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PT Solid Gold Berjangka | Lagarde Says ECB Shouldn’t Lower Its Guard as Inflation Tumbles

01:52 15 December in Fiscal & Monetary, PT SGB, SOLID GOLD BERJANGKA | SOLID GROUP
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ECB Lagarde Christine Lagarde Solid Group Solid Gold Berjangka PT SGB SG Berjangka

Solid Gold Berjangka | European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said policymakers mustn’t get complacent following the recent slump in inflation toward 2% — signaling that investor bets on imminent interest-rate reductions may be premature.

“We should absolutely not lower our guard,” she told reporters Thursday in Frankfurt after the ECB left borrowing costs unchanged for a second meeting. “We did not discuss rate cuts at all.”

Lagarde cited enduring upside risks to consumer prices that include corporate profitability and ongoing negotiations over wages. On the pressure around salaries, she said that “when we look at the data that we have now, it is not declining.”

The ECB’s rate announcement mirrored decisions during the past day by the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England. But while Fed Chair Jerome Powell supercharged global wagers on loosening by saying discussions on the topic have begun, Lagarde joined the BOE in offering pushback.

Her comments came despite new quarterly projections showing a weaker economy softening the outlook for consumer prices during next year following a temporary uptick in the months ahead.

The ECB dropped wording that inflation is “expected to remain too high for too long,” saying instead that it will “decline gradually over the course of next year.”

The euro held steady against the US dollar, while traders pulled back bets on ECB rate cuts next year. They now see 150 basis points of easing compared with about 160 basis points earlier in the session.

Elsewhere, the spread between Italian and German 10-year yields dropped below 170 basis points after a less-radical-than-anticipated phase out of the ECB’s €1.7 trillion ($1.8 trillion) pandemic bond-buying program was unveiled.

The ECB said it intends to reduce PEPP reinvestments by €7.5 billion a month on average over the second half of 2024, before discontinuing them altogether as planned at year-end.

Behind the enthusiasm for monetary-easing wagers is a steeper-than-expected plunge in inflation, to 2.4% in November. The ECB’s latest forecasts offered further grounds for optimism, showing price gains at 2.7% next year and 2.1% in 2025. In 2026, they’re seen at 1.9%.

Analysts reckon the economy is suffering its first recession since Covid struck — albeit a far milder downturn. The ECB now sees gross domestic product only advancing by 0.6% this year and 0.8% next.

Source : Bloomberg