ECB must now focus on keeping the economy ‘afloat’: Quilter Investors
The ECB’s latest cut came in line with analyst expectations, given “sluggish” economic growth and the euro zone’s inflation now sitting “well below” the central bank’s target, Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter Investors, said after the decision.
“The economy is in desperate need of stimulus, and the ECB will be hoping this third rate cut will begin to make a difference. Today’s news will at the very least bring some relief to consumers and businesses which could boost confidence and subsequently help towards the economic recovery,” James said, noting that the ECB will be keeping an “extremely close eye” on emerging data ahead of its December meeting.
“It will be pleased that inflation has finally come in lower than target, but keeping the economy afloat will be its next challenge,” James said.
— Ruxandra Iordache
ECB’s more optimistic inflation outlook contains risks
The Governing Council’s October statement struck the body’s most upbeat tone on the course of inflation in the current cycle, stressing that the “disinflationary process is well on track.”
However, the GC cautioned: “Domestic inflation remains high, as wages are still rising at an elevated pace. At the same time, labour cost pressures are set to continue easing gradually, with profits partially buffering their impact on inflation.”
In September, ECB staff forecast headline inflation averaging 2.5% in 2024, 2.2% in 2025 and 1.9% in 2026.
Another set of staff projections is not due until December.
— Jenni Reid
ECB says inflation outlook impacted by weaker economic activity
The European Central Bank’s Governing Council said the inflation outlook had been “affected by recent downside surprises in indicators of economic activity.”
Business activity in the euro area as measured by the Purchasing Managers’ Index decreased for the first time in seven months for the week of 12-19 Sept.
— Jenni Reid
European Central Bank delivers quarter-point interest rate cut
The European Central Bank on Thursday lowered the deposit rate by 25 basis points, delivering back-to-back rate cuts for the first time in 13 years.
The move, which had been widely expected, marks the central bank’s third interest rate cut of the year.
— Sam Meredith
Euro area bond yields slightly higher
Germany’s 10-year bond yield, the benchmark for the euro zone, rose 2 basis points to 2.198% shortly ahead of the ECB’s interest rate announcement. The yield on 2-year bunds was up by just over 1 basis point at 2.176%
French bond yields also moved slightly higher, with the 10-year up by 3 basis points at 2.938%.
— Jenni Reid
Weaker euro zone growth prospects have pushed ECB to October rate cut, CIO says
Weaker growth prospects in the euro zone — particularly in Germany — have spurred the ECB into an October rate cut that was not expected three weeks ago, according to Iain Stealey, international chief investment officer of global fixed income currency and commodities at J.P. Morgan Asset Management.
That includes weaker Purchasing Managers’ Index figures and “soggier” inflation that is now below-target, he told CNBC’s “Street Signs Europe” on Thursday.
“I do think Christine Lagarde’s going to want to try to distance herself from absolutely fully committing to [a cut in] December. We’ve just seen a 50 basis point [cut] from the Fed, and maybe there’s question marks as to whether that was right, given the data we’ve seen since.”
But, Stealey added: “We are seeing weakness in the euro zone. It does deserve, at the moment, to be on a path of continual cuttings, I think that’s absolutely fair.”
Martins Kazaks, an ECB policymaker and governor of Latvia’s central bank, told Reuters earlier this month that the case for an October rate cut was clear, given risks to growth.
Economists forecast more back-to-back ECB cuts amid spectre of too-low inflation
Economists predicted a continuation of back-to-back ECB rate cuts in notes over the last week, as some raised the possibility that the central bank could soon face the danger of too-low inflation.
Jack Allen-Reynolds, Capital Economics’ deputy chief euro zone economist, foresees a 25 basis point rate cut on Thursday and at each coming meeting until the deposit rate hits 2.5%, from the current 3.5%.
Market consensus is for a rate of 2% by the end of 2025, according to Dutch bank Rabobank, with market pricing at around 1.88%.
Economists at Goldman Sachs forecast an even swifter course of rate cuts, with sequential trims taking the deposit facility to 2% by June 2025. Bank of America Global Research meanwhile sees a continuation from there to a rate of 1.5% by the end of the year.
That aggressive course of monetary easing would come as some argue the ECB is now facing the additional challenge of ensuring inflation does not fall back to the persistent lows seen before the pandemic, which caused it to hold rates in negative territory for years.
French Central Bank Chief Francois Villeroy de Galhau told Italy’s La Repubblica newspaper earlier this month that undershooting the 2% inflation target was a risk the ECB was monitoring.
— Jenni Reid
Euro edges lower against the U.S. dollar
The euro traded 0.1% lower at $1.0852 on Thursday morning, as investors looked ahead to the next monetary policy decision from the European Central Bank.
The ECB is widely expected to deliver a quarter-point interest rate cut for the second consecutive meeting later in the day.
The euro-dollar exhange rate year-to-date.
ECB will stick to gradual rate reductions given geopolitical risks, professor says
The ECB will stick to gradual rate cuts through the first half of next year, given geopolitical risks, Mojmir Mrak, professor at Ljubljana University’s School of Economics and Business told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday.
“If you compare what happened immediately after last meeting and today, the expectations were that [rates] would go down slower,” Mrak said.
“Now I think we are on the path that interest rates will go down, that’s my view. I think the central bank will do this gradually because we should not forget that we are living in an extremely unstable world. If something larger happens in the Middle East with the oil prices, we can have immediately a change.”
A gradual pace could still see 25-basis-point cuts in October and December, with further small reductions taking place throughout the first half of next year, Mrak noted.
— Jenni Reid
European stocks mixed, euro flat ahead of rate announcement
Europe’s Stoxx 600
European stock markets were mixed at Thursday’s open, with the benchmark Stoxx 600 index eking out a 0.13% gain at 8:12 a.m. in London. Banks were the best-performing sector, up 0.75%.
Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC 40 were both higher by around 0.5%, pulling ahead of the U.K.’s FTSE 100, which remained near the flatline.
Movements in the euro were muted, with the currency down 0.09% against the U.S. dollar and fractionally higher against the British pound.
— Jenni Reid
Lack of ECB guidance is supporting euro against U.S. dollar, Goldman economist says
The euro is being shielded from sharper losses against the U.S. dollar — despite more robust economic growth in the U.S. — in part because the European Central Bank is not giving strong guidance on its future path, Goldman Sachs’ Chief Europe Economist Jari Stehn told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday.
“The ECB is cutting, but is cutting in a very data-dependent fashion, without giving you an awful lot of guidance about where you’re headed next. And we think that’s very much going to be the message also today,” Stehn said.
“So we’ll get the 25-basis-point cut, we think they will say we’re doing this in response to weaker data.”
“I think [ECB President Lagarde] will say, Look, if inflation continues to fall we can cut more, but the extent, the rhythm, all of that will depend on the data. So now I do think markets understand this message quite well.”
The euro has been choppy against the greenback throughout this year, starting out at $1.1044 and falling to $1.0853 as of Thursday.
Stehn also told CNBC that caution around prospects for the euro zone economy was warranted.
“The incoming data has been weak, we obviously have various challenges, from trade to fiscal to the manufacturing sector. We have cut our forecast a couple of times through the summer, we basically have growth of 1% over the next year, which is below what the ECB has,” he said.
“Now, that said we still think we’re growing. So we’re not saying we’re going into recession, we’re not saying we’re totally stagnating.”
— Jenni Reid
Markets pricing two more rate cuts by end of the year
Financial markets have fully priced in two more 25-basis-point interest rate cuts from the ECB this year, expected to take place on Thursday and at the central bank’s next monetary policy meeting in December.
That would take the deposit facility — the ECB’s key rate — from 4% in June to 3% by the end of 2024.
The ECB was one of the first major central banks to cut rates when it lowered by a quarter-percentage-point in June. The U.S. Federal Reserve did not join it on the path of monetary easing until September, when it cut its own key rate by a half-percentage point.
— Jenni Reid
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