November 11, 2024

European Central Bank raises eurozone interest rates despite Credit Suisse turmoil – business live

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ECB raises eurozone interest rates by 50bp despite turmoil

Newsflash: The European Central Bank has pressed on with its plan to raise interest rates by half a percent, despite the turmoil in the banking sector.

The ECB’s governing council has voted today to increase its three benchmark interest rates by 50 basis points – as it had pre-committed to at its previous meeting in February.

This means the ECB’s main interest rate rises to 3.5%, from 3%.

That is a surprise for markets, though, as some investors and economist had expected the ECB to rethink whether such a large increase in borrowing costs was wise in the current situation.

However, the ECB has decided to press on in its fight against inflation.

It says:

Inflation is projected to remain too high for too long. Therefore, the Governing Council today decided to increase the three key ECB interest rates by 50 basis points, in line with its determination to ensure the timely return of inflation to the 2% medium-term target.

The elevated level of uncertainty reinforces the importance of a data-dependent approach to the Governing Council’s policy rate decisions, which will be determined by its assessment of the inflation outlook in light of the incoming economic and financial data, the dynamics of underlying inflation, and the strength of monetary policy transmission.

Updated at 09.29 EDT

Key events

History will judge whether today’s interest rate rise from the European Central Bank is wise, or foolhardy.

But it wouldn’t be the first time that the ECB has blundered by focusing on inflation when a crisis was raging.

In July 2008 it raised rates, only to reverse that move a few months later when Lehman Brothers failed.

At the press conference, Christine Lagarde is asked whether it could be making a similar mistake today.

She replies that the ECB is mindful of its history, but confident that today’s decision is ‘robust’, and what is needed.

Lagarde says:

The banks are in a completely different position from 2008. And, you know, crises are never exactly the same anyway.

She repeats her earlier point that the architecture of the banking system, the framework within which they operate, and the supervision of the banking system have all been considerably improved since 2008.

In July 2011, the ECB also raised rates despite the outbreak of the eurozone debt crisis, as it persisted with fighting inflation.

Lagarde then gets a question about greedflation – a hot topic after it emerged earlier this month that the ECB council has been shown evidence that profit margins had been rising rather than falling.

Q: What contribution are corporate profits making to inflation?

The ECB president replies today’s statement from the ECB points out that “many firms were able to raise their profit margins in sectors faced with constrained supply and resurgent demand”.

Lagarde says the ECB hopes to see a proper burden-sharing of the cost-shock which has hit the eurozone, saying it is effectively a tax.

The tax should be shared. There should be burden-sharing.

Such burden sharing (with firms not whacking up their profit margins) would reduce the risk of rising prices pushing up wages, Lagarde suggests.

Such burden-sharing needs to be debated, she adds.

Q: Will the ECB slow the pace of its rate hikes because of financial stability?

Lagarde insists there is no trade off between price stability and financial stability.

We are demonstrating thistoday, she says, by addressing the price stability issue by raising interest rate by 50 basis points – as intended – because inflation is over target.

We also are monitoring market tensions, Lagarde reports, adding that:

We stand ready to provide any kind of additional facilities needed.

ECB rate rise was not unanimous

Today’s decision to raise interest rates by 50 basis points was not unanimous, Christine Lagarde, reveals, but it was taken quickly.

The ECB president explaints the executive board proposed today’s decision, and it was adopted by “a very large majority” of the governing council.

But, three or four members that did not support the decision [out of the 26 members of the governing council].

Lagards says these dissenters were keen to probably give a bit more time to see how the situation unfolds, and collect additional data. “Otherwise, it was a very large majority decisionm” she insists.

Updated at 10.44 EDT

Christine Lagade insists that the ECB’s determination to fight inflation is intact, and should not be doubted.

She says:

We are not waning on our commitment to fight inflation and we are determined to return inflation back to 2% target in the medium term.

Lagarde: Banks are much stronger than in 2008

Q: Are we on the verge of a systemic crisis like in 2008?

Lagarde repeats that the ECB’s Governing Council is “monitoring current market tensions closely” and stands ready to respond as necessary to preserve price stability and financial stability.

She reminds reporters that she involved in the 2008 financial crisis [as France’s finance minister], and knows that reforms have been implemented since those dramatic days.

She says policymakers reformed the framework to strengthen the financial system, agreed on the Basel III regulatory framework, increased the capital ratio (determining how much capital banks must hold in case of crisis) and increase the financial coverage ratio.

She adds:

I think that the banking sector is currently in a much much stronger position than it was back in 2008.

We do have tools and facilities on hand too, Lagarde says.

The ECB president adds that “we have all worked hard in the last few days, and particularly the last few hours”.

She says the EEB staff can act quickly and creatively if they need to fight a liquidity crisis.

Our staff…have demonstrated in the past that they can also exercise creativity in very short order, in case it is needed to respond to what could be a liquidity crisis, if there was such a thing.

But, this is not what we are seeing.

Updated at 10.29 EDT

Q: How do you see the path for interest rates ahead? You haven’t given any guidance at today’s meeting – have we reached peak interest rates?

Lagarde explains that three components will determine future rate decisions.

Thet are 1) the incoming economic and financial data, 2) the dynamics of underlying inflation, and 3) the strength of monetary policy transmission.

Lagarde adds that:

If our baseline was to persist when the uncertainty reduces we know that we have a lot more ground to cover. But it’s a big caveat.

She also explains that the ECB’s latest forecasts were drawn up before the recent financial tensions blew up, so they do not incorporate any of the most recent developments.

Christine Lagarde then explains that market interest rates rose considerably in the weeks after the ECB’s last meeting in early February.

But, she adds, the increase has “strongly reversed over recent days” amid the severe financial market tensions.

Bank credit to euro area firms has become more expensive. Credit to firms has weakened further, owing to lower demand and tighter credit supply conditions

Household borrowing has become more expensive as well, especially owing to higher mortgage rates.

This rise in borrowincg costs has hit demand, and led to a further slowdown in the growth of loans to households, she adds.

Lagarde: financial market tension could hit confidence

The risks to the outlook for economic growth are tilted to the downside, Christine Lagarde warns.

In a nod to the turmoil in the markets of late, the ECB president says:

Persistently elevated financial market tensions could tighten broader credit conditions more strongly than expected and dampen confidence.

Russia’s unjustified war against Ukraine and its people continues to be a significant downside risk to the eocnomy and could again push up the cost of energy and food.

She adds the could also be a drag on eurozone growth if the global economy weakens more sharply than expected.

Christine Lagarde explains that the euro area stagnated in the 4th quarter of 2022, thus avoiding the contraction which had been previously expected.

She predicts that the economy will recover over coming quarters, and says the eurozone’s labour market is strong.

The ECB president says:

“The economy looks set to recover over the coming quarters. Industrial production should pick up as supply conditions improve further, confidence continues to recover and firms work off large order backlogs.”

Lagarde says that government efforts to help households with high energy bills should be temporary and targeted, and designed to encourage people to use less energy.

Christine Lagarde outlines the ECB’s new inflation projections, which are lower than three months ago.

ECB staff now see inflation averaging 5.3% in 2023 (down from 6.3% previously forecast), 2.9% in 2024 (down from 3.4%), and 2.1% in 2025 (down from 2.3%), she says.

But core inflation is a concern.

Lagarde says:

At the same time, underlying price pressures remain strong. Inflation excluding energy and food continued to increase in February and ECB staff expect it to average 4.6% in 2023, which is higher than foreseen in the December projections.

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