(Bloomberg) -- For several global central banks, the question of whether the Iran war poses more of an immediate danger to inflation or to growth is likely to remain open in the coming week.

The European Central Bank on Thursday became the first major central bank to raise interest rates in response to the Iran war

The move puts Frankfurt ahead of its global peers. But risks echoing the institution’s ill-fated 2011 policy response.

NY Times: The world economy is weakening as energy prices fuel a new bout of inflation.

Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh is staring down a rise in inflation that is driven in large part by something the central bank cannot control: the war with Iran.

(Bloomberg) -- For several global central banks, the question of whether the Iran war poses more of an immediate danger to inflation or to growth is likely to remain open in the…

The ECB raised rates to 2.25% as Eurozone inflation hit 3.2% amid the Iran war, while the Fed held steady. Here's what it means for markets and crypto.

The Iran war is fueling a global inflation wave, prompting the European Central Bank to raise interest rates for the first time in nearly three years. US inflation accelerated…

Global central banks are poised to maintain current interest rates this week. The Iran war's impact on inflation and growth remains a key concern. Policymakers are waiting for…

The Bank of England's MPC voted unanimously to hold rates at 3.75% as the Iran war reshapes UK inflation forecasts and shelves expected rate cuts.

Country follows ECB in increasing borrowing costs, but US Fed and Bank of England expected to hold rates