|

European Central Bank: Hawkish bias sustained with one more hike – ING

ING’s Michiel Tukker and Benjamin Schroeder argue that reduced Oil sensitivity in rates and lingering uncertainty should prevent a strong dovish turn from the ECB. They expect the narrative of at least one more hike to be retained for risk management, with Christine Lagarde highlighting Middle East risks and the need to assess shocks before committing to policy changes.

Uncertainty keeps tightening narrative alive

"At the same time, we have to acknowledge that the sensitivity of rates to oil will likely be more muted going forward."

"However, we don’t expect a strong dovish turn from central banks either."

"Some ECB officials, such as Mārtiņš Kazāks, may voice more openly that there is now more room for a wait-and-see stance, effectively diminishing the odds of a hike in July."

"But we don't think that the narrative of at least one more hike will be abandoned, if only to keep it for risk management purposes."

"Seen through this lens and amid still-high uncertainty, keeping a somewhat hawkish bias makes sense."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD flirts with two-week tops around 1.3270

GBP/USD makes a U-turn and adds to Monday’s uptick, advancing to the area of two-week highs near 1.3270 on Tuesday. Meanwhile, Cable’s better tone follows a loss of upside traction in the Greenback, always amid the sharp rally in USD/JPY.

EUR/USD stays offered, flirts with 1.1400

EUR/USD manages to reverse the early drop and now trades with marginal gains near 1.1420 on Tuesday. The pair’s recovery comes in response to some loss of momentum in the US Dollar.

Gold keeps the positive mood above $4,000

Following multi-month lows near $3,950, Gold now manages to regain some composure and reclaim the area beyond the key $4,000 yardstick per troy ounce on Wednesday. Still, any meaningful recovery appears limited as a broadly firmer US Dollar and rising US Treasury yields weigh on the yellow metal.

Ripple defends critical support, Stellar extends recovery

Ripple (XRP) trades around the key $1.00 psychological level, consolidating as the token awaits its next directional catalyst. Stellar (XLM) extends its recovery above $0.178 after posting modest gains at the start of this week.

Why a hawkish Bank of Japan could trigger the next Bitcoin sell-off

The Japanese Yen hits a 40-year low of 162.00 against the US Dollar, raising concerns about intervention or additional rate hikes by the Bank of Japan. BoJ may sell US Treasuries to buy back Yen, potentially pushing US bond yields higher and making Bitcoin less attractive to investors.

Kevin Warsh isn't expected to say much in Sintra: That's exactly why markets will listen

Financial markets could find an important catalyst in the enchanting, fairytale-like landscape of Sintra this week. The ECB Forum will, as it does every year, gather the crème de la crème of central banks. The new boss at the Fed, who has clearly said that the Fed should stop explaining everything, will need to talk – and traders should listen.