ECB Preview: Another High-Wire Act For Draghi As Eurozone Economy Stumbles

 | Mar 04, 2019 05:24AM ET

by Geoffrey Smith

The European Central Bank (ECB) faces a test of nerves this week as its policy-making council meets for the second time this year.

President Mario Draghi and his team are trying to exit a course of extraordinarily loose monetary policy, needed to keep the single currency project together over the last 10 years. But the ECB is now under pressure to do something to revive flagging growth.

Both the German and Italian economies—which account for over 40% of eurozone GDP—are stagnating. The weakness of the German export powerhouse, the region’s bright spot for most of the last decade, is a particular concern, given the fragility of other sources of growth. Ifo’s business climate index, a closely-watched measure of confidence and activity, hit its lowest level since 2014 in February.

“The ECB will have to balance between pre-emptive action, which could be perceived as panic, and a relaxed wait-and-see attitude, which could be perceived as complacency,” according to ING analyst Carsten Brzeski.

Arguably, there are enough glimmers of hope in recent developments to suggest that the worst risks to the economy may not materialize. First, the threat of a chaotic ‘no-deal’ Brexit—which has played a big role in the sharp drop in eurozone business confidence—has receded, as both of the U.K.’s major parties have shifted their stances to accommodate more centrist and business opinion.

Second, the risk of an escalation in the U.S.'s trade war with China is also abating, with the Wall Street Journal reporting at the weekend that the two sides are closing in on a deal that would result in lower bilateral tariffs and enhanced U.S. access to the Chinese market.

Even so, the minutes of the bank’s last meeting said some policymakers saw it as an “urgent” priority to prepare new operations.