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ECB: Another month of wait and see

Thu, Nov 8 2007, 15:12 GMT
by Niels-Henrik Bjørn

Danske Bank A/S


As expected the ECB’s Governing Council left key policy rates unchanged at the meeting today. At the following press conference President Trichet stuck to the fairly hawkish line from last month. Aside from this, Trichet appeared to tread water at today’s Q&A session, basically indicating that the Governing Council still holds a wait-and-see stance. Thus the overall conclusion is still that the Council needs more information before deciding on future policy – that is whether the upside risks to inflation need more tightening. The Council is therefore still at its second highest level of alert to raise rates (monitoring prices very closely).

 In detail the statement revealed little news. However, we noted three - what we would call minor - changes in the prepared statement:

 1. The Council stressed that the information becoming available since the last meeting fully confirms the upside risks to price stability. Last month the Council did not use the word fully.

 2. The Council also noted the divergence between hard and soft data. While confidence indicators have dropped recently, hard data have been fairly strong. In line with our view, the Council seems to doubt the signal from confidence indicators right now. Thus this is also a fairly hawkish point to note given that markets have probably fully focused on soft data and disregarded hard data.

 3. Finally, the Council believes that credit data should be interpreted with caution. Even though credit growth is still running strong, it may be due to many corporations adopting new loans to cope with the ramifications of the credit crisis, and due to households adopting new loans as well.

 Aside from that, we detected little news from Trichet. In particular Trichet avoided sending any new signals on the euro, and he did not sound overly stressed by the pick up in market inflation expectations. The outlook for ECB is fairly uncertain. We believe the -economic window- (economic growth and inflation) for further tightening will remain half-open over the coming 6 months but then gradually close. The “financial window- (money and credit market risk aversion, Fed policy and the euro) is, however, still closed and may remain so for some time. If calm returns to markets, and the economic outlook stabilises the ECB will tighten policy a little further. On balance we continue to expect 25bp tightening in March and June 2008.

Danske Bank  | Holmens Kanal 2-12, DK-1092 Copenhagen
http://www.danskebank.com/ | danskeresearch@danskebank.com

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