The Netherlands reported a year-on-year Consumer Price Index (CPI), not seasonally adjusted, of 2.8% in April. The figure matched expectations at 2.8%.
The April inflation number for the Netherlands, coming in as expected at 2.8%, removes immediate uncertainty from the market. We see this stability leading to a likely decrease in implied volatility on Dutch and European assets. For derivatives traders, this suggests that the price of options may cheapen in the near term.
Market Volatility Outlook
This figure reinforces the view that the European Central Bank can stick to its measured policy path without surprises. Eurozone-wide inflation has also been moderating, with the latest flash estimate for April 2026 showing a 2.6% rise. A predictable ECB means fewer market shocks from monetary policy decisions in the coming weeks.
Therefore, we believe strategies that benefit from lower volatility could be favorable. This includes selling options premium on indices like the AEX, as the lack of an inflation surprise reduces the chance of large, sudden market swings. The risk-reward for such positions has improved with this data release.
This situation presents a clear contrast when we look at the environment back in 2025. During that period, inflation was more unpredictable, with Dutch CPI peaking over 4%, causing significant swings in interest rate expectations. The current predictability is a marked shift from the uncertainty we managed just a year ago.
In the currency markets, this stable inflation outlook could support a range-bound Euro. Without a high inflation shock to force the ECB into hiking rates, significant Euro strength is unlikely. Traders might consider options strategies on the EUR/USD that profit from the pair remaining between established support and resistance levels.
Key Data To Watch
Looking ahead, our focus shifts to the upcoming Eurozone HICP flash estimate and core inflation data. Energy prices also remain a key variable, as they were a primary driver of the inflation spike seen in previous years. Any unexpected moves in these figures could quickly reintroduce the volatility that this Dutch CPI report has helped to calm.