Will the ECB react to the euro’s recent strength? Analysts asses

The euro’s recent surge has brought renewed attention to the European Central Bank, though economists argue it is unlikely to prompt any near-term policy action.

Last week, the single currency climbed to $1.20 against the U.S. dollar for the first time since mid-2021, marking an unusually swift move by historical standards. According to Capital Economics, the euro has strengthened by a similar scale over a 10-day period only a few times in the past decade, while its trade-weighted exchange rate has reached a record high.

Even so, analysts expect the inflationary impact across the euro zone to remain modest. Capital Economics cited ECB sensitivity analysis showing that if the euro stabilizes at current levels, headline inflation next year would be roughly 0.1 percentage points lower than projected in the ECB’s December forecasts.

While this slightly increases downside risks to inflation, the brokerage said it falls far short of the threshold that would justify foreign-exchange intervention on price-stability grounds.

The ECB is likely to address the euro’s strength at its meeting next week, but concrete action appears improbable. Although the central bank has the authority to intervene in currency markets to prevent disorderly moves that could threaten price stability, Capital Economics noted that the euro would need to rise much further before such measures were considered. Even then, intervention through dollar purchases is viewed as highly unlikely.

Historically, the ECB has stepped into currency markets only twice—once in late 2000 and again in March 2011—both times to support, rather than weaken, the euro. Those interventions were coordinated with other major central banks. Capital Economics added that a coordinated effort to push the euro lower now looks extremely unlikely, particularly given the U.S. administration’s preference for a weaker dollar.

ECB officials have so far played down the recent appreciation. Vice President Luis de Guindos has previously described levels above $1.20 as “complicated,” while also calling the level itself “perfectly acceptable.” Meanwhile, Austria’s central bank governor has characterized the latest rise as “modest.”

Capital Economics expects ECB President Christine Lagarde to reiterate that policymakers are closely monitoring exchange-rate developments, but not to actively try to talk the currency down.

Although intervention is unlikely in the near term, prolonged euro strength could influence policy over time. Capital Economics said ECB analysis suggests that if the euro were to appreciate gradually to between $1.25 and $1.30 over the next three years, headline inflation in 2028 would be about 0.3 percentage points lower.

Under such conditions, policymakers would be more inclined to respond through stronger verbal guidance and lower interest rates rather than direct currency market intervention.

For now, economists say the euro’s rise largely reflects U.S. dollar weakness rather than stronger euro zone fundamentals, reducing the need for an immediate response. As a result, the ECB is expected to remain on the sidelines unless the appreciation becomes substantially larger and more persistent, according to Capital Economics.

Sources: Investing

Comments

Leave a comment