Europe - ECB & BOE 01 (May 08 - Nov 11)

Re: European Central Bank

Postby HengHeng » Mon Jun 16, 2008 8:57 pm

well personally , i think sooner or later embargos would be set to force the oil producing countries to bend their arms.

Well free markets don't work in this scenario expecially when it is for an inelastic product.
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Re: European Central Bank

Postby kennynah » Tue Jun 17, 2008 6:34 pm

rather discounted into eur/usd already...when trichet suggested recently, which spiked eur/usd to almost 1.59

17 Jun 2008 09:38 GMT
UPDATE:EU Business:ECB Must Act In "Limited" Way On Inflation



BRUSSELS -(Dow Jones)- The European Central Bank should act in a "limited" way to balance the risks of inflation and slowing economic growth, BusinessEurope President Ernest-Antoine Seilliere said Tuesday.

He added that the ECB should act to ensure "stable" conditions in the euro zone.

The ECB is expected to hike rates to 4.25% next month to contain inflation, which was 3.7% last month, well above the bank's 2% target.

"The business community can understand that the ECB (must act) as needed," Seilliere said, noting that the businesses still don't favor interest rate hikes.

"(Business) is adapting to a euro that's stronger than it should be," he added.

BusinessEurope groups 39 business federations from 33 countries.
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Re: European Central Bank

Postby winston » Tue Jun 24, 2008 3:42 pm

Note especially the European Central Bank‘s strong hints that its benchmark rate will likely go up by 25 basis points next week from 4%, which has held for more than a year now.

This is therefore expected to maintain downward pressure on the US$ and correspondingly, upward pressure on commodities, including oil.

( Winston's comment: Even if it goes up by 25 basis point, would it continue to go up in the future ? Maybe the US $ may spike downwards but it should recover thereafter. If the US govt actually has anything up their sleeve, that would be the time for them to use it. Else, it is just talk that they want a strong US Dollar and they will not have any credibility left )
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Re: European Central Bank

Postby millionairemind » Tue Jun 24, 2008 4:31 pm

Just TOL... would there now be a USD carry trade?? borrow USD cheaply to buy EUROs?? :mrgreen:
"If a speculator is correct half of the time, he is hitting a good average. Even being right 3 or 4 times out of 10 should yield a person a fortune if he has the sense to cut his losses quickly on the ventures where he has been wrong" - Bernard Baruch

Disclaimer - The author may at times own some of the stocks mentioned in this forum. All discussions are NOT to be construed as buy/sell recommendations. Readers are advised to do their own research and analysis.
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Re: European Central Bank

Postby winston » Tue Jun 24, 2008 4:45 pm

Definitely. Borrow US$ and invest in anything else ..

But with the ongoing Global Credit Crunch, can one borrow money now ?
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Re: European Central Bank

Postby winston » Thu Jun 26, 2008 8:22 am

INTELLIGENCE: (EUR) Weber: ECB is in state of heightened alertness

(EUR) ECB's Weber says ECB is in state of heightened alertness, and financial markets should by now have understood our readiness to act.

Strong determination to secure a firm anchoring of medium and long-term inflation expectations in line with price stability.

Recent wage dynamics, elevated energy and food price pressure have increased the risk of prolonged intolerable high inflation. ECB would significantly increase market volatility if it gave the impression medium-term price stability was threatened.

The usual tools of central banks can't resolve causes of tensions on money markets.

Swiftre solution of money market tensions can only be achieved if banks are transparent.
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Re: European Central Bank

Postby winston » Thu Jun 26, 2008 8:25 am

26-06-2008 07:33:48

INTELLIGENCE: (EUR) Trichet: May decide to move by small amt in Jul


(EUR) ECB's Trichet says ECB could decide to move rates by small amount in July. Emphasizes that he did not say ECB envisaged a series of increases.

Sees risks of wage inflation spiral. Adds he is particularly concerned that current high inflation rates may become entrenched.

Says Q1 strong growth reflects temporary factors in part and it is more appropriate to see first two quarters of 2008 together. Sees downside risks to growth.
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Re: European Central Bank ECB

Postby kennynah » Sun Jun 29, 2008 6:36 pm

sometime next week, ECB will make a decision on ECB Rates... this may be a mover/shaker of US equities....watch out for it...
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Re: European Central Bank ECB

Postby winston » Mon Jun 30, 2008 5:50 pm

Trichet Backs Inflation Hawks, Risking Weaker Growth (Update1)
By Simon Kennedy

June 30 (Bloomberg) -- For all his talk of consensus, European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet is having to acknowledge he can't please all of the people all of the time.

A rare public division on his 21-member governing council is forcing Trichet to take sides, backing those who want to raise interest rates this week to curb inflation. Doing so may open an ever bigger rift by easing price pressures in Germany, Europe's biggest economy, at the expense of weaker neighbors.

``I don't remember such an explicit split at the ECB,'' says Jacques Cailloux, chief euro-area economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in London. ``By lifting rates, the ECB will take unprecedented risks with growth.''

Expansion in the 15-nation euro area is already deteriorating as costlier fuel, food and credit undermine household and company spending, and a strong euro and slowing global demand sap exports. As rates rise, the pain will be spread unevenly. The economies of Germany and France are holding up, while Portugal's is contracting, and growth in Ireland and Spain may be the slowest in 15 years.

``Monetary policy could exacerbate this divergence if the ECB begins a sizable rate-hike cycle,'' says Laurent Bilke, an economist at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in London who previously worked at the ECB.

Quarter-Point Increase

Trichet surprised investors and economists on June 5 when he said there was ``no unanimous'' agreement among members of his council on whether to raise rates and signaled a bias toward an increase with talk of ``heightened alertness'' on inflation. Before then, not one economist out of 32 surveyed by Bloomberg News had predicted higher rates this year.

``Frankly, we didn't quite believe our ears when we listened to Trichet,'' says Erik Nielsen, chief European economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in London. All but two of 58 economists surveyed this month forecast the ECB on July 3 will boost its main rate a quarter point to 4.25 percent, the first increase in a year and the highest since 2001.

Forcing the ECB's hand is inflation that surged to 4 percent in June from a year earlier, the fastest in 16 years and in breach of the bank's target of just below 2 percent for a 10th month. A European Commission poll of 30,170 citizens last week showed rising prices overtaking unemployment as their main concern.

Crippling Blow

``The ECB is facing elevated inflation risks,'' says David Mackie, chief European economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in London. ``The idea that a 4 percent rate is enough doesn't seem convincing.''

The risk for Trichet is that a strike against inflation now delivers a crippling blow to the euro zone's more fragile economies. Reports last week showed manufacturing and services industries in the region unexpectedly shrank in June, confidence among consumers and businesses fell more than economists forecast and retail sales plunged. The outlook so concerns Marc Touati, chief economist at Global Equities in Paris, that he has launched an online petition against higher rates at http://www.stoptrichet.com.

A widening continental divide is the price of a ``one-size- fits-all'' monetary policy, says Nick Kounis, an economist at Fortis Bank NV in Amsterdam. ``The ECB is not that interested as it sets policy for the region and for inflation -- not growth,'' he says.

`Painful Adjustments'

Eric Chaney, chief European economist at Morgan Stanley in London, says the region faces its biggest test since 1992, when a system of pegging currencies to the deutsche mark collapsed as stumbling economies forced some countries to devalue.

The Economic and Monetary Union that followed in 1999 is in no such danger, Chaney says. Still, ``painful adjustments are likely to take place'' in the form of slumping demand and plummeting real-estate values in economies such as Spain's that became overextended, he says.

Other vulnerable economies include Italy and Greece, as well as Portugal and Ireland. After bingeing on borrowing and real-estate booms as interest rates fell to a four-decade low of 2 percent, most of these nations would be hamstrung by increased borrowing costs and a higher euro.

Private debt totals 175 percent of gross domestic product in Ireland, compared with 97 percent in the euro area, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. Spain is more susceptible to shifts in short-term borrowing costs, with 90 percent of the country's mortgages carrying variable interest rates.

Hangover

Competitiveness has also suffered as labor costs jumped and current-account deficits ballooned, with the deficit for Greece now close to 14 percent of GDP.

The hangover may now be hitting. Portugal's economy shrank in the first quarter. Ireland's Economic and Social Research Institute said last week the country will fall into a recession this year, the first since 1983. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News see a 45 percent chance Spain will suffer the same fate before the end of 2009.

Meanwhile, Germany's economy is showing resilience after companies cut costs and its government reined in its budget deficit. Germany's growth was the fastest in 12 years during the first quarter, and its current account is in surplus. That leaves consumer prices as the chief worry after they rose 3.4 percent in June from a year ago. So far, the economies of France, Austria, Belgium and the Netherlands are also weathering the global slowdown and credit crisis better than their neighbors on Europe's periphery.

`Considerable' Risks

The differences in the euro area are reflected within Trichet's governing council. Axel Weber, a former academic and president of Germany's traditionally hawkish Bundesbank, led the charge for a rate increase and says inflation risks remain ``considerable.''

Spain's Miguel Angel Fernandez Ordonez has expressed concern about ``contractionary trends'' in his economy, and Lorenzo Bini Smaghi, a member of the ECB executive board, said June 17 that a single quarter-point rate increase ``should be enough.''

Trichet, who speaks today at the Bank for International Settlements meeting in Basel, Switzerland, has typically declared after ECB decisions that they were reached by consensus. Recent comments suggest ``it's going to be very hard for the ECB to come up with a consensus, even after this month,'' says Gilles Moec, London-based senior economist with Bank of America Corp.

Inflation Spreads

For now, Weber and the inflation hawks appear to hold sway as signs accumulate that inflation is spreading beyond commodities such as oil, which reached a record $142.99 a barrel last week.

Ludwigshafen, Germany-based chemical maker BASF SE is raising prices by as much as 20 percent, while employees at Cologne-based airline Deutsche Lufthansa AG want a 9.8 percent wage increase. Inflation expectations, measured by the breakeven on French inflation-indexed bonds, rose to 2.64 percent today from 2.12 percent in March.

``They will do their utmost to ensure inflation doesn't get out of hand,''
says Franz Wenzel, Paris-based deputy director for investment strategy at AXA Investment Managers, which oversees about $831 billion.
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Re: European Central Bank ECB

Postby kennynah » Mon Jun 30, 2008 5:55 pm

Hong Kong liao !!!
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30 Jun 2008 09:00 GMT
BULLET: EMU DATA: Eurozone HICP inflation rose to a new high.


EMU DATA: Eurozone HICP inflation rose to a new record high of +4.0% in June, twice the European Central Bank's definition of price stability, according to Eurostat's flash estimate released Friday. The new record is likely to cement the case for a 25 basis point interest rate hike when the ECB Governing Council meets this Thursday.

The flash estimate is some way above the median forecast of 15 analysts polled last week (+3.8%). Six of these economists forecast a print of 3.9% y/y and only one analyst predicted that HICP would hit 4%.

While Eurostat did not, as usual, give a breakdown of the flash estimate, inflation appears to be
rising fast in most eurozone countries.

German June HICP rose 3.4% y/y, faster than analysts had forecast, while Spanish inflation rose by 5.1% y/y, according to preliminary data released last Friday. Meanwhile, Belgian inflation is running at a 24-year high.
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