ECB's Nowotny sees more political than economic risks to
financial stability
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[June 20, 2018]
VIENNA (Reuters) - The risks
for financial stability in Europe are currently more political than
economic, veteran European Central Bank policymaker Ewald Nowotny said
on Wednesday.
Nowotny, who heads Austria's central bank and is a member of the ECB's
governing council, also told a news conference the euro's <EUR=> recent
weakening against the U.S. dollar was largely driven by diverging
interest rates.
The European Union is struggling to cope with a migration crisis, rising
nationalism in some member states, Britain's impending exit from the
bloc, a brewing trade war with the United States and other challenges.
"On the whole, there are more risks to financial stability in Europe on
the political side than on the economic side," Nowotny said.
He added that it was too early to evaluate a new German-French agreement
to introduce a euro zone budget.
Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Emmanuel Macron agreed on Tuesday
to create a euro zone budget charged with boosting investment in the
currency bloc and promoting economic convergence between its 19 member
states.
"It is important that there is a clear distinction between monetary and
fiscal policy," Nowotny said.
Italy's banking woes should not spill over to affect other European
lenders as Italian banks are relatively independent, he said, adding
that some large Italian banks had made significant progress in cleaning
up their balance sheets.
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Austrian National Bank (OeNB) Governor Ewald Nowotny addresses a
news conference in Vienna, Austria, June 15, 2018.
REUTERS/Heinz-Peter Bader
The euro's <EUR=> depreciation against the U.S. dollar has mainly to do with
diverging monetary policies, as the U.S. Federal Reserve raises borrowing costs
while the ECB has signaled no early change, Nowotny said.
"What we have seen is that markets are interpreting the developments in such a
way that there will be an increasing interest rate differential and that this
will have an impact on the exchange rate," Nowotny said.
The ECB decided last week to end its 2.6 trillion euro bond purchase program by
the close of the year but said rates would stay unchanged at least until next
summer, a wording that pushed back rate hike expectations by three months to
September 2019.
The Federal Reserve has increased rates twice this year, and at its meeting
earlier this month the median forecast for policymakers shifted to two
additional rate moves by the end of the year.
Exchange rate effects are usually short-lived, Nowotny said, adding that in the
long-term, a nationalistic economic policy in the United States could harm its
economic development.
(Reporting by Kirsti Knolle; Editing by Gareth Jones; Editing by Maria Sheahan)
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