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ECB Set to Cut Again But Tensions Cloud Path Beyond
ECB Set to Cut Again But Tensions Cloud Path Beyond · Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- The European Central Bank is about to lower interest rates for the sixth time since June, though a volatile economic backdrop is sowing divisions over where to take borrowing costs from here.

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Analysts polled by Bloomberg almost unanimously predict a quarter-point decrease in the deposit rate, to 2.5%, on Thursday. Beyond that, opinions vary greatly: One sees no more reductions while others reckon the benchmark will go all the way to 1% in early 2026.

Such stark differences reflect fraying unity among officials themselves. While there’s been little major disagreement over the monetary loosening to date, views are diverging on whether inflation is in more danger of over- or undershooting, and how much support should be offered to the region’s misfiring economy.

Muddying the waters further are the implications of the US’s sudden decision to pull back military support for Ukraine and Europe, sparking a rush to rearm that will bring hundreds of billions of euros in spending across the region in the years ahead. European leaders are set to further discuss the issue at a summit Thursday in Brussels, with markets now favoring just two more ECB rate cuts this year.

Traders price 62 basis points of easing — including a quarter point reduction today — down from 65 basis points on Wednesday and 85 basis points last week.

“The decision this Thursday should be straightforward, but the discussions within the Governing Council are undoubtedly going to become more heated,” said Sonja Marten, head of research currencies and monetary policy at DZ Bank. “This may be the last ‘clear-cut’ decision from the ECB this year.”

The rate announcement is due at 2:15 p.m. in Frankfurt. President Christine Lagarde will host a press conference 30 minutes later.

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Interest rates

While policymakers including Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel have urged the ECB to begin discussing a pause in rate cuts — or halting them altogether — no one appears to object strongly to this week’s move.

Should it transpire, easing since June would reach 150 basis points — twice what the Bank of England has so far managed during its cutting cycle and also more than the Federal Reserve’s 100 basis points.

Discord at the ECB is intensifying in part over how much monetary policy is restraining the economy. Schnabel is “no longer sure whether it is still restrictive.” Greece’s Yannis Stournaras thinks “we are definitely still in restrictive territory.”