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While Norges Bank forecasts an almost immediate reversal of its rate hikes after peaking, sticky inflation and currency pressures suggest a different outcome. The analyst expects a longer pause at the peak rate than what the central bank or current market pricing indicates.

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Contrary to Norway, Sweden faces significant downside inflation risks. A forthcoming VAT cut in April, combined with large basket effects between March and May, is expected to push core inflation towards 0.5%. This will significantly undershoot the Riksbank's forecast and intensify pressure to ease monetary policy.

Following a major inflation surprise, the Norwegian front-end rates market rapidly priced out approximately 40 basis points of expected easing. J.P. Morgan's analysis concludes this significant move was a justified reset to a more realistic "on hold" policy outlook for 2026, rather than a speculative overreaction.

The Bank of England's current patience on rates is not a dovish pivot, but a tactical wait for concrete data on "second-round effects" like wage and price surveys. They are trying to avoid tightening too late, suggesting a hike is still likely once this evidence emerges later in the year.

The Riksbank cut rates, but its forward guidance and a dissenter's vote signal a very high bar for future easing. The move, based on forward-looking inflation expectations rather than current data, effectively marks the end of the easing cycle and creates opportunities for carry trades.

ECB President Lagarde's statement that disinflation is over is likely a backward-looking comment on the progress from 10% inflation. However, the ECB’s own forward-looking forecasts project inflation will fall below its 2% target, suggesting that future rate cuts are more likely than the confident public rhetoric implies.

A potential drop in oil prices may cool headline inflation, but it won't necessarily stop Emerging Market central banks from tightening. Underlying price pressures from sticky services inflation, strong demand, and supply bottlenecks will keep core inflation elevated, maintaining the bias towards further rate hikes.

The market is pricing 50 basis points of easing from Norges Bank by the end of 2026. However, strong growth, a solid labor market, and high inflation suggest the central bank will not deliver these cuts, implying that front-end Norwegian yields are biased higher.

Norge Bank's forecast includes an implicit easing bias, but strong demand, persistent inflation, and fiscal easing make actual rate cuts improbable. The market is currently overpricing the likelihood of the central bank delivering these cuts.

The textbook response to supply-shock inflation is to "look through" it and hold rates. However, one expert argues that after five years of high inflation, the sheer duration creates a risk of it becoming embedded. This "duration risk" could override the cause, forcing the Fed to tighten policy as a risk management measure.

Norway's recent, broad-based inflation surprise was significantly driven by rent's increased weight in the CPI basket, now at 29%. This structural factor reinforces the view that underlying inflation is sticky, compelling the Norges Bank to keep policy on hold and lean against rate cuts through 2026.