ECB stops its printing presses even as growth concerns
rise
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[December 13, 2018]
By Balazs Koranyi and Francesco Canepa
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - The European Central
Bank decided on Thursday to end its lavish asset purchase scheme but
otherwise kept policy broadly unchanged, promising protracted stimulus
for an economy struggling with an unexpected slowdown and political
turmoil.
Having long flagged the end of quantitative easing, the ECB had little
choice but to stop the bond buys. But it is likely to take its time
before tightening policy any further given slower growth, a looming
trade war, the prospect of a hard Brexit and budget tensions in Italy
and France.
That all leaves ECB President Mario Draghi with a delicate balancing
act: appearing confident enough to justify the end of the 2.6 trillion
euro ($2.95 trillion), four-year-long QE scheme, but sounding
sufficiently concerned to keep cool investor expectations about further
policy tightening.
Hoping to reassure markets, the ECB repeated its promise that rates
would be kept at their current record lows at least through next summer
and that it would keep open-ended the time horizon for reinvesting cash
from maturing bonds.
"The Governing Council intends to continue reinvesting, in full, the
principal payments from maturing securities purchased under the APP for
an extended period of time past the date when it starts raising the key
ECB interest rates," the ECB said, tweaking its previous guidance that
reinvestments would continue for an "extended period" after the end of
bond buys.
With Thursday's decision, the ECB's rate on bank overnight deposits,
currently its primary interest rate tool, remains at -0.40 percent,
while the main refinancing rate, which determines the cost of credit in
the economy, remains at 0.00 percent.
Attention now turns to Draghi's 1330 GMT news conference, at which he
will present new economic projections, discuss the bank's assessment of
risks and detail its reinvestment policy.
SWEETENERS
The ECB's problem is that growth is weaker than policymakers thought
even just weeks ago, while the predicted rise in underlying inflation
has failed to materialize, putting in doubt some of the bank's
assumptions about the broader economy.
Overall inflation may be near the target now but falling oil prices
suggest a dip in the months ahead and a solid rise in wages is not
feeding through to prices, leaving the bank with an unexplained
disconnect.
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A giant inflatable spatial object depicting Santa Claus is seen near
the European Central Bank (ECB) headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany
December 13, 2018. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
Highlighting this complication, the ECB is likely to cut growth and underlying
inflation projections and may take a dimmer view on risks, all while Draghi
argues that growth is merely falling back to normal after a recent run.
On the upside, Italy has taken steps towards a compromise in a budget impasse
while the United States and China are seeking to tone down trade tensions.
(For a graphic on 'ECB policy vs. inflation' click https://tmsnrt.rs/2SHJc0t)
To take the edge off the bad news, Draghi could also hint at some sweeteners
ahead.
Pushing out the guidance on the first interest rate rise is seen as an easy way
to keep borrowing costs low and new long-term bank loans are also seen as a
relatively low-hanging fruit.
Draghi is also expected to detail how the bank will reinvest cash -- about 200
billion euros next year. While most of these decisions are expected to be
technical, they should give the ECB enough flexibility to provide support.
Investors will be keen to know whether the ECB aims to adjust its holdings of
national government bonds to match its shareholder structure after buying more
French, Italian and Spanish debt than the rules of its programme dictate.
Sticking close to the rules could hurt economies that need support the most,
indicating that even technical decisions could have broader market impact and
suggesting policymakers will opt for a long transition period to keep markets in
check.
All these potential sweeteners are only moderately powerful, however, economists
argue, and will be effective only if growth stabilizes at a fast enough pace to
generate inflation.
(Editing by Catherine Evans)
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