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As with December's rate hike, the European Central Bank had flagged today's
25 basis point increase in the refi rate so clearly that it was pretty much
a done deal. The big question going into today's meeting was: "how hawkish
will the bank and its governor sound after the fact?" The answer: "quite a
lot."
The word "vigilant" disappeared from the post-decision statement, and Governor
Trichet went out of his way to avoid use of the word in his subsequent Q&A
session. So we can deduce that a rate hike currently is not in the cards for
the April 6 meeting. However, rates clearly are headed upward.
Trichet noted that the ECB is "very much in the same state of mind as after
the December decision" and reiterated his recent comments that "the markets
understand what is driving our policy." I.E., market expectations of another
rate hike at the June 8 meeting, and of a 3.0% refi rate by year's end, seem
about right.
However, the language used today was distinctly less nuanced than after the
rate hike on December 1. For one thing, there is more confidence about the
growth outlook for the Eurozone. Trichet pointed out that recent indices and
survey information suggest that economic activity is "improving." And, the
bank's growth and inflation forecasts have nudged upward. The mid-point forecast
for the Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices going into 2007 has been revised
to 2.2%, not far off the bank's "below but close to 2.0%" target, but up from
the 2.1% forecast given in December.
The ECB and the governor reiterated that risks to price stability remain to
the upside. Yesterday's inflation data for the Euro-zone could be seen as a
reason to ease off the monetary brakes - the flash estimate for February eased
to 2.3% from 2.4% in January.

But, it is clear that the ECB is less concerned with the headline inflation
numbers than with other data. The ECB statement noted "overall strong monetary
and credit growth in an environment of ample liquidity in the euro area," while
Trichet spoke of the recent "robust" rate of growth in M3 and of strong growth
in credit to the private sector in recent months. Earlier this week came the
news that both of these had picked up again in January. At 7.6% the rate of
M3 growth is still well above the 4.5% that the ECB says is consistent with
medium-term price stability.

Employment data is still disappointing in the major Euro-zone markets, and
still-high rates of unemployment can weigh on consumer sentiment, but overall
the labor market is a lagging indicator of economic recovery. Besides, sentiment
indicators are looking up, especially in previously-glum Germany. The Euro-zone's
overall economic sentiment index for February, released yesterday, hit a five-year
high with consumers, industry, and the retail sector all feeling more optimistic.

Today we learned that German retail sales climbed a much-better-than-expected
2.7% on the month in real terms in January. Machinery and plant orders soared
25% from January 2005 levels, with domestic demand up 27% and foreign 24% higher.
Similarly, February's Eurozone PMI climbed to its highest level in 19 months,
thanks to surging output and new orders, particularly in Germany and (surprisingly)
in Italy.
With Germany apparently at the start of a broad-based recovery and liquidity
still ample across the 'zone, another 25bp rate hike is probable on June 8
- and possibly as early as May 4. Upcoming Euro-zone data to watch will be
February HCIP on March 16; February M3 data on March 28; and the next round
of sentiment indicators on March 31. German data to watch include the ZEW investor
sentiment indicator for March on the 14th, and particularly the Ifo business
sentiment indicator on the 28th.
If most of these indicators continue to support the recovery story, market
expectations of a May-June rate hike will firm up and the euro will breach
$1.20 this month.
There is, of course, a wild card in all this that has yet to make its presence
felt in the data series, the sentiment indicators, or the analysts' projections
- bird flu. So far, the discovery of the aggressive H5N1 virus in various European
countries has only affected consumption of chickens in a few markets, principally
France and Germany. However, the bans now being imposed on poultry exports
from France will eventually have a ripple effect on the wider economy. More
to the point, once the wild birds begin their spring migrations from nowaffected
regions in Africa back to the European mainland, more reports of dead swans
could seriously rattle consumers. Such exogenous factors are the bane of forecasters
everywhere.
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