KEY POINTS
  • "House price declines could accelerate if markets reprice inflation risks and financial conditions tighten more than expected," the IMF said.
  • Data from Europe's statistics office, Eurostat, showed house prices dropping for the first time since 2015.
  • The European Central Bank is due to meet next week, and one of its members has recently suggested that a 50 basis point hike is not off the table.
A pedestrian inspects advertisements for residential properties for sale in Stockholm, Sweden.

STOCKHOLM, Sweden — The International Monetary Fund warned Friday of "disorderly" house price corrections in Europe, at a time when the region is struggling to bring down inflation.

In its latest regional economic outlook for Europe, the IMF said that a downward correction is already underway in some European housing markets, but this decline could accelerate as central banks increase interest rates further.