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June 5, 2008
As expected, the European Central Bank (ECB) left its refi rate at 4.0% again
this morning. What was not expected was the hawkish tone of the subsequent
statement and the press briefing from President Trichet. He noted that the
Governing Council had a "deep discussion" (trans: "fierce debate"?) and remains "in
a state of heightened alertness." Some members apparently wanted a rate hike
this month but the consensus was to hold. The President then noted that the
Council may decide to make "a small hike" at the July 3 meeting in order to
anchor inflation expectations. The statement emphasized that risks to prices
remain clearly on the upside and have increased further. And, Trichet reiterated
that the bank's mandate is to ensure medium-term price stability, which means
firmly anchoring inflation expectations. The euro promptly firmed anew.
Today's policy meeting took place against the backdrop of the ECB's ten year
anniversary. Back on June 1, 1998, annual inflation in the eleven countries
joining the Euro-zone was running at just 1.4%, a barrel of Brent crude cost
$15.60, and 3-month Euribor stood at 3.575%. While the 2000-2001 period brought
a spike in inflation and market rates, the rest of the decade was fairly predictable
policy-wise as price increases moved pretty much hand-in-hand with growth.
Chart 1

Today's ECB faces a much more challenging world. Inflation is rising, the
interbank market is still struggling, and the macroeconomic impacts of the
US slowdown and global financial turmoil are now coming home to roost. Inflation
in the 15-member 'zone climbed to 3.6% in May, Brent crude stands at $128pb,
and 3-month Euribor today hit 4.864%, the highest so far this year. On the
plus side, today's ECB policy-making has clarity, coherence, and credibility,
all of which were sorely lacking a decade ago.
The ECB and its President apparently have decided that their best course is
to stick firmly to the bank's mandate of maintaining price stability. Trichet
himself set the tone at a speech this past weekend, when he warned that bad
management of the oil crisis back in the 1970s (large wage rises and low interest
rates) seriously hurt the economy. He concluded by warning that the errors
of the past must not be repeated.
As noted, Euro-zone headline inflation jumped to 3.6% in May. The pace of
M3 money supply growth (something the Council is known to watch closely), which
appeared to be on a downward trend in recent months, nudged back up to 10.6%
in April from 10.1% in March. As Trichet pointed out today, while this probably
overstates the underlying pace of monetary expansion thanks to financial market
upheavals, the underlying rate of money and credit growth remains strong.
Chart 2

Add in better-than-expected GDP growth in Q1 - up 0.8% on the quarter and
2.2% on the year - and the case for a July rate hike looks clear. Except, of
course, that forward-looking data point to much slower growth for the 'zone
as a whole in Q2, while the outlook for some countries is downright gloomy.
Retail sales across the 15 'zone countries fell 0.6% m-o-m and 2.9% y-o-y
in April (-0.9% and -2.3%, respectively, in March) as increasingly-expensive
oil and food hit consumers' purchasing power. The European Commission's economic
sentiment survey for May showed consumer confidence hit its lowest level since
September 2005 although overall sentiment did at least stabilize and inflation
expectations continue to hover around the same level as last summer.
Chart 3

Euro-zone services PMI slipped closer to contraction in May, coming in at
50.6 from 52.0 in April, and took a particularly sharp hit in France, while
Italy saw services PMI contract for the third straight month and Spain for
the fifth. Industrial new orders for the Euro-zone were much weaker than expected
in March, shrinking 1.0% on the month and 2.5% on the year. And, today came
the news that manufacturing orders in powerhouse Germany slipped 1.8% on the
month in April as capital goods orders from other Euro-zone states dropped
9.0% - a reflection perhaps of rapid cooling in the likes of Spain and Ireland.
So, what are the odds of a July rate hike? The ECB's mandate is to keep inflation "below
but close to 2%" in the medium term. That qualifier allows some wriggle-room
- the Council can say that current conditions are temporary and prices will
come back toward target in the "medium-term" and can define that however it
sees fit. For now, our hunch is that the Council will continue to talk tough
but the consensus to stand pat will prevail. As always, though, watch the data.
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