ECB cuts rates again but hints at pause

ECB cuts rates again but hints at pause


By Balazs Koranyi and Francesco Canepa

FRANKFURT (Reuters) -The European Central Bank cut interest rates as expected on Thursday but hinted at a pause in its year-long easing cycle after inflation finally returned to its 2% target.

The ECB has lowered borrowing costs eight times, or by 2 percentage points since last June, seeking to prop up a euro zone economy that was struggling even before erratic U.S. economic and trade policies dealt it further blows.

With inflation now just below 2%, ECB President Christine Lagarde said the central bank for the 20 countries that share the euro was in a “good position” with the current rate path, a signal investors took to mean a break in cuts, if not an end to policy easing.

Sources close to the discussion also said the time has come for at least a break since the ECB has already done the legwork in taming inflation and additional support was not needed for now, especially since little new data would be available by the July meeting.

Speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity, four sources with direct knowledge of the discussion said there was broad agreement around the table about sitting tight in July, and a few even made the case for a longer pause, barring unexpected market turbulence.

Lagarde was less explicit but also hinted at steady policy at the next meeting.

“We are well-positioned after that 25 basis point rate cut and with the rate path as it is,” Lagarde told a press conference. “With today’s cut, at the current level of interest rates, we believe we are in a good position.”

The interest rate path implied by markets sees a pause in July and anticipates just one more cut in the deposit rate toward the end of the year, possibly in December.

“I think we are getting to the end of a monetary policy cycle that was responding to compounded shocks, including COVID, including the war in Ukraine, the illegitimate war in Ukraine, and the energy crisis,” Lagarde said.

Economists also saw her words as a clear indication of a pause and some even bet that the ECB’s most aggressive easing cycle since the global financial crisis of 2008-2009 might be at a close.

“We think the ECB is done cutting rates now, but this view is contingent on no major negative surprises surfacing and economic outlook to gradually become more robust in line with the ECB’s forecasts,” Nordea said in a note to clients.

Thursday’s decision was virtually unanimous, and the sources said only Austria’s Robert Holzmann objected. Holzmann did not return calls seeking comment.


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