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President of the European Central Bank (ECB) Christine Lagarde speaks during a press conference after a meeting of the bank in the Hermitage, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, June 9. According to an ECB statement, the Governing Council intends to raise key interest rates by 25 basis points at its July monetary policy meeting. EPA-Yonhap |
The European Central Bank ended a long-running stimulus scheme on Thursday and said it would deliver its first interest rate hike since 2011 next month, followed by a potentially larger move in September.
With inflation at a record-high 8.1 percent and still rising, the ECB now fears that price growth is broadening out and could morph into a hard-to-break wage-price spiral, heralding a new era of stubbornly higher prices.
The central bank for the 19 countries that use the euro said it would end quantitative easing July 1, then raise interest rates by 25 basis points July 21. It will then hike again Sept. 8 and go for a bigger move, unless the inflation outlook improves in the meantime.
"We will make sure that inflation returns to our 2 percent target over the medium term," ECB President Christine Lagarde told a news conference. "It is not just a step, it is a journey," she said of the moves signaled Thursday.
Some policymakers had advocated a bigger move in July but eventually gave in and the final policy decision was approved unanimously, sources told Reuters.
The rapid rise in inflation was driven initially by energy and food prices as economies emerged from COVID-19 lockdowns, but Russia's invasion of Ukraine has accelerated those trends, and even underlying inflation is now double the ECB's target.
The size of rate hikes has been intensely debated by ECB policymakers, with Chief Economist Philip Lane preferring 25 basis point moves in July and September but others arguing for 50 basis points to be considered.
Supporting their case, the ECB raised its inflation projections once again, to 6.8 percent for this year versus a previous forecast of 5.1 percent. It sees inflation at 3.5 percent in 2023 and 2.1 percent in 2024, which would be a fourth straight year of overshooting.
Lagarde said that was too high and that similar projections three months from now would require quicker rate hikes.
"If you are at 2.1 percent in 2024 or beyond, then will the increment of the adjustment be higher? The answer is yes," Lagarde said.
A 50 basis point hike, the logical next increment, would be the ECB's largest one-off rate increase since June 2000. At minus 0.5 percent, the ECB's deposit rate has been in negative territory since 2014.
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A symphony of light consisting of bars, lines and circles in blue and yellow, the colors of the European Union, illuminates the south facade of the European Central Bank (ECB) headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany, in this Dec. 30, 2021, file photo. Reuters-Yonhap |
Behind the curve?
"Given that our forecasts are pointing to a further increase in euro area core inflation in the next few months, we now expect the ECB to hike rates by 25bp in July, and by 50bp in September," Pictet strategist Frederik Ducrozet said.
"We expect the ECB to revert back to the benchmark pace of 25bp hikes, but they are likely to hike in October and in December, and the 50bp option will likely remain on the table until core inflation eases significantly."
By late Thursday, markets were pricing in 144 basis points of rate hikes this year, implying an increase at every meeting from July, with several moves in excess of 25 basis points.
They were anticipating a combined 240 basis points of moves in the deposit rate by the end of 2023, putting the interest rate peak close to 2 percent.
"I think in times of great uncertainty, gradualism is probably appropriate, more so than if the path is clear, well-identified and we all understand where we are heading," said Lagarde, who said early this year that a 2022 rate hike was highly unlikely.
Some economists argued that the ECB was already too late in tacking inflation so raising rates to the neutral level, where it is neither stimulating nor holding back the economy, will not be enough.
"The ECB remains behind the curve," Commerzbank chief economist Jorg Kramer said.
"It is not enough to just take its foot off the gas, it must also step on the brakes," Kramer said. "But that is precisely what it is not prepared to do, which is why we expect inflation to average well above 2 percent in the coming years."
The ECB's first rate hike in over a decade will still leave it trailing most of its global peers, including the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of England, which have been raising rates aggressively and promising even more action.
Unlike the Fed, the ECB also has no plans to reduce its balance sheet, with policymakers reaffirming their commitment to keep reinvesting cash maturing from the 5 trillion euros worth of public and private debt the ECB holds.
Even as she promised rate hikes, Lagarde vowed not to allow the borrowing costs of former euro zone debt crisis countries to be pushed wildly higher by financial markets again. "We are committed, committed!" Lagarde said.
While the start of policy tightening is now set, the end point remains uncertain.
While Lagarde has said that rates should move towards the neutral point, this level is undefined and unobservable, leaving investors guessing just how far the ECB wants to go. (Reuters)