Friday 28 October 2011

EU leaders sidestep eurozone growth issue

So the euro has made some monster gains this month, first as a result of hopes and speculation of major action on some key eurozone debt issues, which were then built upon when EU leaders finally delivered the goods. Bailout fund enlargement, recapitalisation, Greek haircuts – some major decisions were made (though a whole world of detail remains yet to be negotiated). But what about another key issue that was cited as a priority in the build up to the EU Summit- eurozone growth.

Weak growth is plaguing the eurozone periphery; the austerity programmes in countries like Greece, Spain, and the ones that will soon be implemented in Italy are strangling any sort of economic expansion. Perhaps even more alarmingly, growth in the core nations of France and Germany has also slowed down considerably, leaving a dip back into a full eurozone recession a strong possibility.

Without plans for economic growth, the peripheral states will be unable to meet their austerity targets, and again they will come under heightened pressure in the bond markets. One way EU officials can help eurozone growth is through cutting interest rates. The ECB has been looking to hike throughout 2011, the eurozone base rate has risen from 1.00% to 1.50% to curb rising inflation. This has triggered gains in the strength of the single currency which has hurt the periphery further.

Incoming ECB President Mario Draghi will be chairing his first meeting next week, with Trichet having finished his tenure this month. It is not beyond the realms of possibility that he will respond to the downturn in regional growth by cutting interest rates and relieving some pressure. With inflation up at 3.0%, the ECB may be wary, and recent data actually showed that money supply growth accelerated in September. The markets are anticipating a 0.25% rate cut by the end of the year. Perhaps the periphery will have to wait until December for some respite.

The growth issue will come up again and again in coming months and years. It was clearly sidestepped at Wednesday’s EU summit, but the markets will force EU leaders to revisit it.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX

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