ECB’s Lane Urges Attention To Euro Swings

 | Mar 13, 2018 09:52AM ET

The European Central Bank must keep its guard up against the risk of a sudden appreciation in the euro, according to Governing Council member Philip Lane:

“There’s no concern about the current level,” Lane, who heads Ireland’s central bank, said in an interview in Dublin. “But if it moves a lot within a short time interval then you have to think about the implications.”

The ECB has stepped up warnings against exchange-rate volatility in recent months as policy makers prepare the ground for ending their bond-buying program. The euro has gained almost 16 percent versus the dollar over the past year and while that’s partly due to the region’s economic expansion, a stronger currency also puts downward pressure on inflation and potentially saps the competitiveness of exporters.

The euro briefly spiked to the highest level since March 8 on Lane’s comments, before paring gains to trade little changed on the day at $1.2328 at 12:01 p.m. Frankfurt time.

Three years since starting the asset-purchase program, which is set to run until at least September and top 2.5 trillion euros ($3.1 trillion), the ECB remains well short of its inflation goal of just under 2 percent.