ECB policymakers keen to cool euphoria over inflation drop
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[November 08, 2023] By
Balazs Koranyi
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - The European Central Bank needs to see further
progress in dampening inflationary pressures, and companies along with
governments need to chip in to prevent more policy tightening, ECB
policymakers said on Wednesday.
The ECB snapped a steak of ten straight rate hikes last month, and
investors are increasingly betting that its next move will be a cut,
possibly as soon as next April, as consumer price growth in now back
under 3%, down from over 10% in just a year.
But policymakers speaking at various venues across Europe appeared keen
to cool any euphoria about the rapid fall in prices, arguing that the
overall picture was more mixed. Some policymakers even argued that
further rate hikes should not be taken off the table.
"You do see some progress (in underlying inflation), but not yet
enough," ECB chief economist Philip Lane said in Riga, adding that he
did not take "a lot of comfort" from the fall in overall inflation, as
this was driven by a reversal of energy price increases from a year
earlier.
Inflation fell to 2.9% last month from over 10% a year earlier but Lane
predicted steady or even rising price growth next year, with rates in
the "high twos or low threes" in 2024 before a drop back to the 2%
target in 2025.
Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel meanwhile echoed fellow German and
ECB board member Isabel Schnabel in warning about the perils of the last
stage in the ECB's work.
"The 'last mile' before we reach our inflation target may well be the
hardest," Nagel said in London.
Schnabel earlier argued that it could take much longer to get from 3% to
2% than it did to get to the current level.
Latvian policymaker Martins Kazaks and Ireland's Gabriel Makhlouf even
said that further rate hikes should not yet be excluded, even if markets
see a zero probability of such a move.
"It is far, far too early in my view to start talking about whether we
need to start reducing or cutting rates... And also it is too early to
declare that we have reached the top of the ladder" of interest rate
hikes, Makhlouf said in Dublin.
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European Union (EU) flags fly in front of the headquarters of the
European Central Bank (ECB) in Frankfurt, Germany, July 8, 2020.
REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski/File Photo
The ECB's own survey of consumer expectations, published earlier on
Wednesday, showed that price growth expectations over the next year
rose sharply from the previous month but remained steady at just
above the bank's target for three years out.
A key condition for continued disinflation would be for firms to
start absorbing some of the relatively quick wage increases and
accept lower margins, Lane and Nagel argued.
"I am therefore expecting firms’ profits to moderate in the coming
quarters and absorb some of the recent strong increases in wages,"
Nagel said. "If profits were to rise strongly instead, high
inflation would be more persistent. And this would call the (ECB) to
action."
Corporate profit margins surged during the period of quick inflation
as companies raised prices well ahead of the increase in costs,
taking advantage of the turbulence and building buffers against the
possibility of more inflation ahead.
"We do need to see profits adjust," Lane said. "The more firms
absorb wage increases via lower profits, that will help inflation
come down and in turn workers will not feel the need to ask for such
high wage increases."
Nagel said that governments also needed to restrict spending to
reduce the burden on the ECB.
"The IMF told us a few weeks ago, don't declare victory too soon.
Because there's a historical pattern of victory being declared too
soon," Makhlouf said.
(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; additional reporting by Francesco
Canepa and Padraic Halpin; Editing by Andrew Heavens, Toby Chopra
and Bernadette Baum)
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