As the Israel-Iran war threatens a fresh energy shock, the European Central Bank’s rate hike has shifted the global debate from rate cuts to renewed tightening, putting the Federal Reserve, Bank of England and other major central banks on inflation watch.
The global interest rate cycle may be approaching another turning point. After months of expectations that central banks were preparing to ease monetary policy, the European Central Bank’s (ECB) latest rate hike has revived fears that policymakers could be forced back into inflation-fighting mode as geopolitical tensions threaten to push prices higher.
The move comes as the Israel-Iran conflict raises concerns over a fresh energy shock, with markets closely watching the possibility of higher crude oil prices and supply disruptions.
For central banks, a prolonged rise in energy costs could spill into transportation, manufacturing, and consumer prices, threatening the progress made in bringing inflation down after the post-pandemic price surge.
The ECB’s decision has triggered a larger question across global markets: Was it an isolated move, or the first sign that the era of rate cuts may have to wait?
Fed faces tough inflation-growth balancing act
All eyes are now on the US Federal Reserve, which had been widely expected to move towards policy easing as inflation moderated. However, renewed pressure from oil and commodity prices could complicate that path.
A fresh inflation wave may force the Fed to keep borrowing costs elevated for longer, while any sustained rise in prices could reopen discussions about further tightening.
The challenge for the Fed is balancing two risks — cutting rates too early and allowing inflation to return, or keeping rates high for too long and hurting economic growth.
Bank of England faces renewed price pressure
The Bank of England (BoE) could face similar challenges as higher energy prices threaten to increase household and business costs.
The UK economy has already battled years of elevated inflation, and a new external price shock could force policymakers to adopt a more cautious approach toward rate cuts.
While immediate hikes are not guaranteed, central banks may increasingly prefer a “higher-for-longer” strategy until inflation risks become clearer.
Could Asia follow?
The Bank of Japan (BoJ) is also under scrutiny. Japan’s dependence on imported energy means higher oil prices could quickly translate into inflationary pressure, especially if currency weakness makes imports more expensive.
Several emerging economies may also delay easing cycles if rising fuel costs weaken currencies and push inflation higher.
A return of the inflation battle?
Economists believe the world may not see the aggressive rate-hiking cycle witnessed after COVID-19 unless the energy shock becomes severe. But the ECB’s move has changed market expectations.
Until recently, the biggest question was how quickly central banks would cut interest rates. Now, investors are asking whether inflation is returning — and whether the ECB has fired the first shot in a new global tightening cycle.
First Published:
June 12, 2026, 19:32 IST
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