Eurozone Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices rose 2.5% year on year in March. This was below the expected 2.7% reading.
The Eurozone inflation figure coming in at 2.5% instead of the expected 2.7% strengthens the case for earlier European Central Bank rate cuts. This data suggests inflationary pressures are easing more quickly than anticipated, reinforcing the disinflationary trend we have seen develop since late 2025. We should expect markets to immediately price in a higher probability of a rate reduction at the ECB’s meeting in the second quarter.
Rate Cut Expectations
Traders should consider positions that benefit from falling short-term interest rates, such as buying Euribor futures. The German 2-year bund yield has already fallen 12 basis points to 2.40% on this news, signaling the market’s immediate reaction. This follows a pattern we observed through much of 2025, where softer inflation data consistently led to a rally in short-term government debt.
A more dovish ECB will likely put downward pressure on the Euro, especially as the US Federal Reserve continues to hold its own rates steady. We saw the EUR/USD pair drop below 1.06 last year when this monetary policy divergence became clear. Consequently, buying EUR/USD put options or establishing short positions via futures could be a prudent strategy to hedge against, or profit from, a weaker Euro.
This environment is generally positive for European equities, as the prospect of lower borrowing costs boosts corporate earnings outlooks. The Euro Stoxx 50 index is already indicating a higher open, reflecting renewed optimism for an economic soft landing. We anticipate increased demand for call options on major European indices as investors position for a rate-cut-driven rally.