Spanish inflation remains above ECB’s 2% target after US-Iran deal

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Spain’s inflation rate climbed to 3.6% year-on-year in May 2026, measured by the harmonised index of consumer prices, and a diplomatic breakthrough between Washington and Tehran has not yet moved the needle at the supermarket checkout.

The European Central Bank’s medium-term target sits at 2%. Spain is running nearly double that.

What the US-Iran deal actually did

On June 15 through 17, 2026, the US and Iran signed a peace agreement extending an existing ceasefire and, critically, committing to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The deal also opened a 60-day negotiation window covering sanctions relief and nuclear issues.

Oil prices did fall on the news. But energy prices moving in futures markets and energy prices showing up in Spanish consumer data are separated by weeks of transmission lag, refinery throughput, and retail pricing cycles.

Spain’s inflation forecast for the full year 2026 has been revised to 3.5%, driven directly by elevated oil and gas costs tied to the Middle East disruption. That forecast was set before the peace deal was signed, which means any downward revision would need to wait for confirmed supply normalization.

The ECB’s uncomfortable arithmetic

ECB staff projections put euro-area headline inflation at an average of 3.0% for 2026. The path from there narrows gradually, with the projection settling at 2.3% in 2027 and finally reaching the 2.0% target in 2028.

Spain’s 3.6% reading is the highest the country has posted since mid-2024. This is not a gradual drift upward. It is a return to a level that had briefly come down before the Middle East conflict reignited energy market volatility.

What this means for investors watching Europe

The near-term question is whether the US-Iran deal holds and whether the Strait of Hormuz reopening translates into meaningfully lower wholesale energy prices within the next quarter. If the 60-day negotiation period collapses, the energy price relief priced into markets could reverse quickly.

The peace deal is a precondition, not a guarantee, and the data will need to confirm what the diplomats signed.

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