By Balazs Koranyi and Francesco Canepa
FRANKFURT (Reuters) – The European Central Bank raised interest rates by 25 basis points to 3.25% as expected on Thursday and signalled more tightening to come as it fights inflation, but slowed the pace of its moves as a peak in rates comes within sight.
The central bank for the 20 countries that share the euro has now lifted borrowing costs by a combined 375 basis points since last July, with this month’s smaller rise following an unprecedented series of 75 and 50 basis point increases.
The slight downshift came just a day after the U.S. Federal Reserve also raised its benchmark rate by a quarter of a percentage point, which it hinted could be the last in its own historic series of hikes.
“We are not pausing – that is very clear,” ECB President Christine Lagarde told a press conference. “We know that we have more ground to cover.”
She added that interest rates were not yet “sufficiently restrictive” to get inflation down to the ECB’s 2% target and made reference to future “policy decisions”, suggesting that more than one additional rate rise could be on the cards.
“We continue to expect the ECB to hike rates by 25 bps in June, bringing the deposit rate to a peak of 3.50%, with risks of a final 25 bps hike in July depending on future developments in the U.S. banking system,” Frederik Ducrozet at Pictet Wealth Management said.
Lagarde said there were still big upside risks to inflation, notably from recent wage deals and high corporate profit margins, and that financial conditions were still not sufficiently tight.
NOT FED DEPENDENT
She also dismissed the notion that the ECB would have to pause if its U.S. counterpart did so, saying the ECB was “not Fed-dependent”.
Markets which had bet on rates peaking at 3.75% by September pared back their expectations. Investors now see the terminal rate at around 3.65%, indicating that one more hike is fully priced in but that opinion is split on a second move.
The euro fell around 0.5% to $1.1003 after the ECB’s decision and European bond yields dropped. The German 10-year yield, the euro zone benchmark, fell as much as 7 basis points to a one-month low of 2.18%.
“In a nod to the hawks, the ECB hinted at ‘future decisions’ in the plural,” Holger Schmieding at Berenberg said. “This somewhat vague guidance supports the call that the ECB will likely lift rates again by 25 bps on 15 June and on 27 July, to a peak deposit rate of 3.75%.”
The slowdown in the pace of monetary policy tightening comes only days after euro zone banking data showed the biggest drop in demand for loans in over a decade.
This suggests that previous rate rises are being transmitted “forcefully” to the economy but with the usual lags, the ECB said, a comment economists took as a key justification for slowing the pace of hikes.
Further supporting the case for a smaller move, the euro zone economy barely grew last quarter, while banks were tightening access to credit, raising the risk that such a trend could morph into a credit crunch and drag further on growth.
Underlying inflation has also stopped rising – at least for the time being, and food inflation may have also peaked.
On Thursday, the ECB also said it would stop reinvesting cash from maturing debt in its 3.2 trillion euro ($3.5 trillion) Asset Purchase Programme from July.
But some policy hawks still worry that underlying price pressures are building, even if overall inflation has fallen sharply from last autumn’s double-digit readings.
Giving a nod to these worries, Lagarde said “significant upside risks” to inflation remained and that recent wage deals had added to these risks.
The euro zone’s labour market is especially tight as employment is at an all-time-high and the jobless rate at a record low, despite the near-recessionary environment.
Firms in the services sector especially have complained of labour shortages, suggesting that more wage pressures could come this summer.
“We think that today’s message is quite well in line with our forecast of two further 25 bp rate hikes, in June and July, respectively,” Nordea’s Jan von Gerich said.
($1 = 0.9062 euros)
(Editing by Catherine Evans)