KEY POINTS
  • After the European Central Bank hiked interest rates to a record 4%, economists said they were likely to have peaked, with the question now being how long they will hold at this level.
  • The Federal Reserve and Bank of England are both expected to have at most one more hike in the cards, but to finish there.
  • However, inflation is not expected to reach the central banks' 2% targets until 2025, meaning further pain for households and risks to the outlook.
Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank (ECB), at a rates decision news conference in Frankfurt, Germany, on Thursday, Sept. 14, 2023. The ECB raised interest rates again, acting for the 10th consecutive time to choke inflation out of the euro zone's increasingly feeble economy.

The central banks of some of the world's biggest economies are now widely considered to have reached, or be at the brink of reaching, the highest level they will take interest rates.

The European Central Bank last week signaled that its Governing Council feels rates may have got there.