ECB raises rates more than expected to fight off
runaway inflation
By Balazs
Koranyi and Francesco Canepa
All rates
rise by 50 basis points
Inflation
uncomfortably high and rising
ECB also
approves 'anti-fragmentation' tool called TPI
Press
conference at 1245 GMT
FRANKFURT,
July 21 (Reuters) - The European Central Bank raised interest rates by more
than expected on Thursday, confirming that concerns about runaway inflation now
trump growth considerations, even as the euro zone economy reels from the
impact of Russia's war in Ukraine.
The ECB
raised its benchmark deposit rate by 50 basis points to zero percent, breaking
its own guidance for a 25 basis point move as it joined global peers in jacking
up borrowing costs. It was the euro zone central bank's first rate hike for 11
years.
Ending an
eight-year experiment with negative interest rates, the ECB also increased its
main refinancing rate to 0.50% and promised further rate hikes possibly as soon
as its next meeting on Sept. 8.
"Further
normalisation of interest rates will be appropriate," the ECB said.
"The frontloading today of the exit from negative interest rates allows
the Governing Council to make a transition to a meeting-by-meeting approach to
interest rate decisions," the ECB said in a statement.
The ECB had
for weeks guided markets to expect a 25 basis point increase but sources close
to the discussion said 50 basis points was put in play shortly before the
meeting as indicators pointed to a further deterioration of the inflation
outlook.
With
inflation already approaching double-digit territory, it is now at risk of
getting entrenched above the ECB's 2% target and any gas shortage over the
coming winter is likely to push prices even higher, perpetuating rapid price
growth.
Economists
polled by Reuters had predicted a 25 basis point increase but most said the
bank should actually hike by 50 basis points, lifting its record-low minus 0.5%
deposit rate to zero. read more
The euro,
which fell to a two-decade low against the dollar earlier this month, firmed
around a half a percent on the ECB's decision.
The ECB
also agreed to provide extra help to the 19-country currency bloc's more
indebted nations, approving a new bond purchase scheme called Transmission
Protection Instrument, intended to cap the rise in their borrowing costs and
limit financial fragmentation.
"The
scale of TPI purchases depends on the severity of the risks facing policy
transmission," the ECB said in a statement. "The TPI will ensure that
the monetary policy stance is transmitted smoothly across all euro area
countries."
As ECB
rates rise, borrowing costs increase disproportionately for countries like
Italy, Spain or Portugal as investors demand a bigger premium to hold their
debt.
The ECB's
commitment on Thursday comes as a political crisis in Italy is already weighing
on markets following the resignation of Prime Minister Mario Draghi.
The yield
spread between Italian and German 10-year bonds briefly exceeded 240 basis
points on Thursday and was not far from the 250 basis point level that
triggered an emergency ECB policy meeting last month.
Markets now
turn to ECB President Christine Lagarde's 1245 GMT news conference.
The ECB's
50 basis point hike on Thursday still leaves it lagging its global peers,
particularly the U.S. Federal Reserve, which lifted rates by 75 basis points
last month and is likely to move by a similar margin in July.
But the
euro zone is more exposed to the war in Ukraine and a threatened cut off in gas
supplies from Russia could tip the bloc into recession, leaving policymakers
with a dilemma of balancing growth and inflation considerations.
Confidence
has already taken a hit from the war, and high raw materials prices are
depleting purchasing power.
Raising
borrowing costs in a downturn is controversial, however, and could magnify the
pain for businesses and households.
But the
ECB's ultimate mandate is controlling inflation, and rapid price growth for too
long could perpetuate the problem as firms automatically adjust prices.
Europe's
labour market is also increasingly tight, suggesting that pressure from wages
is also likely to keep price growth high.
Some
central banks, most particularly the Fed, have made clear they are willing to
crash growth to control inflation because the risk of a new "inflation
regime" setting in is too high.
And if a
recession is coming, the ECB needs to front-load rate hikes so that its
tightening cycle is finished sooner.

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