Times of Oman

After hitting threeyear high against dollar, euro now faces ECB scrutiny

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BRUSSELS: After hitting a three-year high against the dollar, the strong euro is likely to preoccupy global markets and European Central Bank (ECB) policymake­rs in particular in the coming week.

The ECB, whose Governing Council meets on Thursday, last expressed concern over the single currency in September, when it said exchange rate volatility was an uncertaint­y that required “monitoring”.

Then the euro had only briefly nudged beyond $1.20.

In the last week it has surpassed $1.23, and is now some 4 per cent higher than when ECB policymake­rs met in December, although on a trade-weighted basis the euro’s rise is not as steep.

Its January surge followed the release of minutes from the December ECB meeting showing the bank intended to revisit its policy message in early 2018, prompting markets to price in a 70 percent chance of a rise in interest rates by the end of the year. The ECB last hiked rates in 2011.

Reuters reported on Wednesday that the ECB was unlikely to ditch its pledge to keep buying bonds at its January meeting.

Public comments in the past week show its policymake­rs are growing more alert to the euro’s strength. Vice-President Vitor Constancio said that, while the ECB did not have an exchange rate target, he was concerned by sudden movements that did not reflect changes in fundamenta­ls.

Austrian central bank chief Ewald Nowotny called the euro’s gains against the dollar “not helpful”.

Pain threshold

European firms used to express more concern about the euro crossing what they called the pain threshold, curbing exports and so overall growth. The euro zone economy is currently motoring along at a decade-high pace of 2.5 per cent per year.

Carsten Brzeski, Frankfurtb­ased economist for ING, says the impact of a strong euro on growth has steadily faded as an increasing number of invoices are denominate­d in euros and companies are more active hedging their currency exposure.

“This time it matters more for inflation than for growth,” he said.

Sustained euro strength, he said, would reduce the ECB’s inflation assumption­s this year and next — 1.4 and 1.5 per cent respective­ly — by 0.2 percentage points. This would move them further from the European Central Bank target of close to but below 2 per cent and reduce the prospects of an early and sudden end to quantitati­ve easing.

Indeed, the most recent euro zone inflation figures vindicate the ECB’s easy policy stance. The rate in December fell to 1.4 per cent from 1.5 per cent in November and underlying inflation, excluding volatile energy, food, alcohol and tobacco, was a mere 0.9 per cent for the third month in a row.

The euro might not have hit a pain threshold yet, but ECB policymake­rs will not want to encourage any further rise.

Jan von Gerich, economist at Nordea Markets, suggests ECB President Mario Draghi will sound a shade less optimistic than in December to convince markets that the next rate hike is not coming sooner and to stop the euro from rising further.

“We expect to see some downside pressure on the euro and bond yields in response to the ECB’s immediate message next week,” he said in a note on Thursday.

 ?? – Reuters file picture ??
– Reuters file picture

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