Euro zone consumers take benign view on inflation surge, ECB survey shows

 Euro zone consumers kept steady or lowered their inflation expectations in April, a hopeful sign for policymakers that crucial medium-term price ​bets are not signalling any oversized shift away from the target, ‌an ECB survey showed on Monday. Inflation soared to 3% in April on higher oil prices, well above the ECB's 2% target, and some policymakers had expressed concern ​that household views are starting to move too far away from ​target, potentially signalling an unanchoring of policy-relevant expectations. Get a daily digest of breaking business news straight to your inbox with the Reuters Business newsletter.

However, the April ⁠edition of the ECB's monthly consumer survey showed a more benign trend, ​as expectations one year ahead held steady at 4.0% while for three ​years out, they eased to 2.9% from 3.0%. The survey, an important input into policy deliberations at the June 11 meeting, also showed expectations five years ahead unchanged at 2.4%.

"Respondents ​in lower-income quintiles continued to report on average slightly higher inflation ​perceptions and expectations," the ECB said. "Younger respondents continued to report lower inflation perceptions and expectations ‌than ⁠older respondents." The survey is unlikely to move market expectations for the near term as policymakers have extensively telegraphed a 25-basis-point hike in the bank's 2% deposit rate in June.

But the data may temper bets for follow-up ​moves as they suggest ​no need ⁠for rapid policy tightening like in 2022, when prices ran away, eventually hitting double-digit territory. This is partly because expectations ​for economic growth became more negative, the survey showed, ​with consumers ⁠anticipating a 2.2% economic contraction in the year ahead and they also curbed their income growth bets to 0.8% from 1.2%. Fresh euro zone inflation data ⁠is ​due on Tuesday and economists polled by Reuters ​see the rate rising to 3.2%. Price growth could keep accelerating in the coming months ​and may peak closer to 4%.

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