Arab Times

‘Forget about early-2018 ECB rate hike’

Markets see just about 20% chance of rate increase

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LONDON, April 20, (RTRS): Investors are no longer expecting a rate rise from the European Central Bank by March 2018, money market pricing suggests, marking a sharp reversal in expectatio­ns for higher interest rates from just a month ago.

ECB policymake­rs’ comments playing down the scope for near-term changes to monetary policy, along with falling inflation expectatio­ns, explain the reassessme­nt.

Money market rates tell the tale. Forward Eonia bank-to-bank rates — the best gauge — dated for the ECB meeting on March 8 next year stand at around minus 0.34 percent, two basis points above the Eonia spot rate of minus 0.36 percent.

Such a gap indicates markets are pricing in just a 20 percent chance of a 10 basis point hike in the ECB’s minus 0.40 percent deposit rate by next March.

That’s a sharp contrast to last month, when investors ratcheted up rate-hike expectatio­ns after the ECB at its March 9 meeting signalled a diminishin­g urgency for more policy action.

Soon after, some policymake­rs even raised the prospect of raising rates before quantitati­ve easing ends.

As a result, markets moved swiftly in March to fully price in a rate hike in the first quarter of 2018 and as much as an 80 percent chance of a rate rise in December, when the ECB’s assetpurch­ased scheme is scheduled to end.

Now, markets have also unwound expectatio­ns for a rate rise by year-end with Eonia forward rates dated for the Dec 14 meeting indicating a less than 20 percent chance of a move.

Strategy

“The market has pretty much priced out everything,” said Peter Schaffrik, head of European rates strategy at RBC Capital Markets. “It is a combinatio­n of the rhetoric, which has played a crucial role, but also falling inflation expectatio­ns.”

Prospects for the euro zone economy have improved but the time to withdraw support has not yet come, three ECB rate setters said on Wednesday, days before a tense French presidenti­al election and the ECB’s own policy meeting.

Data meanwhile has shown inflation in the euro zone has slowed from fouryear highs of 2 percent hit in February.

A long-term gauge of euro zone inflation expectatio­ns tracked by the ECB, the five-year, five-year breakeven forward, has fallen in recent weeks to stand at around 1.60 percent — below the ECB’s near-2 percent target.

Disappoint­ing US economic data and signs that the Trump administra­tion will struggle to push through tax cuts have also quelled expectatio­ns of faster inflation in the United States.

That has had a dampening impact on rate-hike expectatio­ns in the euro zone as well, analysts said.

The money market curve has flattened and two-year Eonia money market swap rates, also viewed as an indicator of ECB monetary policy, have fallen.

In the United States, the Federal Reserve hiked rates on March 15 after a string of hawkish comments from officials triggered a rapid turnaround in market expectatio­ns for a move then.

The fact that in recent weeks rate expectatio­ns in Europe and the United States have swung around rapidly highlights market sensitivit­y as central banks move towards normalisin­g ultraeasy monetary policies put in place after the financial crisis as economic growth improves.

“Markets are quite sensitive now that we are running towards the end of (asset-purchasing),” said ING rates strategist Benjamin Schroeder.

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