KEY POINTS
  • Growing supply pressures, high energy prices and the reintroduction of new social restrictions in some euro area countries are among the top concerns for the IMF.
  • Euro zone inflation hit its highest level ever in November, according to preliminary data.
  • "We may have a very modest downgrade in the cards for the euro zone," IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva told CNBC on Monday.

BRUSSELS — The International Monetary Fund could be about to cut growth forecasts for the euro area as concerns over the omicron Covid variant and persistently higher inflation grow.

The Fund said in October that it expected the euro zone economy to grow by 4.3% in 2022. Now, the institution has warned about the "possibility of modest revisions" when it presents new estimates next month.