Qatar Tribune

Mixed messages make ECB struggle to keep markets on side

- AGENCIES

THE policy signals by the European Central Bank (ECB) do not seem to convince investors, analysts say, whether it is trying to raise their expectatio­ns for interest rates or lower them.

Two years of tumult since economies began reopening after COVID-19 have complicate­d central banks’ communicat­ions with financial markets, which help transmit policy moves to businesses and households.

With inflation at multidecad­e highs and war in Ukraine feeding economic volatility, global peers including the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) and the Bank of Japan have often struggled to send clear and consistent signals.

But four analysts told Reuters that the ECB’s problems doing so have been more acute because of frequent changes to its policy message and what one described as a cacophony of voices among policymake­rs from the 20 countries that use the euro.

“They are simply not consistent in their communicat­ion and explaining their

reaction function,” Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro at Dutch bank ING, said.

“The message keeps changing. This is why markets gave up on them.”

Just over a year ago, ECB President Christine agarde was trying to persuade investors they were wrong to bet on rising borrowing costs because high inflation would

prove transitory.

By early February even before Russia invaded Ukraine she had acknowledg­ed mounting inflation risks and the possibilit­y of an interest rate rise.

Now, agarde has the opposite problem: investors won’t believe her when she says the ECB will keep raising rates at a brisk pace to bring inflation down to 2 within two years from nearly five times that level now.

The ECB chief is pushing back, telling investors in Davos last week they should “revise their positions” - adding weight to earlier comments from Dutch and atvian policymake­rs.

“They are trying their utmost to communicat­e clearly right now but they’re suffering the consequenc­es of having been behind the curve last year, and this is the price to pay for changing guidance as frequently as they have,” Danske Bank economist Piet Haines Christians­en said.

Boxed in?

After a few months last year in which it was criticized for not acting while other big central banks did, things had started to improve for the ECB.

A robust diet of rate hikes that started in July stabilized the euro and raised borrowing costs by the autumn - just what the central bank said was needed to lower inflation.

But by December, with signs of inflation peaking, a recession looming, and ECB

Chief Economist Philip ane raising the prospect of smaller rate moves, investors had begun to doubt the ECB’s appetite to keep going for much longer.

It responded by committing at its Dec. 15 meeting to several more rate increases, although at 50 basis points apiece rather than the 75 bps in September and October.

Now, with inflation falling and talk of smaller rate hikes by the Fed which often influences other central banks due to the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency investors are skeptical again.

Money market pricing has the ECB’s deposit rate peaking at 3.3 in July a big drop from 3.5 foreseen at the turn of the year with a cut by December.

Analysts said the ECB had boxed itself in when agarde said last month it would raise rates by 50 bps at its “next meeting, and possibly at the one after that, and possibly thereafter.”

“With the kind of commitment that she gave, you lose credibilit­y if you don’t stick to it,” Dirk Schumacher, head of European macro research at Natixis, said. “That would be a problem for any central bank.”

With the eurozone economy now faring better than expected, he argued agarde should ease away from that December pledge.

Tug of war

agarde’s commitment also puzzled ECB-watchers because the central bank had previously said it wouldn’t make such public prediction­s

known as forward guidance anymore, but instead take each decision based on incoming data.

“They’re facing the contradict­ion of saying they would go meeting-by-meeting while at the same time committing to several rate hikes,” said Frederik Ducrozet, head of macroecono­mic research at Pictet Wealth Management.

But Danske’s Christians­en said the ECB can’t always just follow investors, especially when situations are volatile.

“ECB doesn’t have the luxury to change its view as often as markets. This of course leads to a tug of war between the ECB and the markets on the narrative,” he added.

 ?? ?? Rain clouds gather near the European Central Bank (ECB) building, in Frankfurt, Germany.
Rain clouds gather near the European Central Bank (ECB) building, in Frankfurt, Germany.

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