ECB Stuck Between Low Inflation And Monetary Easing Constraints

 | Jun 16, 2019 01:18AM ET

The European Central Bank (ECB) is struggling to achieve its inflation target of less than but close to 2%. It disappointed markets by only extending its “forward guidance” by 6 months, promising not to increase interest rates before the middle of 2020 at its meeting on the 6th of June. There was no change to the main refinancing rates, which remains at zero and the deposit rate, which remains at -0.4%.

The ECB is caught between the “rock” of low inflation and the “hard place” of the various complications and constraints that limit its ability to undertake further aggressive monetary easing.

Low euro area inflation is due to a combination of global headwinds hitting the economy and falling oil prices. Whereas, the ECB’s policy space is constrained by limits on its asset purchases and concerns about bank profitability.

The recent escalation of the trade war between the US and China has combined with softer US data to spook financial markets. By early June, the S&P 500 had fallen by 7% and the price of Brent crude oil by 18% from April 2019 peaks. In response to these global headwinds, markets have shifted to the price in at least two Fed interest rate cuts by the end of 2019.