ECB to cut interest rates as growth dwindles but focus already on
October
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[September 12, 2024] By
Balazs Koranyi and Francesco Canepa
FRANKFURT (Reuters) -The European Central Bank is almost certain to cut
interest rates again on Thursday, but with inflation risks simmering
despite anaemic growth, investors will be combing its message for clues
on further easing.
The ECB lowered its deposit rate to 3.75% in June and an array of
policymakers have already backed another cut, suggesting their debate is
likely to focus on how quickly borrowing costs need to fall in
subsequent meetings.
The likely outcome is that ECB President Christine Lagarde will stick to
the bank's recent narrative that decisions are taken meeting by meeting,
based on incoming data with no pre-commitments.
But she may also say that all meetings are "live", keeping open the door
to a cut in October, even if some conservative hawks make the case for
slower easing while inflation across the 20-country euro zone remains
above the ECB's 2% target.
"While an October rate cut could happen ... we think it is unlikely that
the incoming information between the September and the October meeting
will be sufficiently weak to bring an October rate cut in play," Danske
Bank's Piet Haines Christiansen said.
More dovish policymakers, mainly from the bloc's south, are likely to
argue that recession risks are rising and that with inflation within
striking distance of the target at 2.2%, ECB rates are now restricting
growth far more than needed.
But inflation-wary hawks, who are still in a majority, say the labour
market remains too hot for the ECB to sit back, and that underlying
price pressures, as evidenced in stubborn services costs, raise the risk
of resurgent inflation.
NEW FORECASTS
New economic forecasts are unlikely to settle the debate.
Quarterly projections from the ECB's staff are expected to show slightly
lower growth this year and inflation broadly on the same path as in June
and set to return to 2% on a "sustainable" basis by the second half of
next year.
That means few if any policymakers are likely to argue against further
easing, with the key divide being just how quickly the ECB should move.
"Whilst we think the ECB is in no rush to cut rates, it also does not
want to keep rates too high for too long," Pimco portfolio manager
Konstantin Veit said. "We continue to envision that the ECB will cut
rates at staff projection meetings, and anticipate its third cut in
December."
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A view of European Central Bank headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany
July 18, 2024. REUTERS/Jana Rodenbusch/File Photo
Hawkish policymakers have made clear that they see quarterly rate
cuts as appropriate, since key growth and wage indicators - which
inform the ECB's own projections - are compiled every three months.
Investors are also divided, with another cut by December fully
priced into financial markets but the chance of an interim move in
October oscillating between 40% and 50%.
Lagarde's main task in her 1245 GMT news conference will be to keep
all options on the table without stoking expectations for October.
"For now, we believe the quarterly rate cut path will hold, with
domestic inflation and underlying labour cost pressures still too
high for comfort," Societe Generale's Anatoli Annenkov said.
"For accelerated policy easing, we believe the labour markets in
particular will need to show signs of a faster deterioration,
something that has remained elusive."
TECHNICAL RATE CUT
With Thursday's move, the ECB's deposit rate will fall by 25 basis
points to 3.5%. The refinancing rate is meanwhile likely to fall by
a much bigger 60 basis points in a long-flagged technical
adjustment.
The gap between the two interest rates has been set at 50 basis
points for years and the ECB announced plans in March to narrow this
corridor to 15 basis points from September in a move that could
eventually rekindle lending between banks.
Such a revival is still years away, so the ECB's move is a
pre-emptive adjustment of its operating framework.
For now, banks are sitting on 3 trillion euros of excess liquidity
and deposit this with the bank overnight, making the deposit rate in
effect the ECB's main policy instrument.
Over time this liquidity should dwindle, pushing banks to borrow
again from the ECB at the refinancing rate, traditionally the
central bank's benchmark interest rate.
Once that happens, the main rate will regain its headline status,
while the narrower rate corridor should help the ECB better manage
market rates.
(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Catherine Evans and Alison
Williams)
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