ECB hawks fail to move the needle
The most striking recent example of markets paying more attention to economic data than to central bank commentary is the failure of European Central Bank hawks to cause much of a re-pricing higher in policy rates expectations. Among others, Martins Kazaks tried to dispel the impression that rate hikes will stop in July, which is currently where the Estr swap curve puts the most likely end point of this hiking cycle. We think current market pricing of just under two more 25bp hikes is realistic, with our own call is for this cycle to end with just one additional hike in June.
There may well be a lag between Fed and ECB cuts, but no major policy divergence
To be fair, the most likely target of central bankers is the impression that the ECB will soon follow in the Fed’s footsteps and cut rates. For instance, Isabel Schnabel judged that rates cuts are "highliy unlikely for the foreseeable future". Similarly, Kazaks described this cycle in two phases: one where the terminal rate is reached, and one where rates are maintained at this level for as long as necessary. Markets and most ECB speakers seem to be in agreement about the former, give or take one hike, but the latter is harder to agree on. We side with the markets. There may well be a lag between Fed (we think as soon as the fourth quarter of 2023) and ECB (more likely around mid-2024) cuts, but no major policy divergence. The implication is that the inversion in 2024-25 Estr forwards should be more pronounced, in anticipation of cuts.
The truth is that, in the market’s psychology, the greater the conviction about a US ‘hard landing’, the more likely is Europe to be dragged into it. There is some logic to that reasoning. Investors can point to the weakness of recent data, for instance German factory orders and industrial production, as early evidence that Europe is not pulling ahead. More hawkishly-minded participants would, as Peter Kazimir another ECB official did, point out that inflation dynamics currently do not allow the bank to contemplate a pause. That mindset is likely shared by many of his colleagues, but the more aggressive the ECB is in hiking now, the more subsequent cuts the curve will price, and the more inverted Estr forwards will get.
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