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Iceland hikes by 25bp, citing rising expectations

Economic outlook deteriorates as energy prices rise and domestic wage pressures persist

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The Central Bank of Iceland has raised rates by 25 basis points to 7.75%.

In its statement released today (May 20), the central bank’s monetary policy committee said its members had reached the decision unanimously, and cited inflation running at more than 5% in 2026 thus far. The bank targets annual inflation at 2.5%.

The bank also cited rising inflation expectations, particularly over the short term. However, it noted that expectations had risen less since the start of the Iran war than they had

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