Khaleej Times

ECB ending 4-year loans makes banks focus on stimulus exit

- Alessandro Speciale and Andre Tartar

frankfurt — The European Central Bank is about to give lenders a last offer of free longterm cash. In return, it’ll get a sense of any concern over the outlook for its extraordin­ary stimulus as the economic recovery spurs calls for an exit plan.

The final round of Targeted Longer-Term Refinancin­g Operations — four-year loans at an interest rate that starts at zero and could go lower — will be allotted to banks on Thursday at 11.30am Frankfurt time. The take-up could be as low as €30 billion ($32 billion) or as high as €750 billion, according to a Bloomberg survey, with a median estimate of €110 billion.

The size of the so-called TLTRO-2 offer could give critical insight into lenders’ thinking as they consider the end of a stimulus spree by the ECB that has given them access to ultra-cheap cash to keep credit flowing to the real economy. While current guidance foresees a significan­t pause between the end of the ECB’s bond-buying programme — predicted in an earlier Bloomberg survey to be around mid-2018 — and the first rate increase, some ECB policy makers have said that gap could be shortened or the sequence reversed.

“Demand for this operation was always going to be higher than the prior TLTRO-2s as it is the final opportunit­y to secure cheap liquidity over four years,” said Alan McQuaid, an economist at Merrion Capital in Dublin. “However, increasing concerns that the ECB will lift interest rates sooner than originally thought is likely to provide an added boost to demand.”

The ECB started its first series of TLTROs in September 2014, with a second series on more lenient terms getting under way last year. The 11 operations so far have delivered a net €570 billion to lenders as part of a package of monetary easing that also includes negative rates and a €2.28 trillion quantitati­ve-easing programme.

The amount banks can borrow is linked to the size of their loan books, in an attempt to spur lending to companies and households. According to 70 per cent of respondent­s in the Bloomberg survey, that strategy has been successful.

Yet while the euro area has posted 15 quarters of economic growth and seen inflation climb to two per cent, officials are wary of declaring victory. The growth in consumer prices is largely driven by energy, with core inflation subdued and hard data such as industrial production volatile. Executive Board member Peter Praet, the ECB’s chief economist, said last week that the outlook doesn’t warrant talk of “regime change.”

Even so, a debate is brewing over how and when stimulus can be withdrawn. Some policy makers raised the issue of sequencing at the March 9 Governing Council meeting, signaling nascent pressure to begin an official discussion on normalisat­ion sooner rather than later. Governors including Austria’s Ewald Nowotny and Italy’s Ignazio Visco have stated publicly that the current forward guidance could be reviewed.

Investors have taken notice and are now pricing in a more than 50 per cent probabilit­y of an increase in the deposit rate — currently at minus 0.4 per cent — by December. A month ago, the chance was just 11 per cent.

That’s a mixed blessing for the ECB. While it’s a sign of confidence, speculatio­n over a rate increase pushes up market borrowing costs and so threatens to weigh on the economy. At a time when the euro-area faces political risks from elections, British plans to leave the European Union, and the US administra­tion’s disdain for global trade rules, that’s an unwelcome complicati­on. — Bloomberg

 ?? — AFP ?? Yet while the euro area has posted 15 quarters of growth, officials are wary of declaring victory.
— AFP Yet while the euro area has posted 15 quarters of growth, officials are wary of declaring victory.

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