ECB: Growth Concerns

The growth outlook has turned weak enough for the European Central Bank (ECB) to deviate from the quarterly cutting trajectory and make its first move outside a staff projection meeting. As the ECB had been guiding towards December at its previous monetary policy meeting, and the amount of data received since the September rate cut has been sparse, risk management considerations seem to have played an important role.

From a risk management perspective, the ECB likely believes that upside shocks to inflation can be addressed by a slower pace of rate reductions going forward, while the rate cut is offering additional protection against downside risks. While the October cut might suggest a desire to normalize policy more quickly, the ECB stressed that decisions will remain meeting-by-meeting, and the data flow over the coming months will decide the speed at which the ECB continues to make policy less restrictive.

Given still too high domestic inflation, largely reflecting price pressures in the services sector, monetary policy will remain tight for now, with a discussion around the appropriate neutral policy rate expected to come into focus next year. While we do not have a strong view on the precise trajectory, another rate cut in December seems likely, and a terminal rate pricing of around 1.85% for the second half of next year remains consistent with our (and most external) estimates for a neutral policy rate for the Euro area.

As a result, we broadly agree with market pricing and see limited upside for European duration outside a recessionary environment, so our stance remains broadly neutral. As for the European interest rate curve, we continue to expect the back end of the interest rate curve to underperform shorter maturities due to gradual rate cuts and rebuilding term premia.