The ECB keeps Interest Rates on Hold

Yesterday, and for the third straight meeting, the Governing Council of the ECB (European Central Bank) voted unanimously to keep their key benchmark deposit rate steady at 2.00%. Financial markets were expecting a rate hold, as the ECB kept their three key interest rates* at their lowest level for more than two years. However, sentiment within the governing council is changing as growth is weakening on the downside and price pressures are building on the upside.

*ECB Interest Rates – The ECB has three interest rates, one being the key deposit rate, which as mentioned above was held at 2.00% and is the interest rate banks receive when they deposit monies overnight with the ECB. The other two facilities are the Main Refinancing Operations (rate held at 2.15%) which is the rate the banks pay when they borrow monies from the ECB for one week, and the Marginal Lending Facility (rate held at 2.40%), which is the rate banks pay when they borrow monies overnight from the ECB.

Indeed, officials noted that policymakers within the ECB will probably vote to increase interest rates at their next meeting in June, unless the crisis in the Middle East abates and there are some positive developments on energy prices. Those close to the ECB’s decision, while asking for anonymity, noted that there was little chance of avoiding a rate hike in June, but stressed that the situation is fluid and can change quickly.

President of the ECB, Christine Lagarde, said, “the next six weeks will be the right time to assess the economy in order to make an informed decision on verified and revisited information”. The president went on to say, “we made an informed decision on the basis of yet insufficient information. We debated the decision that we have unanimously taken today, but we also debated at length, and in depth, a decision to possibly hike”.

Experts advise that officials from the ECB have not been convinced from data received the need to tighten monetary policy, with the increasing prices of energy such as oil and natural gas yet to trigger “second round effects”*. In a statement issued by ECB officials, they said, “the upside risk to inflation and the downside risks to growth have intensified. The Governing Council remains well positioned to navigate the current uncertainty”.

*Second Round Effects – In these scenarios second round effects are price and wage-settings stemming from the current shock that have the potential to raise Eurozone inflation beyond the near-term in a persistent manner.

Analysts advise that financial markets suggest that ECB officials will prioritise an upswing in prices (by 3% in April), which are suffering negative effects from the USA/Iran/Israel crisis. Traders have accordingly priced in 75 basis points rise in interest rates by the end of the year. President Lagarde noted that, “there is one element that is going to have a real impact, and that is the duration of the conflict”.