Close Menu
Digital Euro News
    What's Hot

    OKX Launches Compliant Onchain Payments and Card in Europe

    Bundesbank’s Balz Says Digital Euro Will Not Weaken Cash Acceptance

    ECB’s Cipollone Says Digital Euro Is About Preserving Public Money

    X (Twitter)
    Digital Euro News
    • Latest
    • Digital Euro
    • CBDC
    • Fintech
    • Crypto
    • Policy
    • Analysis
    Digital Euro News
    Home»Digital Euro»ECB Minutes Back Stable Rates and Renew Push for Digital Euro Law
    Digital Euro

    ECB Minutes Back Stable Rates and Renew Push for Digital Euro Law

    The Governing Council’s December account shows policymakers are comfortable holding rates steady, while urging EU institutions to quickly adopt the regulation establishing a digital euro.
    By Rinat MirzaitovJanuary 23, 20263 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp Copy Link

    The European Central Bank used the published account of its 17–18 December 2025 monetary policy meeting to underline two messages at once: interest rates are likely to stay on hold for some time, and Europe’s legislators should move faster on the regulation that would establish a digital euro.

    The minutes, released on 22 January 2026, show policymakers judged inflation to be “in a good place”, with the economy proving more resilient than previously expected. Against that backdrop, the Governing Council backed keeping all three key ECB rates unchanged and stressed it would remain data-dependent and “meeting-by-meeting”, without pre-committing to a particular path.

    Digital Euro Mention Signals Legislative Pressure Is Becoming Routine

    Buried in a broader discussion on competitiveness, capital markets and Europe’s strategic position, the account includes an unusually direct institutional nudge: members argued it was “vital” to complete key integration projects, and called for the rapid adoption of the Regulation on the establishment of the digital euro.

    That matters because it frames the digital euro less as a standalone payments project and more as part of a wider package of European resilience tools, alongside the savings and investments union and the banking union. In political terms, it is also a reminder that the ECB’s technical preparation cannot translate into issuance without a clear legal basis agreed by the European Parliament and Council.

    On the monetary side, the account highlights how markets have largely converged on a “higher for longer” assumption. Investors had priced out additional rate cuts in 2026, and some policymakers noted that, beyond 2026, markets and surveys pointed to the next move eventually being a hike, though with uncertainty around timing.

    At the same time, the minutes show an internal debate about risks in both directions. Some members worried that a period of inflation undershooting, driven largely by energy dynamics, could last long enough to become problematic. Others focused on upside risks from wages and sticky services inflation. This two-sided risk framing is part of why the ECB emphasised “optionalities” and cautious communication around future moves.

    For the digital euro dossier, the significance is less about the detail of the ECB’s design choices and more about institutional signalling. By repeating the call for rapid legislative progress inside a core monetary policy document, the ECB is normalising the idea that the digital euro is a strategic infrastructure decision, not simply a technology experiment.

    Related: Lagarde Urges Rapid Digital Euro Law as ECB Frames It as Stability Anchor

    Featured
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp Copy Link

    Related Posts

    Bundesbank’s Balz Says Digital Euro Will Not Weaken Cash Acceptance

    January 30, 2026

    ECB’s Cipollone Says Digital Euro Is About Preserving Public Money

    January 29, 2026

    Dombrovskis Urges Faster Digital Euro to Reduce EU Dependence on US Payments

    January 29, 2026

    How Siemens Used the Digital Euro to Link Machines and Payments

    January 29, 2026
    Important Posts

    Bundesbank’s Balz Says Digital Euro Will Not Weaken Cash Acceptance

    ECB’s Cipollone Says Digital Euro Is About Preserving Public Money

    Dombrovskis Urges Faster Digital Euro to Reduce EU Dependence on US Payments

    DigitalEuroNews.com is an independent news and information platform. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the European Central Bank, the European Union, or any other governmental or financial authority. DigitalEuroNews.com is also not associated with Euronews.com. All content, articles, and opinions published on this website are provided for informational purposes only and do not constitute financial, legal, or professional advice.

    X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS

    OKX Launches Compliant Onchain Payments and Card in Europe

    Bundesbank’s Balz Says Digital Euro Will Not Weaken Cash Acceptance

    ECB’s Cipollone Says Digital Euro Is About Preserving Public Money

    Dombrovskis Urges Faster Digital Euro to Reduce EU Dependence on US Payments

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest Digital Euro and fintech updates.

    © 2026 DigitalEuroNews.com | Home | About Us | Contact Us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.