Home / Business / ECB will stick to its policy stance amid steady inflation 

ECB will stick to its policy stance amid steady inflation 


European Central Bank President Mario Draghi attends an Eurogroup finance ministers meeting at the European Council in Brussels on May 24, 2018.

Emmanuel Dunand | AFP | Getty Images

European Central Bank President Mario Draghi attends an Eurogroup finance ministers meeting at the European Council in Brussels on May 24, 2018.

The gist of this week’s meeting will be in press conference. Mainly three areas are expected to be of interest:

  • Will there be an update on their interest rate forward guidance?
  • Will the ECB give away more information of what they are planning on doing with reinvestment? How long will they expect to run?
  • Does ECB chief Mario Draghi have anything to say about the risks stemming from the Italian budget debate?

All these points could trigger market moving commentary but at the same time it is not very likely that Draghi is willing to give away substantial new information on these grounds.

“We expect to hear questions about how the central bank intends to reinvest the proceeds from its maturing securities,” Franck Dixmier, global head of fixed income at Allianz GI said in a note to clients this week.

“We would be surprised if officials provided any clarification at that stage since it is in the ECB’s best interest to keep all its options open in today’s tense geopolitical environment,” Dixmier added.

The ECB has committed itself to stop buying new bonds at the end of this year, but the onus clearly now is on the reinvestment of these purchases (as part of its crisis-era stimulus program) and its refined rate guidance. The euro zone’s central bank pledged to keep its key interest rate at minus 0.4 percent “at least through the summer of 2019” during its last meeting.

The ECB wants to keep its flexibility and hence has been stressing the data dependency of all its future decisions ever since they announced the big exit strategy in Riga. But for now the data looks good, there is no need to change the strategy.

Backing for that view will also come from the next staff projections which are due this week and which are seen mostly unchanged from last quarter.

About admin

Check Also

Mercedes-Benz, Microsoft to test ChatGPT in vehicles

Mercedes-Benz electric EQS SUV Mercedes-Benz Mercedes-Benz and Microsoft are partnering to test in-car ChatGPT artificial …