ECB sticks to easy money
pledge despite better growth
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[July 20, 2017]
By Balazs Koranyi and Francesco Canepa
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - The European Central
Bank left its ultra easy monetary policy stance unchanged as expected on
Thursday, keeping rates at record lows and even leaving the door open to
more asset buys if the outlook worsens.
Having raised the prospect of policy tightening last month, Thursday's
inaction was likely to signal that any policy tweaks would come only
slowly and gradually, likely taking years to wean the European economy
off monetary support.
Still, with the euro zone economy now growing for the 17th straight
quarter, its best run since before the global financial crisis, the ECB
can at least contemplate easing off the accelerator, preserving some its
remaining firepower after printing nearly 2 trillion euros to jump start
growth.
But the prospect of reduced monetary stimulus has kept financial markets
edgy, with investors nervously sifting through clues to gauge how big
central banks around the globe will unwind unconventional policy that
have kept borrowing costs at rock bottom.
The ECB kept its deposit rate deep in negative territory and maintained
monthly bond purchases at 60 billion euros, in line with the expectation
of most analysts in a Reuters poll.
"If the outlook becomes less favorable, or if financial conditions
become inconsistent with further progress toward a sustained adjustment
in the path of inflation, the Governing Council stands ready to increase
the program in terms of size and/or duration," it said.
Attention now turns to ECB President Mario Draghi's news conference at
1230 GMT where is expect to keep the door open to policy tweaks as soon
as September but will provide only few if any clues about the bank's
next move.
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European Central Bank President Mario Draghi speaks during a news
conference in Tallinn, Estonia, June 8, 2017. REUTERS/Ints Kalnins
SEPTEMBER?
Draghi sent bond yields and the euro sharply higher last month when he argued
that improved growth on its own would provide accommodation so the ECB would
tighten its own policy to keep the overall level of accommodation broadly
unchanged.
With the euro firming more than 3 percent and German 10 year yields doubling
since Draghi's policy hint, analysts expect Draghi to temper or at least nuance
the message to keep markets at bay.
Indeed, the euro's 11 percent rise this year will weigh on inflation,
compounding the impact of a more than 10 percent drop in crude oil prices.
Still, the ECB is unable to kick the can down the road indefinitely as its asset
buys are set to run until the end of the year and policymakers argue that a
decision on an extension or a gradual wind down has to be taken in September or
October.
Acknowledging the coming inflation headwinds, Draghi has argued that these are
temporary so the ECB needs to look past them, reinforcing expectations for some
tightening in the coming months.
Most economists polled by Reuters expect tapering from next year but unlike the
U.S. Federal Reserve, which cut buys at each meeting when it ended its own asset
buys, the ECB could simply extended the buys at a lower volumes to avoid
creating an impression that it was on a preset course to wind down the buys.
(Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)
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