Russia’s central bank is set to lower its key interest rate to 14% at its June 19 meeting, continuing an aggressive easing cycle that has slashed borrowing costs from a wartime peak of 21%. The move would mark the ninth straight rate reduction, a pace that reflects just how dramatically Russia’s inflation picture has shifted over the past year.

The Bank of Russia last cut rates on April 24, trimming 50 basis points to bring the benchmark to 14.5%. Market expectations point to another 50 basis point reduction at the upcoming meeting, which would land the rate squarely at 14%.

From 21% to 14%: the long walk down

Inflation hit 21% in 2025, driven by wartime military spending and the cumulative drag of international sanctions. As of April 20, inflation had fallen to 5.7%, a dramatic improvement from the 21% peak. The central bank now forecasts inflation settling between 4.5% and 5.5% by the end of 2026.

President Vladimir Putin weighed in on June 10, stating there are “grounds to expect” a rate reduction given the declining inflation trajectory. Central Bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina has been steering the easing cycle with what appears to be full presidential backing.