Door to larger rate hike on 21 July remains open
As to the anti-fragmentation tool (or: transmission protection mechanism as it will be called according to the latest news reports), the minutes of the ECB June meeting don’t provide any new insights. It rather looks as if the ECB had a very muted discussion on this issue and must have been surprised by market movements after the press conference, which explains the hastily organised emergency meeting less than a week after the regular session.
As to the size of the first rate hike, the discussion in June has been more controversial. There seems to have been a group of ECB members favouring a rate hike by more than 25bp at the July meeting. There was broad agreement that risks to inflation remain to the upside, even though the ECB didn’t spot any second-round effects or wage-price spirals. Comments like “in view of the baseline inflation projection exceeding the ECB’s target at the relevant horizon, together with the large and persistent upside risks, it was suggested that the ECB needed to respond more strongly than implied by the market expectations” or “a number of members expressed an initial preference for keeping the door open for a larger hike at the July meeting” illustrate different views on the size of the first rate hike.
However, the majority view in Amsterdam still seemed to be that the first rate hike in eleven years had “to be prepared and explained carefully”. Judging from more recent comments, the ECB also seems to take some comfort from the Fed, which also hiked interest rates by ‘only’ 25bp at the start of the current hiking cycle. The June announcement that there could be larger rate hikes in September was apparently the compromise solution.
All of this means that our base case of the ECB hiking interest rates by 25bp in July and another 50bp in September remains in place. However, with the risk of a looming recession in the eurozone and a cooling US economy, some hawks might regret waiting for too long. Instead, they could still push for a rate hike of 50bp in July, trying to frontload the normalisation and also preempting any unwanted discussions in September on whether or not (larger) rate hikes are still justified.
The euro approaching parity vis-à-vis the US dollar could be another reason for the hawks to push for a surprise. In any case, remember that it only needed one article in the Wall Street Journal a few days ahead of the last Fed meeting to quickly change market expectations from a 50bp rate hike to a 75bp one. We shouldn’t rule out that Christine Lagarde could still ask Jerome Powell for some communication advice.
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