ECB reaffirms rate hike plans even as recession looms large
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[October 28, 2022] By
Balazs Koranyi
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - European Central Bank
policymakers stood firmly behind plans to keep raising interest rates
even at a cost to economic growth, as data on Friday showed rising
inflationary pressures.
The ECB doubled its deposit rate to 1.5% on Thursday and promised more
tightening in the months to come in a bid to prevent sky high inflation
from getting entrenched, rebuffing government criticism that it was
exacerbating a likely recession.
Although markets have started to price out some rate hikes, policymakers
warned that another increase in December was certain and the deposit
rate could then continue to rise.
"It will go even higher in December and the first months of next year,"
ECB policymaker Peter Kazimir said on Friday.
"We will cross the neutral rate -- regardless of where anyone currently
sees it -- like a runaway train," Kazimir, Slovakia's central bank
chief, said. "We need to get monetary policy into the so-called
restrictive environment, at least for a certain period."
At the ECB's neutral interest rate, seen somewhere between 1.5% and 2%,
the bank is neither stimulating nor putting a brake on economic
activity.
Kazimir's call came shortly after the ECB's Survey of Professional
Forecasters, a key input in policy deliberations, showed euro zone
inflation will be higher than feared for years to come and could stay
above the bank's 2% target indefinitely.
Inflation, running at almost 10%, is seen falling only to 5.8% in 2023,
above the ECB's own projection for 5.5%, then holding at 2.4% in 2024.
While that is still decisively above target and likely to justify more
policy tightening, the forecast is still below the International
Monetary Fund's 2.7% projection.
Reinforcing these inflation fears, most German states reporting price
growth data on Friday showed a continued acceleration, defying
expectations for a slowdown or at least a steady reading.
Italian inflation meanwhile soared to 12.8% in October, far outpacing
expectations for 9.9% while French price growth was also well above
forecasts.
Still, tempering the ECB's message, French central bank chief Francois
Villeroy de Galhau noted that the next rate hike would not necessarily
be 75 basis points, following two such back-to-back moves.
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A view of signage outside the European
Central Bank (ECB) building in Frankfurt, Germany October 27, 2022.
REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay
Markets currently price a 50 basis point ECB hike in December and
see rates peaking at 2.7% next year, below the 3% anticipated just a
few days ago.
RECESSION
The hawkish ECB commentary comes as a recession looks now almost
certain, prompting a barrage of criticism from European leaders.
The ECB's survey predicted that economic growth would total just
0.1% next year and there would be three quarters of negative growth
starting with the third quarter of 2022, totalling a cumulative
decline of 0.7%.
Top European officials including French President Francois Macron to
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni expressed frustration with the
ECB in recent days, arguing that its fastest ever policy tightening
could intensify the downturn.
ECB chief Christine Lagarde pushed back on the criticism on
Thursday, arguing that breaking inflation was the ECB's chief
mission and governments could help by providing targeted support for
the most vulnerable.
Highlighting the risk, major global companies including Amazon,
Unilever and Reckitt Beckiser this week gave the starkest warnings
yet on the challenges facing European consumers this winter. "Fuel
cost and the impacts of the Ukraine war are hitting the economies in
Europe even harder than the U.S., and that's showing up in consumer
spend," Brian Olsavsky, Amazon's chief financial officer, told
reporters. Unilever, maker of more than 400 brands including Persil
detergent and Ben & Jerry's ice cream, on Thursday also gave a dire
assessment. "Consumer sentiment in Europe is at an all time low,"
Chief Financial Officer Graeme Pitkethly told reporters, warning of
fears of a "confluence of events" with energy prices and inflation
rising and households' savings waning.
(Additional reporting by Matt Schuffham and Andrius Sytas; editing
by John Stonestreet)
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