Will The ECB Crush The Euro?

 | Mar 06, 2019 03:53PM ET

h2 Daily FX Market Roundup March 7, 2019h3 Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management./h3

Thursday’s European Central Bank monetary policy announcement is the biggest event of the week and it could be even more market-moving than Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report. Over the past year, ECB rate decisions have not been kind to the euro. In the last 15 months, EUR/USD fell after every policy meeting except for September 2018. History could be repeated as the central bank is seriously considering a new targeted long-term refinancing operation (TLTRO). This announcement could be made as quickly as Thursday because it is not a question of if, but a matter of when the loan facility will be renewed. In January, the ECB took the unusual step of lowering its risk assessment at a meeting without updated staff forecasts. Those economic projections will be released on Thursday and should be lowered to support the central bank’s grim outlook. While there have been some improvements in the Eurozone’s economy since then (see table below), growth slowed sharply at the end of last year and prices continue to fall. At 1.5%, Eurozone CPI is running far below the central bank’s target.

Based on the growth and inflation outlook alone, the ECB needs to be dovish. However the current TLTROs are due next June and when the maturity falls below a year, they are considered short term and subject to new regulations that will incentivize banks to pay back the loans sooner, therefore reducing the amount of cheap loans in the market. The ECB has already discussed a new TLTRO so the question is 4 fold:

  1. When will they commit to new TLTRO?
  2. What will be the maturity?
  3. Will it have a fixed or floating interest rate?
  4. Will there be limits?

The more clarity the ECB provides, the greater impact on the euro. If the ECB fails to commit to new loans this week – even if it does not include details – we could see EUR/USD squeeze to 1.14 fairly quickly. If it says a new TLTRO is coming and details will be provided in April, the euro should fall and then stabilize quickly because it is not exceeding bearish expectations. If it has the whole program hashed out and announces new loans with 3-to-4 year maturities, EUR/USD could test its November low of 1.1215.