TLDRAnnual inflation in the Eurozone accelerated to 3.2% in May from April’s 3.0% readingYear-over-year energy costs surged 10.8%, fueled by the Iran conflict and blockade of the Strait of HormuzThe European Central Bank implemented its first rate increase in almost three years last weekA preliminary peace agreement between the US and Iran may reopen the Strait of Hormuz as soon as FridayChief economist Philip Lane indicates the ECB will maintain a “proactive” stance on price pressures despite diplomatic progressThe Eurozone experienced an uptick in consumer price growth during May, with annual inflation reaching 3.2%, compared to the previous month’s 3.0% rate. Wednesday’s official data from Eurostat aligned with analyst predictions.Euro area annual #inflation up to 3.2% in May 2026 https://t.co/6DMsPYz20S pic.twitter.com/qp2Xd0xJqi— EU_Eurostat (@EU_Eurostat) June 17, 2026Month-over-month price increases decelerated to 0.1% from April’s 1.0% reading, meeting market consensus.The primary catalyst behind the acceleration was energy, with costs climbing 10.8% compared to the same period last year. This dramatic increase stems from the February closure of the Strait of Hormuz following coordinated US and Israeli military operations against Iran. Additional strikes targeting Gulf region natural gas infrastructure further intensified pressure on European energy markets.ECB Implements First Rate Increase in Nearly Three YearsResponding to these inflationary pressures, the European Central Bank implemented a rate hike last week—its first in nearly three years. The central bank simultaneously issued warnings about persistent inflation threats.Revised ECB forecasts now anticipate average inflation of 3.0% throughout 2026, declining to 2.3% in 2027, before reaching 2.0% in 2028. These projections represent upward adjustments from earlier estimates of 2.6%, 2.0%, and 2.1% respectively.ECB President Christine Lagarde projected that inflation should normalize to the 2% objective by fall 2027. However, she emphasized that sustained elevated energy costs could trigger additional price acceleration.Lagarde characterized current economic conditions as an environment where “growth is absent or under threat.”Growth projections for the Eurozone have also been revised downward, with the region now anticipated to expand 0.8% this year versus the previous 0.9% forecast.Core inflation—excluding volatile energy, food, alcohol, and tobacco components—registered 2.6% annually. This exceeded both April’s 2.2% figure and the 2.5% consensus estimate.Central Bank Leaves Door Open for Additional Rate IncreasesECB chief economist Philip Lane emphasized the institution’s commitment to remaining “proactive” despite recent developments in the US-Iran peace negotiations that have modestly reduced oil prices.Lane observed that crude prices remain elevated compared to pre-conflict levels. Market participants currently anticipate at least one additional rate hike before year-end, most likely occurring in September or October. The ECB’s deposit facility rate presently sits at 2.25%.A preliminary peace framework between Washington and Tehran is scheduled for signing Friday. The accord would restore access through the Strait of Hormuz and terminate the American naval blockade of Iranian ports.Lane highlighted resilient aspects of the Eurozone economy, citing construction sector recovery, increasing real wage growth, and expanded German fiscal expenditure as encouraging indicators.“Lots of individual items are positive,” Lane stated. “And so the clearly negative energy shock is in the context of this wider resilience.”Future monetary policy adjustments will hinge on crude price stabilization levels and the trajectory of geopolitical tensions.The post Eurozone Inflation Climbs to 3.2% in May Amid Iran Conflict and Energy Crisis appeared first on Blockonomi.