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Riksbank seen on hold but chances rising of hike later this year, Reuters poll shows

Riksbank seen on hold but chances rising of hike later this year, Reuters poll shows

ReutersMon, June 15, 2026 at 11:52 AM UTC

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Riksbank Governor Erik Thedeen attends a press conference, after the announcement that Riksbank will leave the policy rate unchanged at 1.75 percent, in Stockholm, Sweden, December 18, 2025. TT News Agency/Pontus Lundahl via REUTERS

STOCKHOLM, June 15 (Reuters) - Sweden's central bank will keep its policy rate on hold later this week, but signal an increased chance ‌of a hike later this year to keep a lid ‌on price pressures sparked by the Iran war, a Reuters poll of economists showed on Monday.

Economists ​were almost united in seeing no change, with only one bank out of a total 19 forecasting a quarter-point hike when the Riksbank announces its policy decision on Wednesday.

"We expect the Riksbank to shift to a gentle explicit tightening ‌bias," J.P. Morgan said ⁠in a note. "We continue to look for a September hike, but with risks of later move."

Rate-setters across the globe are ⁠trying to gauge the long-term effects of the conflict in the Middle East on inflation, with the European Central Bank the first major central bank to ​act when ​it tightened policy last week.

The Riksbank ​is in less of a ‌hurry. Sweden has stood out in Europe in enjoying moderate cost pressures in recent months with underlying inflation at zero in April - the lowest for 30 years.

Sweden's fossil-free energy mix has muted the effect of higher oil prices, while temporary tax cuts and a stronger crown currency have dampened import prices.

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There ‌are signs, however, that inflation pressure is ​building.

Producer prices rose in April at their ​fastest pace since early 2023. ​Input price inflation in the manufacturing and service sectors was ‌also at a multi-year peak.

How much ​of this gets ​passed on to consumers, however, remains to be seen. The Riksbank's own survey of businesses showed only modest price hikes ahead.

All but four ​banks saw a hike ‌ahead, but analysts were divided over when, with eight predicting a ​hike this year.

For Riksbank poll data, click here

(Reporting by Johan Ahlander ​and Simon JohnsonEditing by Tomasz Janowski)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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