INGING observes ECB officials tolerate hawkish market pricing, while rising oil strengthens expectations for higher short-term euro rates

    by VT Markets
    /
    Mar 27, 2026
    Rising oil prices are reinforcing hawkish pricing in euro area rates, with ECB officials offering little resistance. This has supported expectations for higher short-dated euro rates. A separate view is developing that energy disruption may last longer than first expected. ECB President Christine Lagarde said war-related risks may be underestimated and that technical experts see infrastructure damage as enough to disrupt energy supply for years rather than months.

    Energy Disruption And Policy Response

    Lagarde also said that “large, sustained deviations call for forceful monetary policy action”. This points to the possibility of higher rates not only at the front end but also across the 2-year to 10-year maturities. The front end is again pricing more than three ECB rate rises this year. The report states it was produced using an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor. Last year, we saw European Central Bank officials doing little to discourage bets on higher rates. The ongoing oil shock was creating a complicated picture for the path of monetary policy. President Lagarde’s warnings about long-lasting energy supply damage suggested that rate hikes could be more forceful than anticipated. That hawkish outlook from 2025 proved correct, as core inflation in the Eurozone is still hovering around 3.1% as of last month. Lingering supply issues have kept Brent crude prices firm above $95 a barrel, significantly higher than the average in late 2025. This forced the ECB’s hand into a surprise 25 basis point hike in February, confirming the fears of a prolonged tightening cycle.

    Trading And Volatility Implications

    This environment suggests paying to receive fixed rates on short-term euro interest rate swaps (IRS) remains a risky proposition. The entire yield curve has shifted higher since last year, with the German 2-year yield now at 3.5%, showing how the front-end is leading the charge. Traders should consider positioning for further hawkish surprises by using options on Euribor futures, buying calls or call spreads to profit from rates moving even higher than currently priced. Given the continued uncertainty, implied volatility on EUR-denominated assets is likely to remain elevated. This makes selling options, such as writing strangles on the Euro Stoxx 50 index, potentially profitable but also exposes traders to sharp, unexpected moves. A more cautious approach would be to buy volatility through structures like VSTOXX futures, anticipating more policy-driven market swings in the coming months. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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