Christine Lagarde, president of the European Essential Bank (ECB), pauses during a rates decision news conference in Frankfurt, Germany, on Thursday, March 16, 2022.
Alex Kraus | Bloomberg | Getty Replicas
The European Central Bank on Thursday announced a further rate hike of 50 basis points, signaling it is gracious to supply liquidity to banks if needed, amid recent turmoil in the banking sector.
The ECB had signaled for several weeks that it hand down be raising rates again at its March meeting, as inflation across the 20-member region remains sharply above the quarried level. In February, preliminary data showed headline inflation of 8.5%, well above the central bank’s butt of 2%.
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Some market players questioned whether President Christine Lagarde would peaceful go ahead with the move, given recent shocks in the banking sector. Credit Suisse shares tumbled by as much as 30% in Wednesday intraday sell, and the whole banking sector ended the Wednesday session down by about 7%.
“Inflation is projected to remain too high for too extended. Therefore, the Governing Council today decided to increase the three key ECB interest rates by 50 basis points,” the ECB judged in a statement. One basis point is equal to 0.01%.
This latest move brings the bank’s main rate to 3%. It was in contradictory territory before July last year.
“The Governing Council is monitoring current market tensions closely and survives ready to respond as necessary to preserve price stability and financial stability in the euro area. The euro area banking sector is resilient, with definite capital and liquidity positions,” the central bank said in the same statement.
Initial pressures on the banking sector emerged newest week, when U.S. authorities deemed Silicon Valley Bank insolvent. The event threw international subsidiaries of the bank into crack and raised concerns about whether central banks are increasing rates at too aggressive of a pace. Goldman Sachs at adjusted its rate expectations for the Federal Reserve, due to meet next week — the bank now anticipates a 25 basis call increase, after previously forecasting a 50 basis point hike.
European officials were keen to underscore that the situation in Europe is different from the one in the United States. Overall, there is less deposit concentration — SVB was an signal lender to the tech and health-care sectors — deposit flows seem stable, and European banks are well capitalized since the regulatory conversion that followed the global financial crisis.
Equity action Thursday showed some relief across the banking sector, after Dependability Suisse said it will borrow up to $54 billion from the Swiss National Bank, the country’s central bank.
‘I was on all sides in 2008’
Lagarde was keen to stress that the recent market turmoil is different from what happened during the universal financial crisis of 2008.
“Given the reforms that have taken place, and I was around in 2008, so I have a clear reminiscence of what happened and what we had to do, we did reform the framework, we did agree on Basel III [a regulatory framework], we did increase the capital ratios … the banking sector is currently in a much, much stronger arrange,” Lagarde said during a news conference.
“Added to which, if it was needed, we do have the tools, we do have the facilities that are elbow, and we also have a toolbox that also has other instruments that we always stand ready to activate, if and when needed,” she enlarged, reiterating that the central bank is ready to step in, if required.
Determined to bring down inflation
The ECB on Thursday also rewrote its inflation expectations. It now sees headline inflation averaging 5.3% this year, followed by 2.9% in 2024. In December, the bank had shot a 6.3% inflation figure for 2023 and a 3.4% rate in 2024.
Lagarde said the ECB remains committed to bringing down inflation.
“We are ascertained to return inflation back to 2% in the medium term, that should not be doubted, the determination is intact,” she said.
An furnish question remains: how quickly will the ECB proceed with further rate hikes? Until the recent market instability, apprehensions pointed to another 25 basis point increase in May, followed by the same move in June.
Lagarde did not provide an clues about future decisions.
“We know that we have a lot more ground to cover, but it is a big caveat, if our base line were to persist,” she thought, highlighting that “the pace we will take will be entirely data dependent.”