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Doubts about the Eurozone economy and increasing concerns about inflation undershooting support the ECB’s easing bias. Another 25bp rate cut at the upcoming meeting looks likely.At the ECB’s December meeting, the most notable topics included the debate over the size of the rate cut (25bp vs 50bp), a still relatively optimistic outlook for growth and inflation, and the decision to temporarily disregard any potential impact of the US elections on the Eurozone economy. The minutes offered some interesting insights on these matters.
The highlights
All in all, the minutes clearly show the ECB’s easing bias based on doubts about the growth forecasts and the growing risk of inflation undershooting.
ECB to continue cutting ratesThe next ECB meeting is in two weeks. The only really interesting data points until then will be PMIs and the Ifo index, as well as on the day of the ECB meeting the first estimate for fourth-quarter GDP growth and the European Commission’s economic sentiment indicator. This means that, with all available information so far, the ECB will be confronted with a mild version of stagflationary tendencies: continued sluggishness of the economy and accelerating inflation. This is a complication for the ECB, potentially widening the current divergence between hawks and doves.However, comments from ECB officials since the start of the year suggest that higher inflation in December and possibly also in January will not stop the central bank from cutting rates further. At 3%, the deposit interest rate is still restrictive and too restrictive for the current weak state of the Eurozone economy. The recent surge in bond yields has also worsened financial conditions in the Eurozone. Even if some argue that there is very little monetary policy can do to solve structural issues, political instability and uncertainty in many countries will force the ECB to continue doing the heavy lifting.Also, as long as the current inflationary pressure is anticipated to diminish over the year, the ECB is likely to overlook the present inflation resurgence. While the experience of being slow to address rising inflation will deter the ECB from adopting ultra-low rates, the desire to stay ahead of the curve remains a compelling reason to return interest rates to neutral as swiftly as possible.All of this means that we see the ECB continuing to cut rates. Bringing rates at least to the upper end of estimates for the neutral interest rate, ie 2.5%, looks like a no-brainer. If the Eurozone economy remains weaker than the ECB’s December forecasts predict, cutting rates further will become unavoidable. Let’s not forget that the ECB’s December forecasts used a terminal rate of below 2%. Just to deliver the outcomes of the December forecasts means that the ECB will have to cut rates by a total of 100bp. The next ECB meeting in two weeks will bring the next cut.More By This Author:German Economy Sees Its First Two-Year Contraction Since Early 2000s
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