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EUR

ECB Playbook – What next after three straight 50bps hikes?

Pepperstone
Trading Guides
Mar 12, 2023
The ECB meet this week and will deliver their third successive 50bps rate increase, concluding the tightening that policymakers first guided towards in December last year, and likely also ending a remarkably long spell of unanimity among members of the Governing Council (GC). With this in mind, traders’ focus will likely fall on the policy outlook, namely how much further rates are likely to rise, and how long rates will remain at their terminal level.

Unsurprisingly, given how concrete the ECB’s guidance has been over the last quarter, money markets fully price a 50bps hike at this meeting – a move which would take the deposit rate to 3%. Hence, the rate decision itself is unlikely to be a major market-mover.

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Guidance Holds The Key

Instead, it will be the commentary – both explicit, and implicit via the latest economic forecasts – that are most likely to elicit a market reaction. As recent remarks from a plethora of GC members indicate, the remarkably prolonged period of unanimity and agreement among policymakers on the appropriate rate path is at an end. The hawks, led by Isabel Schnabel, have been touting the prospect of continuing to hike at a 50bps clip well into spring. Meanwhile, the doves, led by Chief Economist Philip Lane, would appear to be much more comfortable with downshifting to a 25bps per meeting pace in the second quarter.

Clearly, market participants will look for clarity on this key issue in both the policy statement, and President Lagarde’s post-meeting press conference. It seems likely, however, that the ECB will downshift to a 25bps hike in both May and June, before pausing to assess the impact of cumulative tightening on the eurozone economy. That said, risks to this call are clearly on the hawkish side, given the stubbornly high nature of core inflation within the bloc, and scant signs of a peak emerging.

Explicit guidance, of the ilk seen last December, is, however, unlikely. Instead, as a result of the aforementioned inflation concerns, optionality and flexibility are set to remain the ‘modus operandi’ of the ECB, with the policy statement likely to stress a ‘meeting-by-meeting’ and ‘data-dependent’ approach to policymaking. A likely compromise to pacify both sides of the hawk-dove divide could be a slower pace of hikes, accompanied by a faster pace of quantitative tightening – something that would pressure periphery debt, and widen core-periphery spreads (such as the BTP-Bund below) if it were to come to fruition.

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