By Yoruk Bahceli, Sara Rossi and Alun John
Sept 11 (Reuters) - Traders on Thursday curbed their bets on another European Central Bank rate cut this cycle, now seeing another move as a coin toss, as the bank sounded sanguine about the economic outlook.
Euro zone rate setters kept their key interest rate on hold at 2% for a second straight meeting, with ECB chief Christine Lagarde reiterating that the bank remains in a "good place" and said risks to the economy had become more balanced than before.
"It's pretty much like saying we're on hold now," said Danske Bank chief analyst Jens Peter Soerensen.
Traders now see just under a 50% chance of another ECB rate cut by June 2026, according to ICAP data, down from around 60% before the ECB's decision earlier on Thursday.
Thursday's policy meeting was the latest milestone in a steady reduction of traders' ECB easing expectations over the summer. In mid-July, traders had nearly fully priced a rate cut by December.
An EU-U.S. trade deal, previous hawkish messaging from the ECB and stronger-than-expected growth and inflation data since have all dented market expectations.
Danske Bank's Soerensen said the description of economic risks as "balanced" in particular reduced traders' rate cut expectations, adding Lagarde could "always twist this language if she (wanted) to keep the possibility of a rate cut."
Declining bets on a rate cut supported the euro, which was last up 0.3% to around $1.173 EUR=EBS.
Germany's two-year bond yield DE2YT=RR, sensitive to interest rate expectations, was up 4 bps to 1.99%.
Those moves were also in contrast to the U.S., where the latest inflation numbers pushed down U.S. Treasury yields and appeared to support expectations for a U.S. rate cut next week.
While markets reduced their rate cut bets, the ECB's economic forecasts highlighted the uncertainty ahead.
The ECB raised its inflation projections for this year and next by a tenth of a percentage point, but cut it by the same amount in 2027 to 1.9%. That means it now projects inflation below target both in 2026 and 2027.
"There is something here for both the hawks and doves," said Divyang Shah, strategist at LSEG's IFR markets.
The slightly higher inflation projection next year supports a view that rate cuts are done, while the below-target forecast in 2027 keeps the door open for another cut, Shah added.
Others cautioned that the ECB had raised the bar for a rate cut even further.
The ECB should have an easing bias at a time when its medium-term forecast shows inflation below target, said Pictet Wealth Management's head of macroeconomic research Frederik Ducrozet.
"I think they should cut, but I don't think they will. It's that simple. As an ECB watcher, a veteran, I know that you shouldn't make the mistake of confusing what you think they should do and what you think they will do. And I think they really don't want to cut anymore."