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The just-released minutes of the European Central Bank’s last meeting in March strike a fine balance between sounding hawkishly concerned and at the same time, preparing for a first rate cut. This won’t happen next week, in our view, but at the June meeting.Yesterday’s drop in eurozone headline inflation has fuelled the discussion on whether the risk of inflation eventually undershooting instead of overshooting the ECB’s target should be the main concern for the central bank. While we think that the ECB will not easily give the all-clear on inflation, the just-released minutes of the March meeting show that the option of a rate cut has entered the central bank’s radar screen.Here are the highlights from the minutes of the ECB’s March meeting:
What to expect from next week’s ECB meetingAs explained in our preview of next week’s ECB meeting, we think that incoming data since the ECB’s March meeting has had something for both the doves and hawks. Signals of a bottoming out of the eurozone economy, with some improvement in lending growth and confidence indicators, should encourage the hawkish team not to rush into rate cuts. At the same time, the slightly faster-than-expected fading away of inflationary pressures could motivate some Governing Council members to ask why the rate-cutting process shouldn’t start next week. Let’s not forget that the ECB’s staff projections in January had inflation returning to target in the second half of 2025, while growth would be slightly above potential in both 2025 and 2026. Given how their models work, the ECB would have to cut rates by some 100bp to get to these – what the ECB would call – favorable macro outcomes. This is why the only questions left are ‘when’ and ‘by how much’ rather than ‘if’ rates will be cut.A rate cut next week is highly unlikely. Not only is actual inflation still above target and services inflation still too high, the ECB will not easily give the all-clear on inflation. The risk of reflation remains too high. This is why we expect the ECB to wait until the June meeting as this will be the meeting with a full batch of important data available: a fresh round of ECB staff forecasts, GDP growth, and wage growth data for the first quarter of 2024 and results of the Bank Lending Survey, just to mention the most relevant ones.Still, even without actual rate action, next week’s meeting is likely to pave the way for a June cut. We think that the ECB has three potential options for its communication:
All in all, the minutes of the ECB’s March meeting confirmed our view that next week’s meeting looks like the prelude to yet another turning point for monetary policy in the eurozone: the final stop before a cut.More By This Author:ECB: Final Stop Before The Cut Easter Bunny Cannot Stop German Disinflation German Consumers Still In Hibernation