Berliner Boersenzeitung - ECB to signal no rush to cut interest rates

EUR -
AED 4.099455
AFN 76.512586
ALL 98.815038
AMD 431.849141
ANG 2.011188
AOA 1049.243867
ARS 1079.586492
AUD 1.618437
AWG 2.011752
AZN 1.902828
BAM 1.954994
BBD 2.253243
BDT 133.345055
BGN 1.953602
BHD 0.420691
BIF 3233.970268
BMD 1.11609
BND 1.431494
BOB 7.711306
BRL 6.066537
BSD 1.115925
BTN 93.382633
BWP 14.5881
BYN 3.651795
BYR 21875.366217
BZD 2.249414
CAD 1.503948
CDF 3197.598548
CHF 0.942159
CLF 0.036562
CLP 1008.867904
CNY 7.825019
CNH 7.796403
COP 4642.142447
CRC 579.205449
CUC 1.11609
CUP 29.576388
CVE 110.219584
CZK 25.159995
DJF 198.72058
DKK 7.457363
DOP 67.106257
DZD 147.849455
EGP 53.988513
ERN 16.741352
ETB 131.406595
FJD 2.439606
FKP 0.849968
GBP 0.833569
GEL 3.041322
GGP 0.849968
GHS 17.586856
GIP 0.849968
GMD 76.450265
GNF 9636.029457
GTQ 8.631946
GYD 233.438452
HKD 8.676004
HNL 27.785551
HRK 7.588309
HTG 147.067307
HUF 396.911221
IDR 16858.652768
ILS 4.130169
IMP 0.849968
INR 93.398105
IQD 1461.882767
IRR 46992.97434
ISK 150.694751
JEP 0.849968
JMD 175.31776
JOD 0.790969
JPY 159.620416
KES 143.818862
KGS 93.984353
KHR 4531.477908
KMF 493.451312
KPW 1004.480469
KRW 1463.327682
KWD 0.340524
KYD 0.929992
KZT 535.268217
LAK 24641.391954
LBP 99933.090094
LKR 333.202703
LRD 215.934567
LSL 19.164119
LTL 3.295524
LVL 0.675112
LYD 5.292819
MAD 10.82424
MDL 19.434559
MGA 5053.234739
MKD 61.50682
MMK 3625.017151
MNT 3792.474154
MOP 8.936178
MRU 44.086834
MUR 51.284157
MVR 17.132226
MWK 1935.024033
MXN 21.851783
MYR 4.603861
MZN 71.313627
NAD 19.164119
NGN 1845.064259
NIO 41.06308
NOK 11.758132
NPR 149.409137
NZD 1.765342
OMR 0.429643
PAB 1.11591
PEN 4.159186
PGK 4.437172
PHP 62.424011
PKR 309.76766
PLN 4.274735
PYG 8710.41086
QAR 4.068624
RON 4.976619
RSD 117.084607
RUB 103.620102
RWF 1508.799964
SAR 4.186506
SBD 9.26658
SCR 15.201181
SDG 671.32825
SEK 11.272549
SGD 1.430638
SHP 0.849968
SLE 25.499649
SLL 23403.845888
SOS 637.774347
SRD 34.089298
STD 23100.811964
SVC 9.763977
SYP 2804.209821
SZL 19.158222
THB 36.140071
TJS 11.873652
TMT 3.917476
TND 3.37361
TOP 2.613994
TRY 38.143274
TTD 7.580454
TWD 35.164672
TZS 3054.581276
UAH 45.938171
UGX 4122.615242
USD 1.11609
UYU 46.79072
UZS 14212.143861
VEF 4043095.067925
VES 41.109389
VND 27466.977684
VUV 132.50446
WST 3.122221
XAF 655.736743
XAG 0.034895
XAU 0.000419
XCD 3.016289
XDR 0.825508
XOF 655.686823
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.413201
ZAR 19.114104
ZMK 10046.147557
ZMW 29.511691
ZWL 359.380561
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    25.15

    +0.16%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    7.03

    -1%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    70.3

    +0.34%

  • RBGPF

    2.5000

    63.3

    +3.95%

  • RELX

    -0.1500

    47.94

    -0.31%

  • BCC

    3.2700

    143.58

    +2.28%

  • SCS

    0.2000

    13.41

    +1.49%

  • RIO

    0.5650

    71.315

    +0.79%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    41.25

    +0.85%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.51

    +0.37%

  • AZN

    -0.2650

    77.915

    -0.34%

  • VOD

    0.0450

    10.085

    +0.45%

  • BTI

    0.1781

    37.255

    +0.48%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    25.14

    +0.12%

  • BP

    0.3900

    31.18

    +1.25%

  • BCE

    0.2600

    35.09

    +0.74%

ECB to signal no rush to cut interest rates
ECB to signal no rush to cut interest rates / Photo: Daniel ROLAND - AFP

ECB to signal no rush to cut interest rates

European Central Bank policymakers are expected to keep interest rates steady on Thursday and signal they are in no hurry to start slashing borrowing costs despite progress against inflation.

Text size:

The Frankfurt institute is tipped to pause for the third meeting in a row following a historic run of hikes to tame runaway prices, leaving the benchmark deposit rate at four percent.

ECB president Christine Lagarde said last week rates had likely reached their peak but that it was too soon to "shout victory" on inflation, citing economic uncertainties and the possible impact of rising wages on price pressures.

She also pushed back against market bets of rate cuts as early as April, joining other ECB officials in signalling that borrowing costs would "likely" only start coming down in the summer -- and if the latest economic data supported such a move.

The ECB is "in no rush yet" to change course and governors may not even discuss cuts at this week's meeting, Deutsche Bank economists wrote.

"We expect Thursday's ECB press conference to again highlight the exceptionally low possibility of a rate cut before the summer," agreed Unicredit in an analyst note.

In the United States, where investors have been pencilling in a first rate cut in March, Federal Reserve officials have also been tempering expectations, indicating more work remains to be done to return inflation safely to the long-term target of two percent.

Atlanta Fed president Raphael Bostic last week said he saw rate reductions coming in the third quarter, or sooner if there was "convincing" evidence of inflation slowing more than expected.

- Wages in focus -

After falling steadily for months, eurozone inflation reaccelerated to 2.9 percent in December.

The increase was widely expected and mainly due to the comparison effect with a year earlier, when governments provided exceptional support to help households after Russia's invasion of Ukraine pushed energy prices higher.

Overall, Lagarde has said the battle against inflation was "on the right path" with the ECB forecasting a return to its two-percent target in 2025.

But in an interview with Bloomberg television at Davos last week, she also expressed caution.

She said the ECB was closely monitoring several risk factors that could drive inflation up again, including wage negotiations as workers seek pay rises to compensate for higher living costs.

It will take several months to get a clearer picture of euro area wage agreements, she said, bolstering the case for a rate cut at the June meeting at the earliest.

The ECB was also keeping a close eye on energy costs and supply chains, Lagarde said, in a nod to tensions in the Middle East and shipping delays in the Red Sea that could impact prices and weigh on economic growth.

The 20-nation eurozone economy, feeling the pain from higher interest rates and weaker exports, shrank by 0.1 percent in the third quarter of 2023.

Although the ECB has forecast growth in the fourth quarter, analysts are more pessimistic.

The latest "surveys and official data suggest that the economy is more likely to have contracted at the end of last year and there is little sign that things are going to improve" in the first quarter of 2024, said Jack-Allen Reynolds from Capital Economics.

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)