Pepperstone logo
Pepperstone logo

分析

EURMonetary Policy

April 2024 ECB Review: Cuts Coming Next Time Around

Michael Brown
Senior Research Strategist
2024年4月11日
The April ECB meeting was little more than a placeholder, albeit one that saw policymakers open the door to a June rate cut, with a dovish statement tweak. A 25bp cut to kick-off the easing cycle seems likely to be delivered at the next meeting, though any hints on what comes beyond this remain elusive for now.

Unsurprisingly, the ECB kept all policy settings unchanged at the conclusion of the April meeting, thereby maintaining the deposit rate at 4.00%, a record high, and the level at which it has been since last September. It may go without saying, however such an outcome had been fully priced by the EUR OIS curve, and was bang in line with consensus expectations.

Preview

Nevertheless, heading into the April decision, focus had not been on the policy decision, but instead on the guidance that would accompany it. This is particularly the case with the ECB, in March, having effectively pre-committed to a June cut, after President Lagarde noted that policymakers would know “a little more by April, and a lot more by June”.

On this note, while the policy statement reiterated that the Governing Council plan to keep policy “sufficiently restrictive for as long as necessary”, the statement did indeed allude to the possibility of cuts. While policymakers noted that they are not “pre-committing” to a particular rate path, and kept up the pretence of adopting a meeting-by-meeting approach, the statement did include reference to the possibility that rates “may” fall, if there is sufficient confidence in inflation returning to 2%.

This guidance, while perhaps not as explicit in hinting at a June cut as some of the GC’s doves would’ve liked, was the only change to the statement from that issued in March – hence, is a significant addition. Said addition helped to cement market expectations for a cut in June, which is priced as around an 80% probability, with the EUR OIS curve implying quarterly cuts from then onwards, until the end of the year.

Preview

President Lagarde expanded on this guidance at the post-meeting press conference, noting three conditions that would need to be met before a rate reduction – namely, the updated assessment of the inflation outlook, dynamics of underlying inflation, and the strength of policy transmission – all of which would need to increase policymakers’ confidence that inflation is converging towards the target.

Despite this, “a few” policymakers on the Governing Council were of the view that a cut at today’s meeting would be appropriate, even if a “very large majority” preferred waiting until June, at which the ECB will have “a lot more data” – a line that Lagarde repeated from the March meeting.

Sticking with the press conference, Lagarde’s view of the economy was broadly unchanged, with activity having remained ‘weak’ in the first quarter, and risks to the growth outlook remaining ‘tilted to the downside’. Furthermore, Lagarde reiterated her expectation that inflation will decline to target, albeit ‘fluctuating’ before doing so.

Sadly, further information or insight than this was rather thin on the ground, owing to journalists’ rather peculiar obsession with continually asking President Lagarde about how developments in the US, and Fed policy, have a bearing on what the ECB may or may not do.

In any case, markets displayed a relatively muted reaction to the ECB statement, and presser, which perhaps shouldn’t come as a surprise, given that the April decision served simply as a placeholder, as policymakers continue to bide their time before a June cut.

Despite that, the path of least resistance for the common currency should continue to lead lower, at least against the greenback, as risks to the ECB outlook tilt in an increasingly dovish direction, and risks to the FOMC outlook become increasingly hawkish, especially after the hotter-than-expected CPI figures yesterday. A continued grind lower in EUR/USD over coming quarters seems a reasonable expectation.

Preview

To conclude, we frankly learned little from the April ECB meeting. While some policymakers were prepared to cut today, it is clear that the Governing Council on the whole continue to wait for “a lot more data” before the June meeting, at which a much greater majority should have confidence in inflation returning to target, and the policy normalisation cycle should begin with the first 25bp cut. Focus now should shift to the pace, and magnitude, of easing that is likely to come this cycle, though any clarity on this seems relatively unlikely, until the next meeting in eight weeks’ time.

這裡提供的資料並未根據旨在促進投資研究獨立性的法律要求進行準備,因此被視為市場營銷溝通。儘管它不受任何在投資研究傳播之前交易的禁制,我們不會在向客戶提供資料之前尋求任何優勢。

Pepperstone不代表這裡提供的材料是準確、及時或完整的,因此不應依賴於此。這些資訊,無論來自第三方與否,不應被視為建議;或者買賣的提議;或者購買或出售任何證券、金融產品或工具的招攬;或參與任何特定的交易策略。它不考慮讀者的財務狀況或投資目標。我們建議閱讀此內容的讀者尋求自己的建議。未經Pepperstone的批准,不允許複製或重新分發此信息。