Rates Spark: Your Timely Inflation Reminder

 | Mar 30, 2023 06:01AM ET

While the Fed and Bank of England have provided hints that they are near the end of their hiking cycles, the European Central Bank's policy stance remains too easy for comfort in light of still-hot inflation. Hawks may reassert their posture with upcoming inflation data, and render end-of-cycle curve dynamics premature for EUR ratesh2 ECB's stance likely too easy for comfort/h2

Expectations of further ECB policy tightening are still under the spell of this month’s banking turmoil. Only cautiously are markets baking rate hikes back into curves. The ECB terminal rate is now seen at 3.37%. Compare that to early March when it was around 4.1%. This implies the market is currently looking at most for another 50bp of tightening from the ECB. Of course, there is still a chance that the turmoil will have a more lasting impact as banks' appetite for risk is diminished and credit conditions are tightened. This scenario has also seeped into inflation expectations - the 5y5y forward inflation swap is at 2.4%, just ahead of the turmoil it was on a march towards 2.6%.

Real rates look hardly restrictive given the ECB still has an acute inflation problem

One way to gauge a central bank’s overall policy stance in this context is to look at real rates. Especially the shorter to intermediate real rates out to 5y are now closer to the bottom of this year’s ranges. That looks hardly restrictive when keeping in mind that the ECB still has an acute inflation problem at hand. If the consensus is right, tomorrow’s core inflation print will rise to another record of 5.7%.

Some dovish-leaning ECB officials have argued recently that the ECB targets headline inflation, and that is indeed moving in the right direction in big steps. But we would also refer to Chief Economist Lane, who pointed out at the beginning of March that underlying inflation gives “an estimate of where headline inflation will settle in the medium term after temporary factors have vanished”.

  • A headache for the ECB: short real EUR rates have eased to the bottom of this year's range