All Eyes On Draghi And Yellen On Thursday

 | Dec 03, 2015 07:03AM ET

All eyes are on the European Central Bank on Thursday as it prepares to announce its latest policy response to the ongoing depressed levels of inflation that have left the central bank well below its target of below but close to 2%.

It’s quite rare that the market is so united in its belief that a major central bank will announce further monetary easing but ECB President Mario Draghi has made it perfectly clear that further stimulus measures are being drawn up in preparation for this meeting. The result is that the question today is not whether the ECB will ease, but how far it will go.

The problem the ECB may now face is that the need for stimulus has been so talked up that only something extremely bold will meet market expectations. Fortunately, under Draghi, the ECB does have history of exceeding market expectations when it comes to monetary stimulus and I expect the same to happen again today.

A combination of a cut to the deposit rate and an expansion of the central banks quantitative easing program may be necessary to meet market expectations today and in reality, this would be the sensible option. Especially if the market is correct in assuming that the range of assets available to the ECB for purchases is shrinking. A cut to the deposit rate could open up the number of available assets that would otherwise not be eligible because rates are currently below the deposit rate.

With that in mind, I think we could see the ECB reduce the deposit rate by 15-20 basis points and increase its asset purchases by €15-20 billion. That would more than satisfy the markets and could drive the euro and yields on eurozone debt even lower, despite both already trading at very low levels in anticipation of more easing.

To add to what is already likely to be very volatile markets, we’ll also hear from Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen today as she testifies on monetary policy before the Joint Economic Committee. As the ECB prepares to announce more stimulus, the Federal Reserve is planning to begin its first tightening cycle in almost a decade, with markets now pricing in a 75% chance of a hike in a couple of weeks.