Keypoints
- The European Central Bank on Thursday held interest rates steady for a fifth straight meeting but gave its strongest indication yet that rate cuts could be ahead.
- In a statement, the institution said, โit would be appropriate to reduce the current level of monetary policy restrictionโ if inflation continues to move toward its 2% target.
- โWe are not assuming that what happens in the euro area will be the mirror of what happens in the United States,โ Lagarde said, following speculation about the impact of a hot U.S. inflation print on the Federal Reserveโs policy.
The European Central Bank on Thursday held interest rates steady for a fifth straight meeting and gave its clearest signal yet of an upcoming rate cut, despite uncertainty over the U.S. Federal Reserveโs next moves.
โIf the Governing Councilโs updated assessment of the inflation outlook, the dynamics of underlying inflation and the strength of monetary policy transmission were to further increase its confidence that inflation is converging to the target in a sustained manner, it would be appropriate to reduce the current level of monetary policy restriction,โ it said in a statement.
In a news conference after the announcement, ECB President Christine Lagarde said this โimportantโ new sentence was a โloud and clear indicationโ of the bankโs current sentiment.
The ECB made no direct reference to loosening monetary policy in its previous communiques.
The central bank for the 20 countries that share the euro currency hiked its key rate to a record 4% in September. It has left this rate unchanged at every gathering since.
Policymakers and economists have zeroed in on June as the month when rates could start to be reduced, after the ECBย forecast. Price rises in the euro zone have sinceย in March.
June will also be the first month when policymakers will have a full set of data on first-quarter wage negotiations โ an area of concern for potential inflationary effects.
The ECB on Thursday said incoming information had โbroadly confirmedโ its medium-term outlook, with falling inflation led by lower food and goods.
Market pricing suggests a 25 basis point cut in June, according to LSEG data.
โFor a while now, the ECB has essentially pre-committed to a June cut. There is a high bar for this not to be delivered. But there is a wide range of possible outcomes in the subsequent months, depending on further progress with disinflation. So far, the data is moving in the dovesโ favour,โ said Hussain Mehdi, director of investment strategy at HSBC Asset Management, in a note.
Next Fed steps
In the U.S., expectations for a summer rate cut from the Federal Reserve were significantly curtailed byย inflation dataย coming in higher than forecast on Wednesday.
This has raised questions over how European central banks will respond to developments in the worldโs largest economy.
Asked Thursday about whether the U.S. consumer price index figures could impact the ECBโs rate-cut trajectory, Lagarde said: โObviously, anything that happens matters to us and will in due course be embedded in the projection that will be prepared and released in June. The United States is a very large market, a very sizeable economy, a major financial sector as well.โ
โWe are not assuming that what happens in the euro area will be the mirror of what happens in the United States,โ Lagarde said, stressing that the economies, political regimes and fiscal policies were all different.
She declined to specify whether the euroโs exchange rate against the U.S. dollar would factor into policymaking.
But in comments reported by Reuters that preceded the ECBโs decision, Per Jansson, deputy governor at Swedenโs central bank, on Thursday said that if the Fed rules out rate cuts in 2024, it could present a โproblemโ for both the Riksbank and the ECB.
In the case of the Riksbank, this would be due to the weakening of the Swedish krona fueling inflation, Janssonย saidย in a speech.
European data continues to move toward the 2% inflation target, keeping the ECB on track for a June cut โ but the pace and extent of further reductions this year โcould be more sensitive to U.S. data and Fed policy,โ Andrew Benito, chief European economist at Eisler Capital, told CNBCโs Silvia Amaro ahead of the rate announcement.

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