Arab Times

Eurozone economy is sparkling

ECB may roll back policy as economy grows

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LONDON, March 25, (RTRS): If the latest surveys of business intentions are to be believed, the Euro-zone economy is sparkling, growing at a pace that easily explains the hints from some European Central Bank policymake­rs of a pullback from their easy-money regime.

IHS Markit’s Euro-zone Flash Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), an influentia­l guide to the buying plans of businesses and hence growth, hit a near sixyear high this month.

It climbed to 56.7 from February’s 56.0, its highest reading since April 2011 and better than any prediction­s in a Reuters poll.

At the same time, flash surveys for the currency bloc’s two largest economies — Germany and France — also stormed past expectatio­ns to register near sixyear highs, conditions likely to play into elections in both countries this year.

“This is a really solid rate of expansion. It’s an economy firing on all cylinders,” Chris Williamson, chief business economist at IHS Markit, said of the Euro-zone.

He added that it implied first quarter economic growth of 0.6 percent quarter on quarter, which would be the joint highest reading since the first quarter of 2011.

One immediate impact may be to put pressure on the ECB to begin rolling back its historical­ly easy monetary policy, a combinatio­n of zero to negative interest rates and a large assetbuyin­g programme.

Earlier this month the ECB pledged to extend its bond-buying programme to at least the end of the year, citing weak underlying inflation and lacklustre growth in the Euro-zone. It will, however, reduce its monthly spend from April. It also highlighte­d that it no longer felt a “sense of urgency” to take further action.

Since then some ECB policymake­rs, notably Austria’s Ewald Nowotny and Italy’s Ignazio Visco, have spoken of a rate hike within or just after the period of the bond-buying programme.

“These (PMI) numbers will likely reinforce the ECB’s view that downside risks are diminishin­g. But the central bank will only tighten gradually,” Morgan Stanley said in a note.

The key will be inflation, control of which is the ECB’s primary mandate.

Markit’s Euro-zone PMI sub-index measuring prices charged by businesses rose to a near six-year high of 53.3.

Inflation in the Euro-zone was 2.0 percent in February — around the ECB’s target. “What we are picking up is an increase in suppliers’ ability to hike prices due to strong demand. If that continues to intensify the ECB should become more worried,” Markit’s Williamson said.

All nine of Friday’s PMI reports — manufactur­ing, services and composite for the Euro-zone, France and Germany — beat even the most optimistic forecasts in Reuters polls of economists.

France’s composite registered 57.6 in March from 55.9 in February, a particular­ly significan­t rise given the country’s economy is generally lagging and this put it above Germany.

How such data plays into the French presidenti­al election, the first round of which is in April, remains to be seen.

National Front candidate Marine Le Pen will be hoping to capture votes from those angry with their economic lot. But the two other leading candidates, Emmanuel Macron and Francois Fillon are both calling for economic reform. A hefty chunk of the electorate has yet to decide who to vote for, if the polls are anything to go by.

Germany’s PMI was driven mainly by strong demand for manufactur­ed goods from the United States, China, Britain and the Middle East.

The manufactur­ing index — reflecting more than two-thirds of the economy — rose to 57.0 from 56.1 in February.

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