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Recent data releases and comments from European Central Bank policymakers
confirm the view that the ECB will hike the refi rate 25 basis points next
week, to 2.50%. Although the Euro-zone's Q4 GDP data was a little rocky, the
growth outlook for 2006 remains relatively upbeat. More to the point, the ECB
continues to focus on the need to counter inflationary pressure from high and
volatile energy prices and from fast credit growth. After easing somewhat in
the final months of 2005, the annual increases in both headline CPI and in
M2 are back on an upward trajectory.

As expected, the Euro-zone economy hit a bit of a rough patch in the final
months of 2005, with Q4 GDP rising just 0.3% on the quarter, down from 0.6%
in Q3. In Germany, healthy exports could not counter still-weak consumer demand,
leaving GDP in that country flat, after 0.6% growth in Q3. In France, the second-largest
Euro-zone economy, overall GDP managed 0.2% quarterly growth, but this was
down from 0.7% in Q3. However, data for the first weeks of this year are looking
more healthy. As we noted last month, business sentiment is picking up strongly
in Germany, and both business and consumer morale has picked up in France and
in Italy so far this year.

More telling for the Euro-zone outlook is what has been happening with the
Belgian business confidence index - a leading indicator for the Euro-zone as
a whole thanks to Belgium's strong trade ties with its neighbors. The index
has climbed fairly steadily since Q2 2005, and jumped to +1.5 in February,
its highest point in 19 months and up from -2.9 in January.
Meanwhile, ECB Governing Council members have been reiterating that their
focus is on medium-term prospects for price stability, that economic growth
should pick up, and that inflation risks remain high. Trichet told the European
Parliament on Monday that markets are "perfectly sensible" to price in a quarter
point rise in the refi rate on March 2. For all of the reasons mentioned above,
it seems safe to assume that two more hikes will be forthcoming this year.
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Victoria Marklew
The Northern Trust Company
Economic Research Department
"The economics of what is, rather than what you might like it to be."
50 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60675
The opinions expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessarily
represent the views of The Northern Trust Company. The Northern Trust Company
does not warrant the accuracy or completeness of information contained herein,
such information is subject to change and is not intended to influence your
investment decisions.
Copyright © 2005-2008 The Northern Trust Company
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