(Reuters) - The European Central Bank is set to
hold fire on rates on Thursday as it waits for earlier stimulus measures to
gain traction, while keeping an eye on emerging risks from the conflict in
Ukraine.
The ECB cut interest rates to record lows in
June, became the first major central bank to charge banks for holding their
deposits overnight and launched a new ultra-cheap, four-year loan program,
dubbed TLTROs, to be rolled out later this year."
After the fireworks in June, it is not the time to take fresh
measures because the ECB wants to wait and see how things develop," said
Reinhard Cluse, economist at UBS. "The ECB wants to keep its powder
dry." None of the 64 economists in a Reuters polled expect any change to
the refinancing or deposit rates when the Governing Council meets on Thursday.
ECB
President Mario Draghi is likely to put more emphasis on the geopolitical risks
to the euro zone growth outlook after the European Union stepped up sanctions
against Russia for its role in Ukraine's political crisis, which has already
hit confidence.
Although
all but two of 36 economists in a separate poll said there was a low risk of
any negative impact on the euro zone economy from the U.S. and EU sanctions on
Russia, they come at a time when key countries are struggling to return to
growth.Italy, the euro zone's third largest economy, slipped back into
recession in the second quarter. Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has led calls to
move from austerity to looser EU budget rules, but has been rebuffed by
Germany, Europe's economic powerhouse, and some others.
In
France, the region's second biggest economy which is also struggling, President
Francois Hollande said the ECB and Germany must do more to boost growth and fight
a "real deflationary risk" in Europe.
Against
the backdrop of this debate, Draghi held talks with incoming European
Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker on Wednesday.
"DONE
WITH EASING"
Euro
zone annual inflation hit 0.4 percent in July, the lowest since October 2009,
though much was down to a sharp fall in volatile energy prices. UBS sees
inflation picking up slowly from here, reaching 0.8 percent toward the end of
the year.
Low
price pressures in the euro zone are also a result of reforms in some countries
to regain competitiveness that include wage cuts and restrained government
spending, which the ECB does not want to undermine.
The
central bank has also taken heart from looser bank lending standards,
indications of a pick-up in credit demand going forward and a weaker euro
exchange rate <EUR=>, which hit a nine-month low against the dollar on
Wednesday.
If,
however, inflation remains stuck at low levels for too long and if inflation
expectations start to deteriorate, the ECB says it stands ready to act,
possibly with large-scale asset purchases, which are also known as quantitative
easing.
"President
Draghi is likely to reiterate the ECB's dovish stance, leaving forward guidance
unchanged with the option to do more in the future (including QE)," said Frederik
Ducrozet, senior economist at Credit Agricole CIB.
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