ECB to scale back crisis measures despite tense outlook: analysts
The European Central Bank will not shirk from scaling back its crisis-fighting stimulus Thursday, analysts expect, even as trade tensions, emerging market woes and Italy bucking budget rules shade the economic outlook.
An actual rise in interest rates, at historic lows since 2016, remains a long way off for the Frankfurt-based institution, they predict.
But President Mario Draghi is unlikely to see risks to growth and inflation in the 19-nation single currency area as big enough to warrant slowing his exit from mass bond-buying.
So-called "quantitative easing" -- designed to pump cash through the financial system and into the real economy, powering growth and inflation -- is slated to fall from the present 30 billion to 15 billion euros ($17.4 billion) per month from October, before ending it in December.
"The auto pilot, turned on in June, should stay on" at Thursday's meeting, economist Carsten Brzeski of ING DiBa said.
Back then, Draghi proclaimed "confidence" in the outlook for growth and inflation, saying risks "broadly balanced" between positive and negative were not enough to knock off course the bank's pursuit of stable price growth close to but below 2.0 percent.
"The fundamental backdrop clearly speaks for the ECB exiting its ultra-loose monetary policies," UBS analysts commented, pointing to relatively steady growth in the eurozone and rising wages likely to stoke prices towards the target.
Nevertheless, "the balance of risks has become more unfavourable in recent months," the bankers added.
Draghi in the summer highlighted the danger of trade friction between the United States and China and the European Union.
With President Donald Trump now threatening to hit all imports of Chinese goods into America with tariffs, fears of a global economic slowdown triggered by protectionism have only grown.
Elsewhere, currency crises that have flared in major emerging economies Turkey and Argentina now risk undermining eurozone export partners like Germany and Spain.
And within the euro area, governments and financial markets fear Italian ministers will honour pricey electoral promises rather than shrinking Rome's tottering debt pile of 132 percent of annual gross domestic product -- more than twice the EU target.
Despite official reassurances, the so-called "yield spread" -- which measures the difference in perceived risk between Italian and ultra-safe German government bonds -- remains uncomfortably high.
Neither is macroeconomic data all rosy.
While headline inflation reached 2.0 percent last month, "core" inflation -- which rules out volatile items like food and energy prices -- notched up just 1.0 percent.
And unemployment across the euro area remains stubbornly high compared with other advanced economies, at 8.2 percent -- limiting upward pressure on salaries and, indirectly, prices.
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