yet. Start the discussion around this signal.
Follow this signal
Get updates on this story
We will email you if this changes materially. No spam. Daily brief optional.
Map context
Open map near European Union
Keep the story in context with nearby live signals, countries, and category movement.
Related coverage
More story pages
The European Central Bank Governing Council keeps interest rates unchanged. President Christine Lagarde says incoming data will guide future policy to bring inflation to the 2% target.
The European Central Bank Governing Council has decided to maintain current interest rates. President Christine Lagarde stated that upcoming data will guide future decisions to ensure inflation reaches the 2% target in the medium term.
The Bank of England and the European Central Bank both held interest rates steady today.
The Bank of England and the European Central Bank both maintained their current interest rates today.
PCE inflation hits 3.5% in March, highest since May 2023, when Fed was raising rates. Core PCE inflation at 3.2%, highest since Nov. 2023.
PCE inflation was 3.5% in March, the highest since May 2023, when the Fed was raising rates. Core PCE inflation was 3.2%, the highest since Nov. 2023, when the Fed still had a hiking bias.
UN chief Guterres warns Middle East crisis pushing global economy to recession. Disruption in Strait of Hormuz is choking vital artery, he says.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned Thursday that the Middle East crisis is pushing the global economy toward recession, saying disruption in the Strait of Hormuz is choking a vital artery.
More live signals
Continue with the live feed.
The fastest nearby updates load from the public feed, not the enriched story endpoint.