Some of Europe’s biggest asset managers are pushing back against the market’s sudden rethink on interest rates, arguing that the latest energy-driven sell-off has moved faster than the underlying policy backdrop. Amundi and Allianz Global Investors have both added to positions in UK and European government bonds as traders swung, within days, from expecting cuts to entertaining the prospect of fresh tightening from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England.
That repricing has been abrupt. In the UK, markets moved from leaning towards a Bank of England cut to briefly assigning a high chance of a hike this year as oil surged towards $120 a barrel, before settling back as crude retreated. In the euro area, traders at one stage priced as many as two ECB hikes in 2026 before expectations eased again. The speed of that shift matters, because it suggests financial conditions can tighten well before central bankers decide whether the shock is temporary or durable.
Amundi has bought short-dated British and Italian government bonds, while Allianz Global Investors has added to a position favouring longer-dated gilts. Gregoire Pesques, chief investment officer for global fixed income at Amundi, said it was “too early for central banks to act”. Allianz has made a similar argument, pointing to softer labour-market conditions, easing inflation, and tight fiscal policy as reasons the recent move in gilt yields may have gone too far.
The official backdrop helps explain that caution. The Bank of England has held Bank Rate at 3.75%, and its next decision is due on 19 March. The European Central Bank also left rates unchanged in February, keeping its deposit facility at 2.00%. Euro area inflation was estimated at 1.9% in February, up from 1.7% in January, while UK inflation is currently around 3.0%. That is not a benign picture, but neither does it amount to a clear signal that policymakers are ready to reverse course on the strength of one energy shock.
For businesses, the more important issue is transmission. In the UK, more than 300 residential mortgage products were withdrawn in a single day this week as lenders reacted to higher gilt yields and swap rates. The move turned what might have remained a bond-market adjustment into a live test of how quickly geopolitical volatility can feed into household borrowing costs, housing activity, and confidence across the wider economy.
That leaves executives with a more complicated message than the market’s initial reaction suggested. Large investors are betting that rates markets have overreached, and central bankers still appear inclined to wait for clearer evidence before responding. Yet the tightening effect is already visible. Ahead of the ECB and Bank of England policy meetings later this month, the real question for business is not only where policy rates go next, but how quickly volatility in energy and bond markets feeds into mortgages, refinancing, and investment decisions.





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