
You are missing trading opportunities:
- Free trading apps
- Over 8,000 signals for copying
- Economic news for exploring financial markets
Registration
Log in
You agree to website policy and terms of use
If you do not have an account, please register
The European Central Bank is facing a big dilemma: should it act or should it wait? Euro-zone inflation is low, but off the bottom. The exchange rate is high and very uncomfortable for exports and for inflation but it also reflects trust in the euro-zone.
There is a lot of uncertainty towards the big event that will set the next significant move of EUR/USD. Here is some background and 4 scenarios.
Missing the target
The ECB has one mandate: inflation of “2% or a bit below” in headline CPI inflation. The target is being missed month after month. Low inflation, also known as “lowflation” makes the debt burden heavier, makes it harder to exit the situation and leaves the danger of the dreaded deflation.
Draghi and co. want to avoid a vicious cycle where falling prices discourage consumption, which in turn lowers production, jobs are lost, consumption falls again, etc. This is what happened in the Great Depression of the ’30s and what happened in Japan’s two “lost decades”. Japan is now fighting deflation using all available means.
Lowflation
The deterioration began in October with CPI falling to 0.7%. The ECB reacted with a surprising rate cut of the main lending rate to 0.25%. Since then inflation bottomed at 0.5% in March, rising back to 0.7% in April (preliminary numbers). Core inflation hit 0.7% twice and climbed back to 1% in April.
ECB members have been busy denying deflation but admitting that if “lowflation” stays for too long, it will be hard to escape it.
Worsening conditions
Later on,the focus gradually shifted to the exchange rate. A strong euro means less competitive euro-zone exports and cheaper imports which push prices down. Moves towards 1.40 in EUR/USD were welcomed with warnings from the ECB, yet it is important to note another currency pair: EUR/CNY.
China is a big trade partner of the euro-zone. The authorities in Beijing began weakening the local yuan against the dollar after a long period of appreciation. This in turn means that EUR/CNY is at levels last seen in 2011.
Talk becoming cheap
The ECB went from dismissing the exchange rate by saying it isn’t a policy target to expressing worries. This continued with strong implicit warnings such as declaring that the governing council is “unanimous about the use of non conventional monetary policy tools” (mentioning QE) to Draghi explicitly connecting the exchange rate to further monetary stimulus.
The first time that Draghi said it resulted in a big Sunday gap. However, the second mention had a short-lived effect. Markets want action, not words.
In a perfect world, Draghi would lower the euro with words and without action. This way, the ECB keeps all the “non conventional” tools after already lowering the main interest rate to 0.25%. This worked with the European debt crisis: Draghi’s “everything it takes speech”, followed by presenting the OMT restored trust. However, now it comes to backfire, with the strong exchange rate.
So what will Draghi do?
4 scenarios
What do you think the ECB will do? Will it act or not? Where will EUR/USD stand in the aftermath of the decision?
The ECB announces its decision on Thursday at 11:45 GMT. Draghi begins his press conference (from Brussels this time) at 1230 GMT.
source