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Central Banks Pivot to Tightening as Energy Inflation Bites

Persistent geopolitical instability and rising energy costs are forcing a major shift among the world’s central banks. With the European Central Bank joining the ranks of those raising borrowing costs, policymakers across the G10 are abandoning past caution to blunt the impact of a global energy-driven inflationary surge.

Central Banks Pivot to Tightening as Energy Inflation Bites

The Reserve Bank of Australia currently leads the G10 with a policy rate of 4.35%, having fully reversed last year’s cuts to combat energy shocks. While Governor Michele Bullock suggests current tightening is effective, markets anticipate a 75% probability of further hikes before year-end. Conversely, the Bank of Canada remains an outlier, opting to hold rates at 2.25% as core data indicates that broader inflationary pressure from energy costs has yet to materialize.

In the United States, the Federal Reserve faces a complex landscape. Traders have pivoted from expecting rate cuts to pricing in a 60% chance of a hike by October, as Chair Kevin Warsh balances economic data against political pressure. Meanwhile, the Bank of England has signaled extreme caution; by abandoning traditional inflation forecasts in favor of scenario planning, policymakers have left the door open for "forceful" interventions should the economic outlook deteriorate.

Japan’s central bank continues a delicate normalization, planning to lift its short-term rate from 0.75% despite the hospitalization of Governor Kazuo Ueda. Switzerland remains at the bottom of the G10 hierarchy with a 0% rate, relying on the strength of the franc and currency intervention rather than interest rate hikes to manage its domestic economy.

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