Don’t Miss a Post. Subscribe now.

ECB Hopes to End Negative Interest Rates by the End of the Third Quarter

Eurozone Inflation Hits New Record 

Politico reports Eurozone Inflation Hits Fresh Record as Growth Slows

Eurozone growth slowed in the first quarter while inflation hit a fresh record high in April, data released by the EU statistics agency showed Friday, stoking fears of stagflation.

Economic growth slowed to 0.2 percent on the quarter from 0.3 percent in the final three months of last year. At the country level, GDP grew by 0.3 percent in Spain and 0.2 percent in Germany, while France stagnated and Italy contracted.

Inflation accelerated further to 7.5 percent in April from 7.4 percent in the previous month. High prices continue to be driven primarily by energy costs, which were up 38 percent on the year. Core inflation, which excludes the volatile factors of food and energy, accelerated from 3.2 percent to 3.9 percent — suggesting that high prices are becoming more entrenched.

Looking at member states, the Baltics were hit hardest. In Estonia, prices were up 19.0 percent, in Lithuania 16.6 percent and in Latvia 13.3 percent.

In the largest member states, by contrast, inflation remained comparatively contained. France was among the lowest, with 5.4 percent. In Italy, inflation was 6.6 percent, and in Germany, 7.8 percent.

New Definition of Contained 

France has 5.4% inflation, Italy 6.6%, and Germany 7.8%. Those numbers look good compared to Estonia at 19.%, Lithuania at 16.6% and Latvia at 13.3%.

This highlights two key things: The idiocy of negative rates and the impossible task of coming up with one rate for the Eurozone that makes any sense at all, positive or negative.

No Panic Yet!

Normalization ECB Style 

A blog post by Christine Lagarde, President of the ECB, discusses  Monetary Policy Normalization in the Euro Area

Households are the ones suffering most from higher import prices, as rising energy and food inflation are eating into real incomes, and nominal wages are not yet catching up. In fact, real wage growth turned negative in the fourth quarter of last year – the last data point we have – and real wages are likely to be contracting even faster now due to rising inflationary pressures.

High energy costs and supply shortages are now also starting to be felt in industrial production, which contracted in nearly all major economies in March.

Against the backdrop of the evidence I presented above, I expect net purchases under the APP to end very early in the third quarter. This would allow us a rate lift-off at our meeting in July, in line with our forward guidance. Based on the current outlook, we are likely to be in a position to exit negative interest rates by the end of the third quarter.

A Liftoff to Zero!

Note that despite 7.5% inflation the ECB is still conducting QE. The QE ends in July. 

Lagarde defended this economic lunacy with a notion of “a genuine risk of too-low inflation becoming entrenched.”

Lagarde says “the ECB’s policy settings were fully focused on dislodging this disinflationary environment.”

Like the Fed, the ECB was hell bent on producing two percent inflation no matter what it took. 

But it will not be until the end of September before Lagarde pencils in a liftoff to zero percent. By then, the entire Eurozone will be in a rip roaring recession. 

For this ridiculous ideology, Christine Lagarde gets my “Hoot of the Day” award.

These central bankers are truly incompetent, almost beyond belief. 

Historical Perspective on CPI Deflations: How Damaging are They?

Please note a BIS study shows routine price deflation is a benefit, not a curse. 

In their attempts to fight routine consumer price deflation, central bankers create very destructive asset bubbles that eventually collapse, setting off what they should fear – asset bubble deflations.

For discussion, please see Historical Perspective on CPI Deflations: How Damaging are They?

This post originated at MishTalk.Com.

Thanks for Tuning In!

Please Subscribe to MishTalk Email Alerts.

Subscribers get an email alert of each post as they happen. Read the ones you like and you can unsubscribe at any time.

If you have subscribed and do not get email alerts, please check your spam folder.

Mish

Subscribe to MishTalk Email Alerts.

Subscribers get an email alert of each post as they happen. Read the ones you like and you can unsubscribe at any time.

This post originated on MishTalk.Com

Thanks for Tuning In!

Mish

Comments to this post are now closed.

34 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
4 years ago
Hope springs eternal in the human breast,” – Alexander Pope, An Essay on Man (1732)
Hope is not a strategy.
Hope is not even a tactic.
Dean_70
Dean_70
4 years ago
As someone with over 20 years of experience in or with the public sector, this is typical of a public sector employee. It amazes me that people look towards these idiots for leadership.
Just view the US presidency like this (regardless of political affiliation): Our president is just another dumb government employee.
Once you come to this realization everything else will make more sense.
Hansa Junchun
Hansa Junchun
4 years ago
ECB’S PRESIDENT LAGARDE: WE ARE NOT IN PANIC MODE.
Well, the ECB is not. Everyone else is. This is perhaps why the think-tanks were warning about civil unrest in the 2020s: they knew the consequences of bad policy, and they also knew the elites are a bunch of clueless detatched egomaniacs.
KidHorn
KidHorn
4 years ago
If the EU starts paying interest, it will be very bad for USD. Right now, EU debt is off limits to many investors because of the negative yield.
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
4 years ago
I look at that picture of Lagarde and all I can think of is “Hunger Games”.
RonJ
RonJ
4 years ago
“A Liftoff to Zero!”
It’s kind of like the missile rising up out of the silo, before launch. Will the Euro Zone have a failure to launch?
ColoradoAccountant
ColoradoAccountant
4 years ago
Reminder that economists are not licensed by the state like my doctor or the woman that cuts my hair. You can’t sue economists for being wrong.
RonJ
RonJ
4 years ago
Bourla says Pfizer can’t be sued, due to contracts for a prototype vaccine. Woe to the Covid vaccine injured.
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
4 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
They fully intend to tell the vaccine-injured that “it was voluntary”.
Mark my words.
Dean_70
Dean_70
4 years ago
Reply to  Bam_Man
I think that Pfizer can be sued if they are proven to have provided false data or intentionally misleading information.
The government can certainly be sued due to the mandates. This is what I expect in a couple years. Death rates are already soaring and scientists have been connecting the dots. The rate of cancer is going expediential right now. The mRNA vaccinated have become immune compromised.
Johnson & Johnson jab was made unavailable late last year as they halted production. What did they do with the millions of doses that were already produced? They sent them to African nations, fully aware of the blood clot issues.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
4 years ago
New home inventory rising.
March –
For Sale Inventory and Months’ Supply
The seasonally‐adjusted estimate of new houses for sale at the end of March was 407,000. This represents a supply
of 6.4 months at the current sales rate
April –
For Sale Inventory and Months’ Supply
The seasonally‐adjusted estimate of new houses for sale at the end of April was 444,000. This represents a supply of
9.0 months at the current sales rate
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
4 years ago
Richmond Federal Reserve Bank Manufacturing index out
expected … 14
range of “experts” … 14 to 20
actual … -9
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
4 years ago
The negative revisions did not stop with March.
December 871K —> 839K
January 845K —> 831K
February 835K —> 792K
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
4 years ago
If this absurd situation does not represent the TOTAL failure of Central Banking, I don’t know what will (maybe an upcoming hyperinflation?)
The Germans must really be loving this.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
4 years ago
Yikes!
New home sales did a nose dive
expected 750K SAAR
actual 591K SAAR
oh, and large downward revision to prior
763K —> 709K
Zardoz
Zardoz
4 years ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
’tis but a scratch!
Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
4 years ago
It seems that Fed incompetence is exceeded only by the ECB and B of J.
Let’s be clear what negative interest rates are:
1) a denial of free markets
2) autocratic spendthrift government
3) outright theft from savers
4) the result of Keynesian economics
My solution: a guillotine on The Mall.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
4 years ago
Reply to  Captain Ahab
Negative / low rates – for years – also forced folks into uncomfortable positions.
60/40 funds became 80/20 and such.
I remember last year Realist touting how Canadian retirement system doing so well … compared to US.
I took a look at their system to see how they managed performance … surprise surprise … moved heavier into equity.
We’ll see how that works out as cycle plays out.
Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
4 years ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
I agree. People who are ill-equipped to hold risky assets have been forced into them. With regard to pension-type programs, a hard landing will destroy most of them; same for the 401ks. It will not end well.
The risk-return relationship, fundamental to economic decision making, essentially became irrational as interest rates neared zero. The guillotine is the only answer, or it will continue to happen.
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
4 years ago
Reply to  Captain Ahab
That is also my theory, the ruling class needs to be culled roughly once in a century lest it become too complacent.
KidHorn
KidHorn
4 years ago
Reply to  Captain Ahab
It’s what happens when central banks buy all the government debt. Individual investors don’t buy negative yielding debt. Only those who aren’t buying it to make a profit. They buy it to fund a government.
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
4 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Individual investors do buy negative yielding debt, when they see the system is so fubared, more negative yields are coming. With central banking cabal in charge, the system is fubared by definition.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
4 years ago
You hit on a key point. Many will say “who in their right mind would ever buy negative yield debt? … why not go to cash?” Well, in our fiat world not possible for everyone. In the case of US there is only a little more than $2 trillion in “cash”. A drop in the bucket. If we see a deflationary collapse in assets (we will) investors/corporations/institutions/etc will seek least worst options.
When the worm turns, investor concern will be Return OF Capital (or at least as much as possible) and not Return ON Capital.
Christoball
Christoball
4 years ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett
Is the situation that some people have so much money that they could not open up enough $250K FDIC insured accounts to hold it all??????
Christoball
Christoball
4 years ago
Reply to  Christoball
I mean Euro insured accounts 🙂
KidHorn
KidHorn
4 years ago
Negative yielding debt is the result of central bank buying. It would never exist unless the central banks were buying the debt. There may be an isolated case here and there of individuals buying it, but almost 100% is bought by central banks.
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
4 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
By individual investors I mean institutions, hedge funds etc… When yields were going negative, the prices of less negative yielding bonds go up, and such speculators can and did make a profit.
Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
4 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
“Only those who aren’t buying it to make a profit.” Therein, lies the problem of capital inflation, and its first cousins, asset inflation, goods and services inflation….
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
4 years ago
C’mon, Mish … you know better.
Can’t post a picture of Lagarde without her Gucci bag –
All ’bout the asset holders, baby.
Everyone else? Well, they can eat bugs, walk wherever … and, uhh, muddle through … somehow.
Eighthman
Eighthman
4 years ago
I think a worthy topic of debate is the hypothesis that the Euro project will collapse because of sanctions on Russia in particular. Without cheap energy, Germany and others lose competitiveness. And they can’t do business with Russia – and eventually, maybe China. Following that, they can’t keep kicking the can in regard to the poorer south EU and can’t hold on to low interest rates amidst inflation. Tack on the expenses of the greens for reputed renewables, funding Ukraine and buying US weapons.
KidHorn
KidHorn
4 years ago
Reply to  Eighthman
Why can’t they do business with Russia? They can always tell the US to piss off and do what’s best for them.
Zardoz
Zardoz
4 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Funding their future invader? Sounds like a great plan.
TexasTim65
TexasTim65
4 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
At the rate Russia is conquering Ukraine it will be their children’s children that will have to worry about that.
Far more likely Europe is conquered from the south by waves of immigrants fleeing Africa where population is expected to double in a few decades.
JRM
JRM
4 years ago
Reply to  TexasTim65
This is only if your buying what the WEST MSM/INTEL agencies are selling!!!
Which is clearly you and the majority of WESTERN cannon fodder are doing!!!

Decorate Your Walls with Mish Fine Art Images

Click each image to view details or purchase in the store.

Stay Informed

Subscribe to MishTalk

You will receive all messages from this feed and they will be delivered by email.