Let’s dive straight into it.
Deutsche Bank
- 25 bps rate cut
- Focus on staff projections, whether capturing the trade war and defense spending
- Also focus on if policymakers continue to think that policy is still “restrictive”
- At the balance, “restrictive” to probably stay for one more meeting
- That means the policy statement can effectively remain unchanged
- Expect Lagarde to emphasise that policy path will follow the data, not be constrained by neutral talk
- A rate cut in April remains our baseline
ING
- 25 bps rate cut
- The critical part is whether the ECB will drop the “restrictive” label from its official stance
- A complete drop would be too hawkish
- So, there might just be some slight modification i.e. “less restrictive” or “hardly restrictive anymore”
Societe Generale
- 25 bps rate cut
- Reference to “restrictive” should remain
- That would suggest another rate cut at the next meeting in April
- That is in line with our call but we doubt that the data is sufficiently clear yet to
send that message - After the April rate cut, ECB will be in a better position to reassess medium-term outlook and risks
- That could see the ECB possibly shift to quarterly rate assessments
Barclays
- 25 bps rate cut
- Expect the ECB to remain non-committal and data-dependent
- April meeting is live and we forecast another rate cut
- Expect Lagarde to express similar views to January press conference as outlook is little changed
- We anticipate consecutive 25 bps cuts until June, before proceeding with 25 bps cuts in September and December for a terminal deposit rate of 1.50%
- But Germany’s fiscal reform could give the ECB a reason to reach a slightly higher
terminal rate than we currently expect; though it doesn’t change the terminal rate forecast itself
CIBC
- 25 bps rate cut
- Growth projections likely to be downgraded in the coming year
- The risk is that the ECB pauses in April or June
- Guidance around timing and rate path to come will be the focal points this meeting
Goldman Sachs
- 25 bps rate cut
- A softening of
the language around “restrictive” is most likely - ECB might prefer to say that policy remains “somewhat restrictive”
- We are looking for a small downgrade to growth, broadly unchanged core inflation
- ECB to o reiterate that growth risks are to the downside and the disinflation process
is well on track - A pause in April is “possible if disinflation stalls or if activity data surprises notably to the upside”
- We continue to think that rate cuts in both April and June are likely
- That will be followed by one additional cut in July for a terminal rate of 1.75%
This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.
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