The European Central Bank raised its three key interest rates by 25 basis points on June 11, its first hike since the tightening cycle that ended in September 2023. The deposit facility rate rose to 2.25%, the main refinancing rate to 2.40%, and the marginal lending facility to 2.65%, effective June 17, according to the ECB’s own policy statement. The move reverses eight straight rate cuts the ECB delivered between June 2024 and June 2025.
ECB President Christine Lagarde spent the following weeks defending the decision, telling reporters at the Sintra central banking forum that critics had it wrong.
That is not an accurate description.
She said of characterizations calling it an insurance hike, according to the Associated Press.
What Forced the ECB’s Hand
The trigger was an energy shock tied to the conflict in the Middle East, which pushed euro-area inflation to 3.2% in May, the highest reading since 2023.
The ECB’s own updated projections show headline inflation averaging 3.0% in 2026, easing to 2.3% in 2027 and 2.0% in 2028, a slower path back to target than the central bank had forecast in March.
Core inflation, which strips out food and energy, is now projected at 2.5% for both 2026 and 2027.
Growth forecasts moved the other way. The ECB now expects real GDP growth of just 0.8% in 2026, rising to 1.2% in 2027 and 1.5% in 2028, both figures revised down from earlier projections as the energy shock weighs on incomes and confidence.
Lagarde told French newspaper Les Echos the decision had been building for months. “We are convinced we made the right decision,” she said, according to Investing.com’s report of the interview.
She added that a majority of the Governing Council was ready to act as early as April but held off pending more data, and the eventual vote to hike was unanimous.
A New Playbook, Not Just a New Rate
At Sintra, Lagarde used the moment to frame a broader shift in how the ECB operates. “Monetary policy has gone back to basics,” she said, according to Euronews’ coverage of her opening remarks.
After more than a decade leaning on bond-buying programs and explicit forward guidance, she indicated the ECB is reverting to interest rates as its primary tool, guided by what she called a reaction function built on three inputs: the inflation outlook, underlying inflation dynamics, and how strongly policy is feeding through the economy. Traditional forward guidance, she said, is “not in the cards.”
That leaves the path for further hikes genuinely open. The ECB has not committed to a September move, and Lagarde has repeatedly said future decisions will be made meeting by meeting rather than on a preset track.
Why This Matters for Bitcoin
A stronger, higher-yielding euro competes directly with non-yielding assets like Bitcoin for investor capital, and the ECB’s hike lands at an already fragile moment for crypto markets.
New Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh held US rates steady at his first meeting in June and pulled this year’s expected rate cut off the table entirely, with nine of eighteen Fed officials now projecting a hike rather than a cut.
Bitcoin fell below $60,000 within a week of that decision, its first time under that level since 2024, and spot Bitcoin ETFs shed a record $4.5 billion in June alone, their worst month since launching.
Warsh appeared alongside Lagarde on a panel at the same Sintra forum and offered no relief on tone, saying inflation remains “too high” despite growing optimism about AI-driven productivity gains, per CNBC’s live coverage.
With both the Fed and ECB now leaning hawkish rather than one offsetting the other, the dollar-euro dynamic that sometimes cushions Bitcoin against a single central bank’s tightening isn’t currently in play.
There’s a narrower silver lining for euro-denominated stablecoins. Issuers that hold euro reserves earn more yield as ECB rates rise, an economic tailwind even as the broader rate environment weighs on risk assets generally.
The ECB’s next policy meeting will show whether June was a one-off response to the energy shock or the start of a longer tightening run. Markets are currently split on whether a September move is likely, and Lagarde has given no indication either way.

