Tag Archives: Central Bank

Webcast of the press conference 4 September 2014

Press conference following the meeting of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank on 4 September 2014 at its premises in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, starting at 2:30 p.m. CET:

  • Introductory statement by Mario Draghi, President of the ECB.
  • Question and answer session. Registered journalists pose questions to Mario Draghi, President of the ECB, and to Vítor Constâncio, Vice-President of the ECB.

https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/tvservices/webcast/html/webcast_140904.en.html

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THINGS TO LOOK OUT FOR AT THURSDAY’S ECB MEETING

Mario Draghi has set the bar high for the European Central Bank’s next meeting Thursday.

The bank president’s warning about reduced inflation expectations, made in a speech on Aug. 22, fanned hopes that the ECB may announce additional stimulus measures to boost economic growth and prices.

A report Friday showing annual eurozone inflation weakened to 0.3% in August, well below the ECB’s 2% target, raised fears that Europe is sliding toward deflation.

But Mr. Draghi faces some complicated choices. Interest rates are at record lows. Quantitative easing is highly controversial. And new four-year loans to banks are due this month, meaning there is already stimulus in the pipeline.

Here are five things to watch on Thursday.

http://blogs.wsj.com/briefly/2014/09/02/5-things-to-look-out-for-at-thursdays-ecb-meeting/

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Reminder :: Quantitative easing alone will not do the trick

Very low inflation poses a mounting threat to the economic stability of the eurozone. The rate of consumer price inflation has been below 1 per cent since October, and hence far below the European Central Bank’s (ECB) target of just below 2 per cent. This highlights the degree of weakness in the eurozone economy – and reinforces it – notwithstanding the optimism generated by a return to modest growth. And it further increases doubts over debt sustainability across the currency union: without a healthy dose of inflation, it is much harder for households, firms and governments to reduce their debt burdens.  To make things worse, in the most indebted countries, such as Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy, inflation is even lower than the eurozone average. In response, many observers argue that the ECB should employ unconventional tools like quantitative easing (QE) to boost inflation. The problem is that QE alone is unlikely to be effective without a significant change in the ECB’s approach to monetary policy. The ECB needs to manage people’s expectations about the future path of demand, income and inflation more forcefully if it is to generate a proper economic recovery across the Eurozone. 

 

See more at: http://www.cer.org.uk/insights/quantitative-easing-alone-will-not-do-trick#sthash.00rBSkSf.dpuf

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Markets will now most likely sit on their hands until Friday’s economic summit

The dollar is stronger today following the slightly hawkish stance of the FOMC Minutes, which hinted at the potential for an earlier-than-expected hike in interest rates. Nothing is likely to happen any time soon though, and equities liked that idea in continuing their positive trend, with the S+P regaining its all time high. Markets will now most likely sit on their hands until Friday’s economic summit at Jackson Hole, where both Janet Yellen and Mario Draghi will be speaking on Friday. Ahead of that, the main focus will be on today’s global manufacturing and services data, and the UK Retail Sales

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Jackson Hole Guide: Investors Seek Yellen Job-Market View

Here’s what to look for from the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s annual economic symposium in Jackson Hole,Wyoming, which runs Aug. 21-23.

— Yellen’s keynote: The highlight will be Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s speech Aug. 22 on labor markets at 10 a.m. New York time. She’ll probably reiterate the Fed’s view that there is plenty of room for improvement in the labor market, according to Dean Maki, chief U.S. economist at Barclays Plc in New York.

— In July, the Federal Open Market Committee changed the language of its policy statement to highlight “significant underutilization of labor resources” as a justification for continued easy-money policies, even though the unemployment rate has fallen faster than Fed officials had forecast. The Fed chief will probably “point to measures like the elevated number of workers that are employed part time for economic reasons as evidence” of continued slack, Maki said.

— Yellen “would like to move away from this being a market-moving policy speech and get it back to being more of an academic exercise,” said Michelle Girard, chief U.S. economist at RBS Securities Inc. in Stamford,Connecticut. “I don’t think that she will use this as a tool to signal anything in terms of the Fed’s thinking, or certainly any meaningful change in the Fed’s thinking.”

— Wage focus: Tepid growth in wages is one area Yellen could choose to explore in more detail if she wants to advance the conversation, said Ethan Harris, co-head of global economics research at Bank of America Corp. in New York.

Stagnant Wages

— Average hourly earnings rose 2 percent in July from the year before, matching the mean increase over the past five years and down from 3.1 percent in the year ended December 2007, Labor Department data showed in the latest employment report. Separately, the employment cost index, a measure of labor cost changes, advanced 2 percent in June from the previous year.

— “A more careful look at wages would be a good place for her to plow some new ground,” Harris said. “They are way too weak, no sign of improvement, and if you’re going to defend why the Fed is going so slowly here, that’s your exhibit A: slow wage growth.”

— Conference participants will be mostly academics and central bankers; economists from major Wall Street banks weren’t invited this year.

— Draghi’s outlook: European Central Bank President Mario Draghi will follow Yellen with the keynote luncheon address. Investors will be seeking further insights into how weak his 18-nation economy is and whether he’s more likely to deploy Fed-style quantitative easing that the ECB has resisted.

Europe Stalls

— The euro area unexpectedly stalled in the second quarter as its three biggest economies failed to grow, adding to the region’s deflation risks. Draghi already committed this month to intensifying the unprecedented stimulus he unveiled in June if the outlook deteriorates.

— Draghi’s challenge may be compounded if Yellen remains focused on boosting the U.S. labor market, according to Alberto Gallo, head of macro credit research at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in London. That’s because her bias toward continued stimulus will keep the dollar weak against the euro.

— Draghi “has tried to push down the euro and has so far won little ground against the dollar,” Gallo said. “The ECB is under even more pressure to do more.”

— Structural woes: Panel discussions on labor-market research presented at the conference may reveal “a growing awareness that underutilized labor resources may be a more permanent fixture,” rather than a cyclical shift, said Eric Green, global head of foreign exchange and rates at TD Securities USA LLC in New York.

‘Hawkish’ Tone

More here : http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-08-20/jackson-hole-guide-investors-seek-yellen-job-market-view.html

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FOMC not so important this month

The Federal Open Market Committee releases minutes from its last meeting on Wednesday afternoon, but Wall Street is already downplaying the event as a sideshow in comparison to an annual symposium on monetary policy in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, two days later.

“The FOMC minutes are telling us about what happened three weeks ago, and Jackson Hole, given its precedent for signaling meaningful policy shifts, has taken on this very elevated status; it gets that extra attention even if it is just an academic conference,” said Jeff Greenberg, senior economist at J.P. Morgan Private Bank.

While investors will parse Wednesday’s minutes for clues as to when the Fed will start hiking interest rates, “the real look ahead for any hints as to monetary policy is Jackson Hole,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at Wunderlich Securities.

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Is the Fed Behind the Curve?

Imagine Fed Governor Rip van Winkle started his nap at the beginning of 2007 and just woke up to find that inflation is close to the Fed’s objective and the unemployment rate is at its 30-year average. You could forgive him for expecting the federal funds rate to be close to its long-run norm of about 4%, and for his surprise upon learning that the funds rate is at 0.1% and Fed assets are five times where they were when his snooze began.

Is the Fed already behind the curve? Why do policymakers emphasize their expectation that rates will stay low “for a considerable time” beyond October (when asset purchases are expected to halt)? What risks are they seeking to balance?

The most common benchmark for monetary policy is the Taylor rule, which relates the central bank’s policy rate to a combination of deviations of inflation from its target and a measure of resource slack. The modified Taylor rule in the chart below shows that – even ignoring the Fed’s balance sheet expansion – the Fed’s interest rate policy is now unusually stimulative by the standard of the past three decades. [The blue line in the chart is based on the Fed’s preferred inflation measure, the price index of personal consumption expenditures, and the deviation of the unemployment rate from its equilibrium level as a measure of slack.]

U.S. Federal Funds Rate vs. Modified Taylor Rule, 1985–May 2014

Note: The modified Taylor rule shown is R = r + Inflation + 0.5x(Inflation – 2) – (Ut – U*), where: (1) R is the federal funds rate; (2) r is the equilibrium real interest rate (set to 1.75 in line with the midpoint of FOMC members’ projections for the federal funds rate and the inflation rate in the longer run); (3) inflation is measured by the annual percent change of the price index of personal consumption expenditures; (4) Ut is the unemployment rate; and (5) U* is the equilibrium unemployment rate (set to 5.35% in line with the midpoint of FOMC members’ projections for the longer run).

 

See more at: http://www.economonitor.com/blog/2014/07/is-the-fed-behind-the-curve/#sthash.dq1tBL9N.dpuf

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