Pro Login

Europe's Inflation Was Almost Under Control. Then the War Started.

A stylized illustration of a cylindrical cup with blue arrows and lines indicating a swirling or rotational motion inside the cup.
Briefs Finance
Published Mar 3, 2026
Share:
A red upward-trending arrow with a large 1 Euro coin and a compressed spring, set above a cityscape with stormy skies; a floating Euro balloon hints at Europe inflation pressures.
Summary:

  • Eurozone inflation ticked up to 1.9% in February — just before the Iran conflict hit energy markets.
  • Natural gas prices in Europe jumped 50% in two days; the ECB is now caught in a tough spot.
  • The eurozone is the most exposed major economy to an extended Middle East war, analysts warn.

Europe had a clean inflation story heading into March. Then everything changed.

The Data That's Already Outdated

Eurostat's flash estimate showed eurozone inflation rose to 1.9% in February, up from 1.7% in January — an unexpected uptick that already caught economists off guard. Core inflation, which strips out food and energy, climbed to 2.4%. Services inflation ran at 3.4%.

The catch: all of that data was collected before the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran on February 28. The numbers don't capture a single day of the energy shock now unfolding.

Why Europe Has More to Lose

The eurozone is almost entirely dependent on imported oil and gas. That makes it uniquely vulnerable when the Strait of Hormuz — the transit point for 20% of global oil and LNG — gets disrupted.

ING analysts called Europe "the most exposed major economy" to the conflict, noting that in an extended-war scenario, European natural gas prices could spike toward €80–100 per megawatt-hour. European gas prices were already up 50% by Monday. The Euro STOXX 50 fell 3.3% on Tuesday; Germany's DAX dropped to its lowest since December.

The ECB's Impossible Position

ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane told the Financial Times that a prolonged war could push eurozone inflation meaningfully higher while simultaneously weighing on growth — a textbook stagflation setup.

The ECB had been on a rate-cutting path as inflation cooled. Now it faces a scenario where cutting rates feeds inflation, but holding them steady chokes off a fragile recovery.

Europe was almost at the finish line. The timing couldn't be worse.

Disclosure

Get Market Briefs delivered to your inbox every morning for free!

Market briefs opt-in (#63)
No fluff. No noise. No politics. Just finance news you can read in 5 minutes.

Blogs

March 8, 2026
Do You Have To Pay Taxes on Stocks: What Every Investor Needs to Know

Do You Have to Pay Taxes on Stocks? Short answer: […]

Read More
March 7, 2026
When to Buy a Stock: What Smart Investors Actually Look Fr

Everybody wants to know the secret to buying a stock. […]

Read More
March 6, 2026
GDXJ Stock And Two Other Gold ETFs Investors Need To Pay Attention To

Gold and silver hit new record highs in 2026 - […]

Read More
March 6, 2026
What Are Assets? A Simple Guide for Investors

The term asset gets thrown around in finance quite a […]

Read More
March 5, 2026
What Is an Income Statement? What It Is & How To Read It

Every public company has to share three financial statements with […]

Read More
March 4, 2026
Top Dividend Stocks Are Having a Moment - And There's a Very Good Reason Why

The Quiet Rotation Nobody Is Talking About Over the last […]

Read More
March 4, 2026
How to Invest in the S&P 500: A Beginner's Guide

When you hear investors talking about “the market” they’re most […]

Read More
March 3, 2026
Market Disruptors: What They Are and How Smart Investors Spot Them Early

What Is a Market Disruptor? A market disruptor is a […]

Read More
March 2, 2026
General Dynamics Stock (GD): Why Some Investors Are Paying Attention Right Now

For years, the "smart money" in defense went to cyber […]

Read More
March 2, 2026
What Is a Prospectus? The Investor's Simple Guide

If you want to understand what you’re investing in, you […]

Read More
1 2 3 13
0 Shares
Share via
Copy link