Germany's inflation just hit 2.6% for November, overshooting forecasts. This uptick matters more than people think—central bank policies shift on data like this. When European inflation runs hot, expect ripples across risk assets. Markets hate surprises, and this one might push the ECB to hold rates higher for longer.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
14 Likes
Reward
14
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
FundingMartyr
· 23h ago
Inflation in Germany breaks 2.6%, the European Central Bank has to tighten its belt again... Now the time for holding rates will be longer, and risk assets will have to continue to bear the burden.
View OriginalReply0
PessimisticLayer
· 11-29 11:14
Europe is stirring things up again... Germany's inflation has broken 2.6%, and the ECB has to continue to uphold high Intrerest Rates, making life even harder for the asset side.
View OriginalReply0
LightningLady
· 11-28 17:58
2.6%? Oh no, the ECB has to hold off on interest rate cuts again, and now European assets are going to shake a bit.
View OriginalReply0
OnChainDetective
· 11-28 17:58
nah, 2.6% sounds like classic data manipulation tbh. lemme check the transaction patterns on this—something feels off about the timing. ecb always moves slower than the charts suggest anyway, so ngl this won't shock anyone actually watching the order flow.
Reply0
ZKProofster
· 11-28 17:54
nah, people acting surprised by this... inflation data's literally the cryptographic primitive of macro policy, no? ecb watching like hawks now. higher for longer = rip to those lever-long alts, ngl
Reply0
DeFiVeteran
· 11-28 17:53
Germany's inflation at 2.6%? Europe is going to be forced to raise interest rates again, and our yield farming returns are likely to shrink.
Germany's inflation just hit 2.6% for November, overshooting forecasts. This uptick matters more than people think—central bank policies shift on data like this. When European inflation runs hot, expect ripples across risk assets. Markets hate surprises, and this one might push the ECB to hold rates higher for longer.