Focus on staff projections, whether capturing the trade war and defense spending
Also focus on if policymakers continue to think that policy is still “restrictive”
At the balance, “restrictive” to probably stay for one more meeting
That means the policy statement can effectively remain unchanged
Expect Lagarde to emphasise that policy path will follow the data, not be constrained by neutral talk
A rate cut in April remains our baseline
ING
25 bps rate cut
The critical part is whether the ECB will drop the “restrictive” label from its official stance
A complete drop would be too hawkish
So, there might just be some slight modification i.e. “less restrictive” or “hardly restrictive anymore”
Societe Generale
25 bps rate cut
Reference to “restrictive” should remain
That would suggest another rate cut at the next meeting in April
That is in line with our call but we doubt that the data is sufficiently clear yet to
send that message
After the April rate cut, ECB will be in a better position to reassess medium-term outlook and risks
That could see the ECB possibly shift to quarterly rate assessments
Barclays
25 bps rate cut
Expect the ECB to remain non-committal and data-dependent
April meeting is live and we forecast another rate cut
Expect Lagarde to express similar views to January press conference as outlook is little changed
We anticipate consecutive 25 bps cuts until June, before proceeding with 25 bps cuts in September and December for a terminal deposit rate of 1.50%
But Germany’s fiscal reform could give the ECB a reason to reach a slightly higher
terminal rate than we currently expect; though it doesn’t change the terminal rate forecast itself
CIBC
25 bps rate cut
Growth projections likely to be downgraded in the coming year
The risk is that the ECB pauses in April or June
Guidance around timing and rate path to come will be the focal points this meeting
Goldman Sachs
25 bps rate cut
A softening of
the language around “restrictive” is most likely
ECB might prefer to say that policy remains “somewhat restrictive”
We are looking for a small downgrade to growth, broadly unchanged core inflation
ECB to o reiterate that growth risks are to the downside and the disinflation process
is well on track
A pause in April is “possible if disinflation stalls or if activity data surprises notably to the upside”
We continue to think that rate cuts in both April and June are likely
That will be followed by one additional cut in July for a terminal rate of 1.75%
This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.
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