Euro zone inflation tumble pits ECB against markets
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[November 30, 2023] By
Balazs Koranyi
FRANKFURT (Reuters) -Euro zone inflation tumbled more than expected for
a third straight month in November, challenging the European Central
Bank's narrative that price growth is stubborn and fuelling bets on
early spring rate cuts in defiance of the bank's explicit guidance.
Inflation has dropped quickly towards the ECB's 2% target from levels
above 10% just a year ago but policymakers have cautioned against
excessive optimism. They warn that the "last mile" of disinflation could
be more difficult and take twice as long as getting back under 3%.
Hard data showing inflation falling much faster than expected appears to
be challenging that outlook, however, even if a bounce back in the
coming months is still likely as high energy prices get knocked out of
year-earlier figures and some tax cuts are reversed.
Consumer price growth in the 20 nations sharing the euro currency
dropped to 2.4% in November from 2.9% in October, well below
expectations for 2.7%, dragged lower by nearly all items, with the
notable exception of unprocessed food prices.
Even underlying price pressures eased more quickly than forecast, with
inflation excluding food and energy - closely scrutinized by the ECB -
dipping to 3.6% from 4.2% on a big drop in services prices.
The rapid inflation slowdown puts the euro zone central bank and
investors on a collision course as the two appear to see greatly
different paths ahead, both for consumer prices and ECB interest rates.
"With a third month of an unambiguously good inflation report, and with
prices actually declining from the previous month, it is starting to
look that before long we will be talking about inflation being too low,
rather than too high," Kamil Kovar, a senior economist at Moody's
Analytics, said.
"And if the recent trends in inflation and growth continue then 2024
will be the year when the ECB implements a pirouette in monetary
policy."
The ECB argues that underlying dynamics are more stubborn than they
appear and inflation will actually come back above 3%next year, only
hitting the 2% target in late 2025, partly due to rapid nominal wage
growth.
This will require the bank to hold its deposit rate at a record-high 4%
for an extended period, and even Yannis Stournaras, the dovish chief of
the Greek central bank, sees no cut before mid-2024.
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People walk past the festive window decorations for the Christmas
season at the Samaritaine department store in Paris, France,
November 23, 2023. REUTERS/Sarah Meyssonnier
Fresh data on Thursday showing unemployment holding at a record-low
6.5% despite an economic contraction would appear to support this
argument as it underlines just how tight the euro zone's labour
market is.
Bank of Italy Governor Fabio Panetta did not explicitly push back on
the ECB's guidance on Thursday but warned about the dangers of
keeping interest rates high for too long.
"The duration of this phase will depend on development in
macroeconomic variables; it could be short if continued weakness in
economic activity accelerates the decline in inflation," Panetta, a
former ECB board member, said. ""We need to avoid unnecessary damage
to economic activity."
Investors are increasingly ignoring ECB President Christine
Lagarde's explicit guidance for steady rates for several quarters,
pricing in a combined 115 basis points of cuts for the next year,
with a first move by April fully priced in.
A key reason for the discrepancy is that the ECB's own projections
have a poor track record. It has been forced several times in recent
years to abandon its guidance after first pushing back on market
expectations.
Economists say that growth is weaker than the ECB expected, the
labor market is softening and credit demand has evaporated, all
pointing to rapid disinflation.
"Also, there is still a lot more of the impact of tightening to come
as interest payments are still increasing," ING economist Bert
Colijn said. "The market is therefore right to start looking at rate
cuts for 2024. We think the first one could well happen before the
summer."
Some economists argue that modeling current inflation is
exceptionally difficult because corporate profits are the main
driver, not wages as in normal bouts of rapid inflation.
(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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