The Jerusalem Post

ECB scales back its asset purchases

- • By BALAZS KORANYI and FRANCESCO CANEPA

FRANKFURT (Reuters) – The European Central Bank trimmed back its asset buys in a surprise move on Thursday. But it promised protracted stimulus to aid a still fragile recovery and dismissed any talk of tapering the program away.

With still no sign of a sustained rebound in underlying inflation and heightened political risk from looming elections in four of the euro zone’s five biggest economies, the ECB promised to keep borrowing costs depressed longer than predicted, even reserving the right to raise back purchases if the outlook sours.

Although the cut in the volume of monthly asset buys suggests a concession to conservati­ve countries such as Germany and the Netherland­s, the underlying message was seen as dovish, catering to nations on the periphery and a boost for financial markets.

Catching financial markets off guard, ECB President Mario Draghi said the bond buys would be cut to €60 billion a month from €80b. starting in April, but they would go on until the end of 2017, three months longer than expected.

“There is no question about tapering,” he said. “We can even go back to 80 [billion]... there’s a range of options.”

“The key message... is to show that there is no tapering in sight, to show that the ECB is going to stay in the market, to show that we will continue to exert pressure on market prices,” Draghi added.

The euro weakened 1.3% on the ECB’s move, and stocks surged 1%, boosted by bank shares that have rallied all week.

With elections looming in France, Germany, the Netherland­s and possibly Italy, and all facing strengthen­ing populist movements, the ECB can hardly afford to ease back on the accelerato­r.

But much of its firepower is exhausted, and Germany is growing increasing­ly frustrated with its unpreceden­ted stimulus, so the bank has been under pressure to make at least a token nod to the haws, signaling that quantitati­ve easing cannot go on forever.

The ECB has already spent more than €1.4 trillion buying bonds and is at risk of running out of assets. The Bundesbank argues that this blurs a legal line and can be considered central-bank financing of budgets.

To make further buys possible, the ECB relaxed some of its self-imposed rules, increasing the pool of eligible assets.

Bonds with maturity between one and two years will now be included in the asset buys, and the bank will also purchase bonds yielding less than its minus-0.4% deposit rate, if necessary.

But in another small victory for conservati­ve euro-zone members, the ECB decided not to allow bond purchases to deviate from countries’ shareholdi­ng in the bank, an issue considered a red line for Germany’s Bundesbank.

HAWKISH AND DOVISH

“By surprising on the dovish side with duration and at the same time tapering the purchase rate, the ECB has made a shrewd move in our view,” HSBC economist Simon Wells said.

“By tapering, albeit conditiona­lly, it has made a sop to its critics who think policy is already too loose,” he said. “But it has also bought itself time and side-stepped a series of potentiall­y difficult discussion­s about further extensions during 2017.”

Underlying its promise for extensive stimulus, the ECB predicted inflation at 1.7% in 2019, arguing that higher energy prices could lift consumer prices even without lifting the underlying trend.

But when asked if the 1.7% met its goal of below but close to 2%, Draghi said: “Not really, so we have to persist.”

“Uncertaint­y prevails everywhere,” he told a news conference.

Much to Draghi’s concern, wage growth has also disappoint­ed, suggesting that companies have cut their inflation expectatio­ns.

This is a hard-to-break cycle that could entrench anemic price growth, making it harder to get it back to the desired at-or-just-below 2%.

Even consumptio­n, the key driver of growth, is not as good as it looks. Consumptio­n has driven a jump in disposable income due to oil-price falls and loose ECB policy. But Brent crude is up 14% over the past three months, leaving monetary policy as the chief driver of consumptio­n.

Interest rates, seen by most to have bottomed out, were kept unchanged, with the deposit rate kept deep in negative territory.

Euro-zone economic growth is shrugging off Britain’s decision to leave the European Union, and Germany, the bloc’s growth engine, seems to be picking up speed again.

Ironically, the collapse of Italy’s government this week may hasten instead of delay the recapitali­zation of ailing lender Monte dei Paschi, much to the ECB’s relief. It has pointed to weak banks as an obstacle to transmitti­ng stimulus.

 ?? (Ralph Orlowski/Reuters) ?? EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK President Mario Draghi (right) and Vice President Vitor Constancio arrive for a news conference at ECB headquarte­rs in Frankfurt yesterday.
(Ralph Orlowski/Reuters) EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK President Mario Draghi (right) and Vice President Vitor Constancio arrive for a news conference at ECB headquarte­rs in Frankfurt yesterday.

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