Euro zone consumer inflation expectations hold steady

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Euro zone consumers kept their inflation expectations unchanged in November, predicting a steady slowdown in price growth towards the European Central Bank's 2% target in the coming years, an ECB survey showed on Thursday.

Inflation has been hovering ⁠around 2% most of the past year and fresh data out ⁠on Wednesday put price growth right at 2% in December, as falling energy costs offset rising services prices.

Consumers across the currency bloc perceived inflation to be somewhat higher - 3.1% in November - but saw it at 2.8% over the next ‍year, 2.5% three years ahead, and ​2.2% five years out, the ECB said, based on a survey ‍of 19,000 adults in 11 euro zone countries.

Inflation, tamed by record-quick ECB rate ⁠hikes in 2022 and 2023, has ‍been a non-issue in recent months and, if anything, price growth could go even lower given a persistent drag from falling oil and gas ‍prices.

However, the ECB is unlikely to ease policy ‍for ‌now to stop price growth from going too low, as projections see ‌a rebound later, partly on steady economic ​growth.

Consumers, ‍who are generally more pessimistic than professional forecasters, expect the economy to contract by 1.3% over the coming year, a more pessimistic scenario than October's 1.1% contraction expectation.

Most forecasters see the ‌euro zone expanding at a rate between 1% and 1.5% this year, after ‌growth of about 1.4% in 2025.

(Reporting by ‍Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Alex Richardson)

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