Europe must break down its internal barriers to move away from a growth model that is driven by exports, European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said.
In a speech to bankers Friday, Lagarde also highlighted Europe’s vulnerability to the “weaponization” of key raw materials and technologies.
US treasury secretary Scott Bessent talks about the independence of the Federal Reserve in an interview with Fox News.Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP
US treasury secretary Scott Bessent has said the Federal Reserve is and should be independent but that it had “made a lot of mistakes”, as he defended Donald Trump’s right to fire the central bank governor Lisa Cook.
The president has criticised the Fed and its chair, Jerome Powell, for months for not lowering interest rates. Independent central banks are widely seen as crucial to a stable global financial system. Bessent also rejected the idea that markets were disturbed by the Trump administration’s actions. “S&P’s at a new high and bond yields are fine, so we haven’t seen anything yet,” he said.
Bessent’s comments come as Christine Lagarde, the president of the European Central Bank (ECB), said Trump undermining the independence of the world’s most powerful central bank could pose a “very serious danger” for the world economy.
Lagarde, who was France’s finance minister until 2011 before leaving to run the International Monetary Fund, said it would be “very difficult” for Trump to take control of Fed decision-making on interest rates, but such a scenario would be highly dangerous.
“If US monetary policy were no longer independent and instead dependent on the dictates of this or that person, then I believe that the effect on the balance of the American economy could – as a result of the effects this would have around the world – be very worrying, because it is the largest economy in the world,” she said, according to remarks reported by Reuters.
Guatemala is ready and willing to receive about 150 unaccompanied children of all ages each week from the US, the country’s president has said, a day after a US federal judge halted the deportation of 10 Guatemalan children.
On Monday, Guatemala’s president, Bernardo Arévalo, told journalists that his government had been coordinating with the US to receive the unaccompanied minors.
Nine former officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have said that Robert F Kennedy Jr’s leadership of the US health and human services department is “unlike anything our country has ever experienced” and “unacceptable”. They also warned that Kennedy’s leadership “should alarm every American, regardless of political leanings”.
The president said Monday he would award Rudy Giuliani the nation’s highest civilian honour, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, two days after his longtime political ally was seriously injured in a car crash.
The decision places the award on a man once lauded for leading New York after the 11 September 2001 attacks and later sanctioned by courts and disbarred for amplifying false claims about the 2020 US presidential election. Giuliani, the former New York mayor, was also criminally charged in two states; he has denied wrongdoing.
Hundreds of protests organised as part of the national “workers over billionaires” effort – a mass action calling for the protection of social safety – were held in cities large and small across the country, including New York, Houston, Washington DC and Los Angeles.
As the Labor Day rallies took place, Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson sharply denounced the Trump administration’s threat to deploy federal troops to the city as part of an immigration crackdown.
For this Labor Day, the Trump administration has draped an enormous banner outside the US labor department with his portrait and the words “American Workers First”. But many labor advocates say Trump has consistently put corporate interests first in his second term as he has taken dozens of actions that hurt workers.
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European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde is giving a press conference following the bank’s latest monetary policy decision. The central bank left interest rates unchanged on Thursday, after implementing a cut in June.
(Bloomberg) — The euro climbed with European stock-index futures on speculation Marine Le Pen’s far-right party will struggle to win an outright majority in French elections, easing investor concern that Europe’s second-largest economy was headed for a more radical policy shift.
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Futures on French government bonds edged higher, while those on German bunds dropped after the first round of voting showed Le Pen’s National Rally in front of President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist alliance, albeit less comfortably than some polls projected. A very strong showing for her party would have increased the odds of expansive fiscal policy in France, whose deficit already exceeds what’s allowed under European Union rules.
Most Asian shares rose, with Japanese and South Korean benchmarks both gaining. Chinese equities slipped after a report showed factory activity contracted for a second month in June. While data showed the Caixin manufacturing gauge edged up last month, Bloomberg Economics said the marginal improvement did little to counter the worrisome message from official surveys. Hong Kong financial markets are shut for a holiday.
“We are starting off in Asia with that sense of relief that the far-right parties did not get the kind of majority that was feared,” Charu Chanana, a market strategist for Saxo Capital Markets in Singapore, told Bloomberg Television’s David Ingles and Stephen Engle.
In addition to French politics, investors will be looking to the European Central Bank for clues, she said, adding that “there’s been some sense of stability for the euro zone economy after that first rate cut, but we certainly don’t look like we’re out of the woods yet.”
France’s second round of voting will be held on July 7. The French political world is now embarking on a period of horse-trading. In constituencies where three people qualified for the runoffs, the third-placed candidate can withdraw to boost the chances of another mainstream party defeating the far right.
Japan Confidence
Confidence among Japan’s large manufacturers rose, data on Monday showed, leaving the door open for the central bank to consider an interest-rate increase later this month. The yield for the nation’s 10-year bond rose 2 basis points to 1.07%.
One in three economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicts a rate hike at the BOJ’s next gathering. The yen dropped to the lowest level since 1986 last week, prompting some analysts to flag a heightened risk of a rate move as Governor Kazuo Ueda has pledged to watch the yen’s impact on inflation closely.
A swath of data indicated the US biggest economy is cooling without lasting damage to consumers. US consumer sentiment declined by less than initially estimated on expectations inflationary pressures will moderate and the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge marked its smallest advance in six months. Ten-year treasuries were little changed on Monday.
“Going into the second half, there’s a lot of election election uncertainty and we think the dollar will be the best risk-off hedge,” Alex Loo, foreign exchange and macro strategist at TD Securities, told Annabelle Droulers and Shery Ahn on Bloomberg Television. “We do like its appeal as a safe-haven currency.”
In commodities, oil was little changed as traders weighed China’s economic outlook and geopolitical risks in Europe and the Middle East. Gold was also little changed.
Key events this week:
Eurozone S&P Global Eurozone Manufacturing PMI, Monday
Indonesia CPI, Monday
India HSBC Manufacturing PMI, Monday
UK S&P Global / CIPS UK Manufacturing PMI, Monday
US construction spending, ISM Manufacturing, Monday
ECB President Christine Lagarde speaks, Monday
Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel speaks, Monday
RBA issues minutes of June policy meeting, Tuesday
South Korea CPI, Tuesday
Eurozone CPI, unemployment, Tuesday
Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks, Tuesday
ECB President Christine Lagarde speaks, Tuesday
Australia retail sales, Wednesday
China Caixin services PMI, Wednesday
Eurozone S&P Global Eurozone Services PMI, PPI, Wednesday
Poland rate decision, Wednesday
US FOMC minutes, ISM Services, factory orders, trade, initial jobless claims, durable goods, Wednesday
ECB President Christine Lagarde speaks, Wednesday
New York Fed President John Williams speaks, Wednesday
Sweden’s Riksbank issues minutes of June meeting, Wednesday
Australia trade, Thursday
Brazil trade, Thursday
UK general election, Thursday
European Union provisional tariffs on China EVs set to be introduced, Thursday
ECB publishes account of June’s policy meeting, Thursday
US Independence Day holiday, Thursday
Philippines CPI, Friday
Taiwan CPI, Friday
Thailand CPI, international reserves, Friday
Eurozone retail sales, Friday
France trade, industrial production, Friday
Germany industrial production, Friday
ECB President Christine Lagarde speaks, Friday
Canada unemployment, Friday
US unemployment, nonfarm payrolls, Friday
New York Fed President John Williams speaks, Friday
Some of the main moves in markets:
Stocks
S&P 500 futures rose 0.3% as of 12:50 p.m. Tokyo time
Hang Seng futures fell 0.4%
Nikkei 225 futures (OSE) rose 0.1%
Japan’s Topix rose 0.4%
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.3%
The Shanghai Composite rose 0.3%
Euro Stoxx 50 futures rose 1.1%
Currencies
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed
The euro rose 0.4% to $1.0752
The Japanese yen was little changed at 161.04 per dollar
The offshore yuan was little changed at 7.3016 per dollar
Cryptocurrencies
Bitcoin rose 2.4% to $63,373.65
Ether rose 2.3% to $3,495.2
Bonds
The yield on 10-year Treasuries was little changed at 4.39%
Japan’s 10-year yield advanced two basis points to 1.070%
Australia’s 10-year yield advanced seven basis points to 4.38%
Commodities
This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde on Tuesday said the central bank remains on course to cut interest rates in the near term, subject to any major shocks.
Lagarde said the ECB would monitor oil prices “very closely” amid elevated fears of a spillover conflict in the Middle East. However, since Iran’s unprecedented air attack on Israel over the weekend, she said the oil price reaction had been “relatively moderate.”
Her comments come shortly after the central bank gave its clearest indication to date that it could start cutting interest rates during its June meeting.
“We are observing a disinflationary process that is moving according to our expectations,” Lagarde told CNBC’s Sara Eisen on the sidelines of the IMF Spring Meetings.
“We just need to build a bit more confidence in this disinflationary process but if it moves according to our expectations, if we don’t have a major shock in development, we are heading towards a moment where we have to moderate the restrictive monetary policy,” Lagarde said.
“As I said, subject to no development of additional shock, it will be time to moderate the restrictive monetary policy in reasonably short order,” she added.
The ECB on Thursday held interest rates steady at a record high for the fifth consecutive meeting, but signaled that cooling inflation means it could begin trimming soon.
In a shift from previous language, the ECB said “it would be appropriate” to lower its 4% deposit rate if underlying price pressures and the impact of previous rate hikes were to boost confidence that inflation is falling back toward its 2% target “in a sustained manner.”
The central bank had previously made no direct reference to loosening monetary policy in its prior communiques.
Asked whether a June rate cut might be followed by subsequent reductions, Lagarde replied, “I have been extremely clear on that and I have said deliberately we are not pre-committing to any rate path.”
“There is huge uncertainty out there. … We have to be attentive to those developments, we have to look at the data, we have to draw conclusions from those data.”
Lagarde declined to comment when asked whether three ECB rate cuts this year was a reasonable expectation for market participants.
Policymakers and economists have zeroed in on June as the month when rates could start to be reduced, after the ECB trimmed its medium-term inflation forecast. Price rises in the euro zone have since cooled more than expected in March.
Asked about the central bank’s confidence in inflation continuing to fall in the wake of rising commodity prices, particularly should oil prices spike amid geopolitical tensions, Lagarde replied, “All commodity prices have an impact, and we have to be extremely attentive to those movements.”
“Clearly on energy and on food, it has a direct and rapid impact,” she added.
Earlier on Tuesday, ECB policymaker Olli Rehn said that the prospects for a June rate cut hinge upon inflation falling as expected, noting that the biggest risks to the ECB’s monetary policy stem from Iran-Israel tensions and the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war.
“As summer approaches we can start reducing the level of restriction in monetary policy, provided that inflation continues to fall as projected,” Rehn, who serves as the governor of the Bank of Finland, said in a statement.
“The biggest risks stem from geopolitics, both the deteriorating situation in Ukraine and the possible escalation of the Middle East conflict, with all their ramifications,” he added.
Israeli forces have pledged to respond to Iran’s large-scale air attack on Israel on Saturday. World leaders have called for the “utmost degree of restraint” in the aftermath of the weekend attack, amid fears of an escalation of the conflict in the Middle East.
Speculation that the ECB could soon start cutting rates comes even as investors have slashed their bets on Federal Reserve rate reductions. Traders now ascribe a 20% likelihood of a Fed rate cut in June, after yet another inflation print showed consumer prices remain sticky.
It comes after the bank’s policymakers lowered their annual growth forecast, as they confirmed a widely expected hold of interest rates.
ECB staff projections now see economic growth of 0.6% in 2024, from a prior forecast of 0.8%. Their inflation forecast for the year was brought to 2.3% from 2.7%.
A trader works, as a screen displays a news conference by Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell following the Fed rate announcement, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., January 31, 2024.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters
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Wall Street retreats U.S. stocks lost ground on Monday and Treasury yields rose amid lingering concerns that the Federal Reserve may not cut rates as much as expected. The blue-chip Dow fell over 200 points. The S&P 500 also slumped after hitting a record high last week. The Nasdaq Composite also dropped 0.2%.
Oil’s supply crunch The oil market faces a supply crunch by the end of 2025 as the world is not replacing crude reserves fast enough, according to Occidental CEO Vicki Hollub. About 97% of the oil produced today was discovered in the 20th century, she told CNBC.
Palantir surges Shares of Palantir spiked 19%in extended trading after the company reported revenue that topped analysts’ estimates. In a letter to shareholders, Palantir CEO Alex Karp said demand for large language models in the U.S. “continues to be unrelenting.”
Red Sea tensions Higher shipping costs due to tensions in the Red Sea could hinder the global fight against inflation, said the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Clare Lombardelli, chief economist at the OECD, told CNBC that shipping-driven inflation pressures remain a risk rather than its base case.
[PRO] Banking allure The banking sector offers attractive opportunities despite an increase in volatility, according to fund manager Cole Smead. “It’s the banks that made bad decisions that are making [other] banks look attractive in pricing,” Smead told CNBC, who picked two bank stocks that are in play.
Investors are once again getting ahead of themselves on the Fed’s next move.
Markets were rattled after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell reiterated the central bank is unlikely to rush to lower interest rates.
Wall Street has been parsing his hawkish comments, yet in essence what Powell said over the weekend was no different than what he shared at Wednesday’s press conference: that he wants to see more evidence that inflation is coming down to a sustainable level.
Still, the debate over the timing of rate cuts unsettled Fed watchers.
This sparked a sell-off spurred by higher bond yields. The yield on the 10-year Treasury spiked for a second day, trading around 4.163%. Typically, higher yields tend to indicate investors think the Fed will take longer to cut rates.
Fresh data out Monday also didn’t help. A new survey showed the U.S. services sector expand at a faster-than-expected clip in January.
This on top of the booming jobs report released Friday, fueled investor worries that rates may stay elevated for much longer.
Wall Street will now look ahead to the swath of Fed speakers this week. Perhaps they will shed more light on the path for rate cuts.
The ECB on Thursday held interest rates steady for the third meeting in a row. The bank was widely expected to leave policy unchanged in light of the sharp fall in euro zone inflation.
The team at Capital Economics was among the most bullish we found on the outlook for stocks in 2024.
The firm sees the benchmark S&P 500 rising to 5,500 by the end of this year, and adding another 1,000 points — roughly 18% — through the end of 2025, hitting 6,500 in a little under two years.
In a note to clients published Wednesday, the firm’s chief markets economist, John Higgins, walks through the main pillars of this forecast as investors have kicked off the year with some trepidation.
Higgins’s view most simply boils down to an argument that earnings can continue to rise and AI hype will ultimately inflate a stock market bubble.
Comparing the conditions for the market today to those that preceded the tech bubble in the late ’90s, Higgins notes, among other things, that while valuations for the market’s tech leaders are elevated, there is both scope for valuations to rise further both for this basket of stocks and the market overall.
The simplest way to think about valuations rising is that stock prices — or the amount investors pay for each $1 of earnings — rise while actual profits don’t.
Source: Capital Economics
“Our current end-2024 and end-2025 forecasts for the S&P 500 are 5,500 and 6,500, respectively,” Higgins wrote. “Punchy as these projections may appear, the valuation of the index would only have to rise to roughly the level it reached before the dot com bubble burst for them to be [realized] — based on what are think are plausible outcomes for EPS.”
“Our analysis leads us to conclude that, provided the economy skirts a recession, there is scope for a bubble to inflate in the S&P 500 this year and next,” Higgins added.
“We envisage the index becoming even more top heavy in the process, but do think that most sectors will fare well even if those that stand to benefit the most from the advent of AI keep leading the charge.”
The ECB on Thursday held interest rates steady for the second meeting in a row, as it revised its growth forecasts lower.
The bank was widely expected to leave policy unchanged in light of the sharp fall in euro zone inflation, as investors instead chase signals on when the first rate cut may come and assess the ECB’s plans to shrink its balance sheet.
(Bloomberg) — Inflation gauges in the US and euro zone are set to show the smallest annual increases since early or mid-2021, reinforcing sentiment that interest rates won’t be raised again.
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The Federal Reserve’s preferred measures will be published on Thursday, with the personal consumption expenditures price index seen rising 3.1% in October from a year ago. The core measure, which excludes food and fuel and is considered a better gauge of underlying inflation, is expected to have climbed 3.5%.
Euro-region data for November, also due on Thursday, will probably show inflation at 2.7%, the lowest since July 2021. The underlying measure is seen slowing to 3.9%.
Despite the disinflation progress, officials on both sides of the Atlantic insist they want to see more evidence to be sure that consumer prices are durably under control. On Friday, European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said that “we’re certainly not declaring victory.”
Fed officials are united around a strategy of being deliberate about the path for policy. Minutes of their last meeting showed that they took note of how higher rates were starting to squeeze households and businesses.
The Fed on Wednesday will issue its Beige Book of economic conditions and anecdotes from across the country.
The US personal income and spending report is also forecast to show only a slight advance in inflation-adjusted consumer outlays. The October downshift in demand help explain forecasts for a slowdown in the economy after a third-quarter growth spurt.
What Bloomberg Economics Says:
“The inflation impulse dulled in October, which should allow the Fed to stay on hold through year-end.”
—Anna Wong, Stuart Paul, Eliza Winger and Estelle Ou, economists. For full analysis, click here
The government issues its first revision to third-quarter gross domestic product on Wednesday, the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey calls for 5% growth. Initial estimate of corporate profits are also expected.
Other US data in the coming week include October new-home sales, November consumer confidence, weekly jobless claims, and a key manufacturing survey.
Further north, Canada will release third-quarter GDP data that will reveal whether it entered a recession, though economists reckon on at least minimal growth. Jobs numbers for November will be the last major data point before the Bank of Canada’s rate decision on Dec. 6.
Elsewhere, the Paris-based OECD presents a new set of forecasts, Lagarde speaks to European lawmakers, and central banks from New Zealand to South Korea are expected to keep rates on hold.
Click here for what happened last week and below is our wrap of what’s coming up in the global economy.
Asia
Central bank governors are expected to gather at the start of the week as part of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s global financial summit and Bank for International Settlements conference.
Chinese purchasing manager indexes will start being published toward the end of the week, data to be closely watched by investors for signs of recovery in the world’s second-largest economy.
The Bank of Korea is expected to hold rates steady on Thursday, though it continues to face a tricky policy environment where inflation remains sticky, growth weak and household debt on the rise.
South Korea is also set to report on trade data Friday, one of the earliest looks into how global demand was holding up in November.
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand and the Bank of Thailand are set to make their latest rate decisions on Wednesday, while India will report third quarter GDP the same day.
A range of Asian countries will report on manufacturing PMI data on Friday, from India to Vietnam to Indonesia, giving a broader view into how the region’s economies are holding up.
Bank of Japan board members will speak to business leaders and hold press conferences on Wednesday and Thursday, amid continued speculation over the timing for policy normalization.
The country will also report on industrial production and retail sales data on Thursday, plus labor and business spending data on Friday, after figures showed the Japanese economy contracted in the third quarter.
Europe, Middle East, Africa
Testimony by Lagarde to the European Parliament on Monday will provide investors with something to trade on before the inflation data.
Those numbers will arrive after a drip of national reports starting on Wednesday that are mostly expected to show a synchronized decline across major economies, albeit at divergent levels.
While Spanish inflation probably accelerated, it’s seen weakening in France to 4.1%, and the outcome in Germany is also projected lower at 2.7%. Italian price increases are expected to decelerate markedly further below the ECB’s goal, to 1.1%.
Friday may feature the release of several reports by ratings companies. Among them, S&P Global Ratings is scheduled to publish a view on France, and Scope Ratings could do the same for Italy.
Meanwhile, the German government is struggling to hammer out a revised budget after a shock court ruling earlier this month.
In the UK, several Bank of England policymakers are due to make appearances, including Governor Andrew Bailey, while it’s a quieter week for data.
After Sweden’s Riksbank surprised investors on Thursday by halting rate increases, third-quarter GDP on Wednesday may reveal a recession. Economic weakness was one argument economists gave to keep borrowing costs on hold – although Governor Erik Thedeen hasn’t closed the door on another hike.
On Friday, meanwhile, Swiss data could show that the economy returned to marginal growth during the same period after stalling in the prior three months.
Turning east, Poland will publish inflation, seen staying at 6.6% — more than twice as much as in the neighboring euro region. GDP numbers in the Czech Republic may show a recession.
In Israel, analysts expect the base rate to stay at 4.75% on Monday as the central bank continues supporting the currency. The shekel has recovered all losses since Israel’s war with Hamas began in early October, but officials may refrain from cutting rates until next year.
The same day, Ghana, the world’s second-largest cocoa producer, is set to leave borrowing costs unchanged.
Mauritius on Tuesday is also poised to hold rates steady as inflation has eased below the central bank’s 2% to 5% target range earlier than expected. And with inflation quickening again, gas-rich Mozambique is also likely to keep borrowing costs unchanged on Wednesday.
Latin America
Latin America has a light economic calendar in the coming week, with highlights to include mid-month consumer prices index in Brazil and an inflation report by Mexico’s central bank.
Brazil’s mid-November inflation, due on Tuesday, is expected to further decelerate from a year ago, justifying the central bank’s pledge to deliver at least two more rate cuts of half a percentage point.
Mexico releases its inflation report the following day. The document, which usually brings revisions to growth estimates, may shed light on the timing of a much-anticipated monetary easing cycle.
The central bank has signaled that rate cuts are near, but the latest economic activity data, including third-quarter GDP figures released on Friday, showed Latin America’s second-largest economy is performing better than economists forecast.
Chile publishes a number of activity and production reports starting on Thursday, the most important being Friday’s Imacec index of economic activity for October. The indicator, considered a proxy for GDP, had its biggest gain in eight months in September, surprising economists.
Also on Friday, Brazil releases industrial production for October, while Mexico publishes remittances data for the same month.
–With assistance from Monique Vanek, Piotr Skolimowski, Yuko Takeo, Molly Smith and Laura Dhillon Kane.
President of the European Central Bank (ECB) Christine Lagarde gestures as she addresses a press conference following the meeting of the governing council of the ECB in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany, on July 27, 2023.
Daniel Roland | Afp | Getty Images
The European Central Bank on Thursday announced a 10th consecutive hike in its main interest rate, as the fight against inflation took precedence over a weakening economy.
Rate raises have now hauled the central bank’s main deposit facility from -0.5% in June 2022 to a record 4%. A key reason for the hike Thursday appeared to be upward revisions in newly published staff macroeconomic projections for the euro area, which see inflation averaging at 5.6% this year from a prior forecast of 5.4%, and 3.2% next year from a prior forecast of 3%.
However, it nudged its closely-watched medium-term forecast lower, from 2.2% to 2.1%.
In a market-moving statement, it also indicated that further hikes may be off the table for now.
“Based on its current assessment, the Governing Council considers that the key ECB interest rates have reached levels that, maintained for a sufficiently long duration, will make a substantial contribution to the timely return of inflation to the target,” it said.
“The Governing Council’s future decisions will ensure that the key ECB interest rates will be set at sufficiently restrictive levels for as long as necessary.”
The euro fell sharply on the announcement and was down 0.5% against the U.S. dollar at $1.0686 at 3 p.m. Frankfurt time, trading at a three-month low.
European stocks rallied following cautious trading through the morning, meanwhile, with the benchmark Stoxx 600 index up by 1.1%.
The ECB move on Thursday also takes the interest rates on its main refinancing operations and marginal lending facility 25 basis points higher, to 4.5% and 4.75%, respectively.
Staff also lowered economic growth projections for the euro area from 0.9% to 0.7% expansion in 2023, from 1.5% to 1% in 2024, and from 1.6% to 1.5% in 2025.
While the ECB has firmly signaled its next moves in previous meetings, economists and analysts were divided over whether the doves or hawks in Frankfurt would win out at this September meeting. Money markets indicated a roughly 63% chance of a hike through Thursday morning, up from a more even split in recent days.
Oil market reports suggesting tighter supply and higher prices through the rest of the year and beyond have fueled inflation fears, along with signs of wage growth. A Reuters article on Wednesday reporting the ECB now expects euro zone inflation to remain above 3% in 2024 appeared to increase market bets on a rate hike. The report came from a source ahead of the release of its projection Thursday.
“Some [Governing Council] members did not draw the same conclusion, and some governors would have preferred to pause and reserve future decisions once more certainty, more intelligence, would have resulted from the passing of time and the impact of our many previous decisions,” ECB President Christine Lagarde told CNBC’s Annette Weisbach in the press conference following the announcement.
“But I can tell you there was a solid majority of the governors to agree with the decision we have made.”
Lagarde said there was no concrete answer to whether rate hikes were finished since the Governing Council remains data-dependent — but she stressed the ECB’s current thinking was encapsulated in the statement around rates at current levels making a “substantial contribution” to the fight against inflation if held for long enough.
Germany is forecast to be the only major European economy to contract this year — though the wider picture is also downbeat, with euro zone business activity declining in August to its lowest level since November 2020.
Peter Schaffrik, chief European macro strategist at RBC Capital Markets, told CNBC that market focus would not so much be on the hike itself, but rather the language used by the central bank in its statement.
Schaffrik said one focus will be on the 2025 inflation forecast, which unlike forecasts for 2023 and 2024 was revised lower since this is typically what the ECB means when it talks about the medium term.
Another will be on its descriptor of rates being maintained for a “sufficiently long duration” — indicating the “path forward is flat for quite some time,” he said.
Deep in the Wyoming wilderness last month, Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank, stood before a large audience of elite central bankers and casually predicted the collapse of the international financial order. Resplendent in red and black, she resembled a humanoid Lindor chocolate truffle — and though her warning was diluted by the usual impenetrable jargon, the subtext was sufficiently clear and dramatic.
“There are plausible scenarios where we could see a fundamental change in the nature of global economic interactions,” Lagarde announced drily to the crowd, which was gathered for the annual central banker confab in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The assumptions that have long informed the technocratic management of the global order were breaking down. The world, she said, could soon enter a “new age” in which “past regularities may no longer be a good guide for how the economy works.”
“For policymakers with a stability mandate,” she added with understatement, “this poses a significant challenge.”
A “new age”? — and coming from a member of that most dreary and unimaginative of the global technocratic-priesthoods, the central bankers? The warning at Jackson Hole wasn’t even the first time Lagarde has fretted publicly about the fate of the international order of free markets, dollar dominance and globalization that she had a hand in creating. While others have raised the issue, Lagarde has been outspoken. Just in April, she was the first major Western central banker to raise explicit concerns about the fragility of the greenback, whose international dominance she said “should no longer be taken for granted.”
It was, all told, decidedly odd from the leader of the hallowed monetary authority, whose communications department rarely holds forth on anything more gripping than balance sheet policy and deposit rate adjustments. Coming from a woman whose long career in the upper echelons has been defined by a deference to the U.S.-led international order, it was apostasy, even. Most alarming was Lagarde’s seeming indifference to the power of her own words over the state of said international order. One official at the ECB was startled enough by the April comments that he asked the speechwriter what they meant, only to be reassured that they had been “misinterpreted” and were simply an affirmation of the institution’s narrow mandate for price stability.
But it’s hard not to wonder whether Lagarde, after a lifetime managing the global establishment from crisis to crisis, has identified a potential extinction event — and is making her pitch that, once more, it is she who ought to help the world avert it. “I agree she’s on to something,” said the retired fixed-income investor Jay Newman. “There will be big shifts in trade and investment.” Paul Podolsky, another longtime trader, speculated that Lagarde was preparing the ECB, in trademark French fashion, for a “possible situation in which the euro would have more leadership in the global system than it would normally have.”
Elsewhere, the prevailing sense is confusion, not least at Lagarde’s apparent disregard for the tradition of blandness in a business where every utterance is heavily scrutinized by obsessive, knee-jerk market forces. “What Lagarde said is not the natural thing for a central banker to say, in the sense that they typically don’t go for the tail-risk as a baseline,” panicked one analyst in nervous anonymity, referring to a kind of risk that is rare but deadly. “Maybe she doesn’t realize what an unusual communication it is for a central banker — or maybe she knows something we don’t.”
So what does Lagarde want? The problem is it’s tricky to get a grip on what, if anything, actually moves her. Few have been able to discern in her any strong feelings or guiding principles beyond some vague notion of “service” to the institutions she invariably ends up leading through dramatic, epoch-defining crises. A sphinx with a winning smile, she possesses a charm that can come off as both authentic and calculated. “She could be funny when she needed to be,” said one former colleague.
What does she do for fun? She rarely reads for pleasure. Nobody interviewed by POLITICO has ever seen her read a book, or anything that isn’t a policy briefing. She has scant time, understandably, for the pursuit of hobbies. She does enjoy making jam, in July, for her family, and she is prone to the odd round of golf with the central bankers. She used to swim regularly but now not as often, constrained as she is by an intense work schedule. In terms of world-view, those who know her deduce that if she believes in anything she’s a centrist, or vaguely center-right. But most stop short at “pragmatic.”
Unlike many of the technocrats she finds herself surrounded by, however, she is a charming chancer and a skilled communicator. She possesses an uncanny, Forrest-Gump-like predisposition for finding the driving beat of history — and if not exactly seizing it, surviving it.
From the outset, she enjoyed a near-vertical trajectory, rising from the depths of suburban Normandy to lead the major Chicago law firm Baker McKenzie, where she wooed colleagues and the international business elite alike. (“She is perhaps the nicest person I’ve ever had the pleasure of knowing,” said former Baker colleague Marc Levey.) At a time of peak globalization, the firm helped big upstart firms like Dell break into Europe, and by 2005 her growing prominence had landed her in an unelected role in French politics. As finance minister, she wrestled with the financial crisis, professed undying allegiance to Nicolas Sarkozy (“Use me for as long as it suits you,” she wrote the then French president) and was later convicted for “negligence” in a sordid affaire involving payments of public funds to a billionaire businessman — but escaped punishment when the judge took pity on her. (“She acted on orders,” a former political colleague told the Guardian newspaper. “She has done nothing wrong in her life.“)
With uncommon ease, Lagarde remained at the ever-changing forefront of establishment consensus, a quasi-ceremonial, Elizabeth II-like figure who was perceived as an effective steward but was nevertheless often constrained by circumstance from exercising any real power. Consider her time as managing director of the International Monetary Fund, the venerable, 77-year-old institution that lends out money, often on harsh terms, to indebted countries when nobody else will. She joined the IMF in 2011. It was a dark time — the height of the eurozone crisis. Greece was the unhappy protagonist, forced to near-fatally gut its public spending at the behest of its Franco-German creditors after a decade-long spending binge, the effects of which it masked by manipulating its official data.
As part of the French government, Lagarde, in line with the prevailing consensus, had resisted the IMF’s involvement. But when the fund’s chief, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was arrested on sexual assault charges in New York, she leaped for the top job. She embarked on a glitzy world tour, schmoozed China and split the Latin American vote, handily beating her rival, the distinguished Mexican central banker Agustín Carstens. Given the trashed reputation of her predecessor — and in spite of previous assurances that the Europeans would cede control to the emerging economies who were now among their creditors — it was a sleek, if ultimately predictable, victory.
Once in office, however, she was rarely more than an elegant middle manager, readily admitting that she was not the one making the big decisions. Neither, she admitted, was she much of an economist — her own chief economist, Olivier Blanchard, likened her, with warmth, to a “first-year undergraduate.” “I’ll try to be a good conductor,” Lagarde said upon joining. “And, you know, without being too poetic about it, not all conductors know how to play the piano, the harp, the violin, or the cello.” She was principally an informed mediator who would sway but not dictate, there to build consensus among the nation-states represented on the IMF’s board — which in practice, according to some, meant winning acceptance for whatever decision the Europeans and U.S. had already made beforehand.
She played upstart nations against one another, offering big concessions to the most powerful new arrival, China, while sidelining others, according to Paulo Nogueira Batista, the Brazilian board member at the time. “The managing director and staff of the fund would approach us individually to explain what they were thinking, and explain their views, and they’d say, ’Look, we understand you’re not happy with the solution, but let me tell you, we already have the required majority,’” Batista recalled. “And then, if we were still resisting, we’d be in the minority.” She was also conspicuously close to the American board member, David Lipton. “Christine wouldn’t have been so good without David, and David needed her to be the face of the fund — with her charisma and her charm,” said Daniel Heller, who represented Switzerland on the board.
The result? Against the advice of the U.S., many emerging world members and the Fund’s own thinkers, including Blanchard, the Fund bowed to European pressure and signed up to a deal that left Greece lumbering under its debts for a further four years before it had another chance to renegotiate. Even when Lagarde herself came around to Blanchard’s view, pressure from a German-led bloc in Europe meant she could change little. Exactly nobody was surprised when, in 2015, the tensions caused by that bailout came to a heady boil, triggering the rise of a rebel left-wing government in Greece.
At the ensuing tense summits of the eurozone’s finance ministers, situated at a long table in a windowless, harshly lit room in Brussels, she was able to offer the occasional morsel of benign distraction. “She was great fun,” said Jeroen Dijsselbloem, then the Eurogroup’s head, recalling that at the “most impossible moments,” with the fate of Greece and the eurozone in the balance, “she’d reach into her bag and take out some M&M’s and say, ‘Let’s have some chocolates.’”
“Yes, Lagarde was personally warm,” granted Yanis Varoufakis, Greece’s finance minister at the time. But to him, that counted for little. “Because she was straitjacketed by the IMF, she was powerless,” he said. “And given that she was very keen not to jeopardize her position in the institutional pecking order, she was happy to go along with our crushing.”
With the U.S. exasperated and with the eurozone appearing to have overcome its existential crisis, the Fund withdrew from tense negotiations over a third bailout with the Greek government at the 11th hour, citing major disagreements between Athens and her creditors. Lagarde — her hands carefully washed of whatever would come next — emerged with her reputation intact.
So what to make of her recent turn as a minor visionary? Lagarde has always held forth on the big, worthy problems of the day across an eclectic range of media — appearing last year on Irish prime-time TV, for instance, to offer an armchair psychological diagnosis of Vladimir Putin, and discussing her sex life in Elle France magazine in 2019. But now, her words — as she learned the hard way — carry momentous weight.
Initially, with trademark tact, she claimed she didn’t even want the job at the ECB, though within months she was asked to run, and by November 2019 she got it, as a compromise candidate that saw the German Ursula von der Leyen take charge of the European Commission. “So Lagarde was brought in for, like, greening up the economy, and other stuff beyond monetary policy,” recalled Carsten Brzeski, the chief economist at ING Economics and a wry critic of Lagarde. “And then we had the pandemic.”
The novel coronavirus was more than a match for Lagarde’s vaunted communication skills (or, indeed, anyone else’s). But that didn’t mean she couldn’t do a whole lot of damage. Disaster came right at the pandemic’s outset, at a conference on March 12, 2020, when she was answering questions from the media about the early alarming spread of COVID-19 in northern Italy. Asked whether she would act to reduce the perilously high “spread” on the interest paid on Italian debt, Lagarde offered a now-infamous response that blew up the Italian economy — and much of her credibility with it.
The cataclysmic soundbite? “We are not here to close spreads.”
It may not sound like much, but in the arcane world of central banking, it was tantamount to uttering a hex. Years before, Mario Draghi, Lagarde’s predecessor, had famously “saved the eurozone” by announcing that the ECB would do “whatever it takes” to back billions of euros of at-risk sovereign debt. Central banking relies on a certain enigmatic mysticism, which Draghi, the reclusive, Jesuit-trained technocrat par excellence, had in spades. At the Italian’s mere beckoning, debt markets calmed. Draghi didn’t even need to deploy the figurative “bazooka” of actually flooding the eurozone with money. His words were enough.
Lagarde’s comment was “whatever it takes” in reverse — a bazooka turned faceward. “I saw the Draghi spirit leave the room,” recalled Brzeski hauntedly. “For years we were spoiled by his famous magic — the man could calm financial markets just by reading out the telephone book — and then Lagarde comes and ruins it in ten minutes. The Draghi magic was exorcized, and Lagarde was the exorcist.”
The bond markets exploded. Before joining the bank, Lagarde had been pitched as an arbiter whose main role would be to forge consensus among the central bank governors who make decisions at the ECB. But the “spreads” fiasco was a sharp reminder that she was uniquely accountable as the voice of euro monetary policy. And she blew it. Her authority collapsed. “In the past, we knew we needed to listen very carefully to Draghi,” said Brzeski. “Now markets know it’s normally not Lagarde who calls the shots.” Plus, she was enjoying herself too much, pontificating on climate change and social justice. “As a central banker you don’t improvise,” harrumphed Brzeski. “You are boring, you repeat the same messages over and over again.” Once, when a presser ended, recalled one analyst, reporters swamped the ECB’s head of market operations Isabel Schnabel — leaving Lagarde alone, taking notes.
Former colleagues wonder whether she misses the IMF, where she was able to be a rockstar financier, to propound without worrying about how her pronouncements landed. “I mean that job is incredible, it connects you with global power at the highest level,” said Heller, the Swiss board member. French media, as usual, speculated that her eye was really on the presidency, a rumor that has never entirely gone away.
“Maybe she looks down on central banking,” wondered Brzeski, sounding wounded. “Maybe she finds it boring.”
All that is to say that now, when Lagarde says something, it’s safe to assume she’s saying it with intent. “She had a very steep learning curve, but she also climbed the learning curve very quickly,” said Klaas Knot, the governor of the Dutch central bank. Even Brzeski observed that the past year’s harrowing experience of inflation has forced a certain weary seriousness onto Lagarde, and she recently snapped at a Reuters journalist who questioned her shifting views on monetary policy. She looks lifeless at the pulpit, bored and no longer having fun — a growing despair, Brzeski said, that has at least made her more credible with the markets.
Just as she has offered her thoughts on climate change and the war in Ukraine, it may be that Lagarde, with her recent comments, is looking for that next big crisis over which to assume ceremonial leadership. As well as policy tightening, her overworked publicity team prioritizes policy branding: snappy soundbites, alliterative triplets, cartoon-based policy explainers. “She sees the big picture,” said Latvian central bank Governor Mārtiņš Kazāks. “Just look at her CV.” “I think she’s jealous and still looking for her ‘whatever it takes’ moment,” said the ECB staffer cited above, somewhat less charitably.
It is also highly likely that she earnestly believes things are taking a turn for the worse, and is, in a way, mourning the collapse of the globalized system that she shaped and that in turn shaped her. And in grappling with a world off balance, it helps to have a lawyer deliver the bad news. Effective monetary policy requires the synthesis of planetary volumes of data, and, as her colleagues say, Lagarde has the training to inhale great galaxies of the stuff, spending much of her waking life wading through dense briefing material. “Read the footnotes in her speech,” the veteran market-watcher Podolsky urged. “All she is doing is, lawyerly-like, reading — or having her staff read — all the staff research coming from the ECB, OECD, and IMF, and pulling out the pieces that support her questioning.”
Like an owl before an earthquake, Lagarde seems alive, said Podolsky, to the prospect of “a more hostile world,” of war and deglobalization, of Chinese decline and inflation that never quite dies. It is a chaotic uncertainty that left the ECB’s own Governing Council divided and markets uneasy, ahead of an announcement Thursday on whether the bank will continue to raise interest rates or take a break, an acknowledgment that the economy — and the politically sensitive manufacturing sector in particular — has cooled. (The ECB and Lagarde, through the bank’s press office, declined to comment for this article.)
There’s another possibility, however. As Lagarde has learned, predictions from a major central banker carry the risk of being self-fulfilling. “If she was finance minister nobody would pay attention,” noted the analyst speaking on condition of anonymity. With inflation raging, as Lagarde herself noted in a recent speech, the public is ever more attuned to the bank’s operations and communications, which makes the economy, in turn, more sensitive to Lagarde’s touch. This, she added, provides “a valuable window of time to deliver our key messages.”
Key messages! Monetary policy is already a weak form of mass mind control — could Lagarde be trying to verbalize into existence a new economic paradigm on which to hitch her professional fortunes? She has always been willing to say, well, whatever it takes, for her survival, even when doing so strains beyond her level of competence. A legacy as the ECB chief who oversaw the euro’s rise as a challenge to the domination of the dollar would be an elegant feather in her cap.
And if armageddon never arrives? She’ll be well placed to take credit for averting it. Lagarde — as with most central bankers — was humiliated by the sudden rise in inflation. As Brad Setser, a former staff economist at the U.S. Treasury, said, her recent comments reflect a desire to emphasize the risks as a form of damage control. “It comes from a need to be reserved,” he said.
Call it apocalyptic expectations management. If ECB policy fails to steer Europe safely through global economic fragmentation, Lagarde can quite comfortably say that, well, sorry, but she always warned it might. And then, as usual, she will emerge from the calamity blameless — sure, the opera house may be flaming rubble, the brass players at each other’s throats and the wind section reduced to cinders, but she’s just the “conductor” after all.
Lettering by Evangeline Gallagher for POLITICO.Source images by Hollie Adams/Bloomberg via Getty Images, Thomas Lohnes/Getty Images, Boris Roessler/Picture Alliance via Getty Images and pool photo by Sebastian Gollnow via Getty Images. Animation by Dato Parulava/POLITICO.
The European Central Bank has likely pressed pause on its rate hiking cycle, the chief financial officer of Commerzbank told CNBC on Friday.
The ECB raised interest rates in July, completing a full year of rate increases. ECB President Christine Lagarde flagged that the central bank could continue or pause rate hikes at its next meeting in September, but definitely will not cut. The ECB’s main rate currently stands at 3.75%.
Commerzbank CFO Bettina Orlopp told CNBC that the ECB is unlikely to raise rates in September — going against the grain of several analysts who expect a final rate hike next month.
“It is not our assumption we will see [a] rate cut, we do not assume there will be rate increases [too],” Orlopp said when asked about the outlook for 2024. “We will stick to the 3.75% that we currently have.”
Commerzbank is the second largest lender in Germany by market capitalization, and its performance is closely linked to the interest rate environment.
Second-quarter results out Friday showed a 20% jump in the bank’s net profit, compared with the previous year. Revenue also came in higher than analysts had anticipated, reaching 2.6 billion euros ($2.84 billion). The solid results led the German lender to increase its expectations for net interest income in 2023 to “at least 7.8 billion euros,” from a previous guidance of 7 billion euros.
Orlopp added that: “If there were to be another interest rate hike like in the fall, that would be again an upside potential for us.”
A lot of uncertainty remains about which direction the ECB will take in September, with the central bank arguing its decision will depend on data.
“We are very close to the peak in rates and I think the peak is going to come in the next couple of months,” Akshay Singal, EMEA head of short-term interest rate trading at Citi, told CNBC’s Street Signs on Friday.
“[The] September meeting will be the last hike for all of them, if they do [increase rates],” he added, referencing the ECB, Bank of England and Federal Reserve.
People shop in a Manhattan store on July 27, 2023 in New York City.
Spencer Platt | Getty Images News | Getty Images
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Streak shattered The Dow Jones Industrial Average finally ran out of steam and closed the day in the red, ending its 13-day winning streak. Other major U.S. indexes had a losing day as well. Europe’s Stoxx 600 index advanced 1.35%, juiced by a 4.2% jump in media stocks and a 4.1% rise in the technology sector.
What recession? The U.S. economy’s showing no signs of stopping. Gross domestic product grew at an annualized 2.4% rate in the second quarter, according to the Commerce Department. That’s higher than the 2% estimate from Dow Jones and the first quarter’s 2% growth. In other good news, the personal consumption price index rose 2.6% in the second quarter, down from 4.1% in the first.
Intel’s unexpected profit Intel returned to profit in the second quarter after two straight quarters of losses, even as revenue fell year-on-year around 15% to $12.9 billion. That’s because its gross margin was nearly 40% on an adjusted basis. Intel’s forecast for its third-quarter earnings was higher than analyst expectations. In sum, investors appeared pleased, pushing shares up more than 7% in extended trading.
New bank rules Banks with more than $100 billion in assets may need to set aside more money against possible losses by July 2028. U.S. regulators announced a set of proposed changes to regulations for the banking industry Thursday. And in response to Silicon Valley Bank’s failure, regulators want more banks to include unrealized losses in their capital ratios under the new rules.
Another much-anticipated hike The European Central Bank on Thursday raised interest rates by 25 basis points, bringing its main rate to 3.75%. The move was widely anticipated, but market watchers aren’t sure if the ECB will pause or continue hiking at its September meeting. Like Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell yesterday, ECB President Christine Lagarde left the ECB’s upcoming decision open.
[PRO] Reasonably priced stocks Stock markets have undeniably been rallying, but most of the growth has been driven by Big Tech shares that are trading at expensive valuations, that is, at multiple times their projected earnings. In light of this, Goldman Sachs looked for stocks at a “reasonable” price that are still projected to experience healthy growth.
Alas! It was exciting while it lasted, but the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.67%, snapping its 13-day winning streak. We’ll have to wait longer — maybe for another century! — to see if it can tie the 14-day record it hit 126 years ago in 1897. (And perhaps in time to come market analysts will bemoan Honeywell, which sank 5.7% on worse-than-expected revenue and was the worst performer in the Dow.)
Other major indexes on Wall Street didn’t fare so well, either. The S&P 500 slipped 0.64% and the Nasdaq Composite lost 0.55% — even Meta’s 4.4% jump couldn’t offset a broader decline in the tech-heavy index.
One thing that isn’t losing momentum, however, is the U.S. economy. Second-quarter GDP growth handily beat analysts’ expectations, and it has consumers to thank. Consumer spending increased 1.6%. That doesn’t sound much, but when you consider how it makes up 68% of all economic activity during the second quarter, a small bump can have an outsized effect.
The U.S. economy hasn’t contracted since the second quarter of 2022. Other positive economic data released yesterday: Durable goods orders rose 4.7%, more than three times the estimate, and weekly jobless claims fell 7,000 to bring it below estimates. All those statistics make predictions of an imminent recession seem increasingly doubtful.
Of course, the strength of the economy makes it likelier that the Federal Reserve might hike rates again at its September meeting. This sentiment was reflected in the 2-year Treasury yield — typically the most sensitive to short-term interest rates — which jumped more than 10 basis points to 4.931% after the release of GDP data.
Still, DoubleLine Capital CEO Jeffrey Gundlach told CNBC that “the Fed should really be happy” with the current inflation rate, suggesting rates are as high as they should go. The personal consumer expenditures price index, the Fed’s favorite inflation gauge, comes out later today, and will give a sense if we’re indeed at the end of the hiking cycle — giving the Dow another shot at making history.
It announced a new rate increase of a quarter percentage point, bringing its main rate to 3.75%, completing a full year of consecutive rate hikes in the euro zone.
“Inflation continues to decline but is still expected to remain too high for too long,” the ECB said Thursday in a statement.
From hawkish pauses to rate hikes and dovish tones, the world’s biggest central banks last week struck very different tones on monetary policy.
The European Central Bank on Thursday hiked rates and surprised markets with a worsening inflation outlook, which led investors to price in even more rate increases in the euro zone.
“Taking all these different approaches together shows that not only seems there to be a new divergence on the right approach for monetary policy but it also illustrates that the global economy is no longer synchronized but rather a collection of very different cycles,” Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro at ING Germany, told CNBC via email.
In Europe, inflation has come down in the bloc which uses the euro but remains well above the ECB target. This is also the case in the U.K., where the Bank of England is expected to raise rates Thursday after very strong labor data.
The Fed, which started its hiking cycle before the ECB, decided to take a break in June — but said there would be another two rate increases later this year, meaning its hiking cycle is not yet complete.
The picture is different in Asia, however. China’s economic recovery is stalling, with falls in both domestic and external demand leading policymakers to step up support measures in an effort to revive activity.
In Japan — which has battled a deflationary environment for many years — the central bank said it expects inflation to come down later this year and opted not to normalize policy yet.
“Each central bank [tries] to solve for its own economy, which obviously includes considerations for changes in financial conditions imposed from abroad,” Erik Nielsen, group chief economics advisor at UniCredit said via email.
The euro rose to a 15-year high against the Japanese yen on Friday, according to Reuters, off the back of the divergent monetary policy decisions. The euro also broke above the $1.09 threshold as investors digested the ECB’s hawkish tone last Thursday.
In bond markets, the yield on the German 2-year bond hit a fresh 3-month higher Friday, given expectations that the ECB will continue with its approach in the short term.
“Makes sense we start seeing this divergence. In the past, it was clear there was a lot of room to cover for pretty much all the major central banks, while now, given the different stages the jurisdictions are in the cycle, there will be more nuanced decisions to be made,” Konstantin Veit, portfolio manager at PIMCO, told CNBC’s Street Signs Europe on Friday.
“This indeed will create opportunities for the investors.”
ECB President Christine Lagarde was asked during a press conference to compare her team’s decision to increase rates, versus the Federal Reserve’s decision to pause.
“We are not thinking about pausing,” she said. “Are we done? Have we finished the journey? No, we are not at [the] destination,” she said, pointing to at least another potential rate hike in July.
For some economists, it is only a matter of time before the ECB finds itself in a similar position to that of the Fed.
“The Fed is leading the ECB [as] the U.S. economy is leading the eurozone economy by a few quarters. This means that, at the latest after the September meeting, the ECB will also be confronted with the debate on whether or not to pause,” Brzeski said.
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European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde is due to give a press conference following the bank’s latest monetary policy decision.
The bank announced that it was taking its main rate up by 25 basis points to 3.5%, diverging from a U.S. Federal Reserve decision to pause its own hikes on Wednesday.