trichet posts
FeedPosted Jul 9th 2008 3:23PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Earnings Transcripts
If the leading ECB official is correct, the West is about witness yet another episode of 'That 70s Inflation Show'.
European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet warned Wednesday that euro nations are already seeing the first signs of a wage-price inflation spiral, and called on governments to exercise discipline by not granting wage hikes that could further fan inflation via consequent price rises, The Associated Press reported.
The ECB's governing council "is strongly concerned that price and wage-setting behavior could add to inflationary pressures," Trichet told the European Parliament, while also defending the ECB's decision last Thursday to increase interest rates. "First signs are already emerging in some regions of the euro area."
A wage-price spiral typically occurs when employees and others seek wage increases to keep pace with rising prices. The increased wages ratchet up employer costs, who pass the added costs on to consumers via higher prices, perpetuating the wage-price spiral.
Trichet's concern: Rising European inflation
Continue reading ECB's Trichet says wage-price spiral starting to affect euro nations
Posted Jul 3rd 2008 12:06PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Commodities, Federal Reserve

These days, European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet isn't too popular in currency market circles, if one trader is any indication.
Trichet, a legendary inflation hawk, campaigned for and secured
a quarter-point interest rate increase Thursday, to 4.25%, in the ECB's key, short-term interest rate, the refinance rate. Many economists thought Trichet's action was premature, despite Europe's 3.7% annualized inflation rate, and that it could spell further economic slowing Europe. Unbowed, Trichet plowed ahead.
With the above as a backdrop, many currency traders, Andrew Resnick among them, plowed ahead with euro-long trades on the calculation that a higher interest rate for the euro will cause the euro to rise. Resnick went long with the euro in the euro-dollar currency pairing.
But then what did Trichet do? He stated at the regular
post-ECB rate decision press conference that he has "no bias" and that "we have no pre-commitment" to raise rates further - - signaling that one interest rate increase may be enough,
Bloomberg News reported. The result? The
euro plunged versus the
dollar after his comments: it fell 1.2 cents - - a large price move in the currency market - - to $1.5758 Thursday morning.
And with it plunged Resnick's profits for the day. All his trades were stopped-out for losses.
'Trichet is making many friends among traders'"Trichet," Resnick said, "isn't making many friends among traders, and probably not among business executives and economists as well." Resnick followed his evaluation of Trichet's social standing with several candid and frank, descriptive, colorful comments about the ECB president that can't be published here. Suffice it to say that Resnick is not happy with Trichet's two-step.
Continue reading Dollar rises vs euro after ECB's Trichet signals one rate hike may be enough
Posted Jul 3rd 2008 9:13AM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Commodities, Oil, Federal Reserve
In a move that surprised almost no one, the European Central Bank
increased its key interest rate, the refinance rate, a quarter point to 4.25%. The increase brings the refinance rate to its highest level in seven years.
The currency market, which for the most part had already factored-in the ECB rate increase, did not react initially following the decision. The
euro was virtually unchanged versus the
dollar at $1.5882.
The other major currency pairings also held their ground. The dollar was unchanged against the
pound at $1.9884 and the dollar rose slightly, up 0.10 yen to 106.25 yen, versus
Japan's yen.
Economist: Trichet 'jumped the gun'London-based economist Mark Chandler told BloggingStocks Thursday the ECB's decision was no surprise, but that doesn't decrease his disappointment with the ECB's stance.
"I afraid I'm going to really disagree with this one. I understand where [ECB President Jean-Claude] Trichet is coming from, but he's jumped the gun from my perspective. He could have waited another quarter," Chandler said. "There's a real concern now he's going to throw Europe into a recession like America, and if the dollar continues to fall against the euro, his rate increase won't lower inflation all that much. I don't like that bargain at all."
Continue reading ECB increases key interest rate a quarter point; will the Fed follow?
Posted Jul 2nd 2008 1:31PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Commodities, Oil, Federal Reserve
In comments made June 23 to Germany's Die Zeit but published only today, European Central President Jean-Claude Trichet warned of an "explosion" in inflation if the bank does not act decisively to counter it, Reuters reported Wednesday.
"If we are not resolute, there is a risk that inflation will explode. If we act decisively, then we can master the situation," Trichet said in the German text of comments published by weekly Die Zeit on Wednesday.
Trichet's comments appear one day before the ECB's meeting on interest rates. Many economists expect the ECB to increase its key interest rate, the refinance rate, by 25 basis points to 4.25%. (The ECB decision will be announced Thursday at 7:45 a.m. EDT.)
At issue: How to check inflation
European inflation is running at a 3.7% annualized rate, and trending up. That fact, combined with Trichet's comments published Wednesday, "all but guarantee a rate hike Thursday by the ECB," in economist David H. Wang's interpretation.
Continue reading ECB's Trichet warns of inflation 'explosion'
Posted Jun 30th 2008 11:22AM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Other Issues, Federal Reserve
So much for consensus building.
That was how one currency trader characterized the present mood in the currency markets regarding the European Central Bank's upcoming Thursday July 3 meeting to discuss interest rates and monetary policy.
"Initially there was talk that [ECB President Jean-Claude] Trichet would make a concession to the doves, and hold off raising rates for this meeting, but now the belief pretty much is that they'll raise rates a quarter point to 4.25%," currency trader Andrew Resnick said Monday. Resnick added that he is short with the dollar in the euro-dollar and British pound-dollar currency pairings.
European inflation is running at a 3.7% annualized rate, and trending up, Resnick said, and "a 4% refinance rate just doesn't look like it can cut the mustard and contain inflation the way Trichet wants inflation contained." If the ECB increases the refinance rate -- its key, short-term interest rate -- it would be the bank's first increase in a year.
Continue reading ECB's Trichet seen backing inflation hawks, despite Europe's slowing economy
Posted Jun 28th 2008 3:10PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Commodities, Oil, Federal Reserve
It's a European anti-inflation campaign that will require boldness, creativity, and patience.
That was how one economist described a potential monetary policy tack by the European Central Bank (ECB) for the quarters ahead.
London-based economist Mark Chandler told BloggingStocks that typically, a central bank will increase interest rates to fight inflation. Paradoxically, he's not recommending that the ECB do that now.
"It is a bit of a paradox, but if the ECB raises interest rates it may have the effect of, in fact, increasing inflation," Chandler said. (Euro-zone inflation is presently running at about a 3.7% annualized rate -- well above the ECB 2.0% limit, according to Eurostat.)
Contain commodities prices, contain inflation
Here's how an interest rate hike may hurt inflation's cause: a rate hike would put the euro, once again, in a superior investment position versus the U.S. dollar, causing the already-weak dollar to fall more, Chandler said. As the dollar continues to fall, commodity prices -- including oil -- will continue to rise, as investors seek to preserve purchasing power of the decreased value of dollar-denominated commodities, and as a general inflation hedge.
Continue reading Best ECB inflation-fighting strategy may be ... no interest rate increase
Posted Jun 25th 2008 4:00PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Federal Reserve
The European Central Bank's president has 'clarified' earlier comments on the continent's monetary policy by stating that interest rates may, or may not, rise in the months ahead.
"I said that we could increase rates by a small amount in order to secure a solid anchoring of inflation expectations,"' ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet told the European Parliament in Brussels Wednesday,
Bloomberg News reported. "I didn't say that we could envisage a series of increases. That being said, of course we never pre-commit."'
Earlier this month, on June 5, Trichet said the ECB might raise its key short-term interest rate, the refinance rate, by 25 basis points, to 4.25% in July to contain rising inflation in Europe. Inflation is currently running at a 3.7% annual pace, according to Eurostat, the European Union's economic statistics office, well above the ECB's 2% limit. (
pdf)
Trichet dispels multi-hike chatterDuring his July 5 comments Trichet did not rule out multiple interest rate increases, which the currency markets interpreted as a signal that at least one interest rate increase was ahead, possibly more, and the markets bid-up the price of the euro. On Wednesday, Trichet sought to dispel that notion, while at the same time letting the markets know that no rate decision has been made.
Still, the
euro rose about one-half cent against the
dollar Wednesday to $1.5645, although it should be noted that the currency markets were also responding to anticipated stand-pat stance on interest rates by the U.S. Federal Reserve. And this afternoon,
the Fed, as expected, kept its key, short-term interest rate the same at 2%, while also saying the balance of risks had shift to inflation containment from slowing economic growth / economic recession.
Continue reading ECB's Trichet: European interest rates may, or may not, rise
Posted Jun 20th 2008 12:22PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Other Issues, Federal Reserve
The dollar is on-pace to record a large weekly decline Friday -- undoing last week's gains against the euro and pound -- as traders and analysts debated the likely next step for the U.S. Federal Reserve and European Central Bank.
The
dollar traded at about $1.5637 to the
euro Friday at mid-day, which would represent a 3-cent decline for the week, if it maintains that level by the New York close at 5 p.m. The dollar also traded at $1.9760 to the
British pound, also about a 3-cent loss for the week.
Currency trader Andrew Resnick told BloggingStocks Friday concerns about rising inflation in Germany and financial service losses in the United States have caused a sentiment adjustment in the often-volatile currency markets.
A shift in sentiment"Last week, the debate was structured around rising inflation in the U.S. and how long the Federal Reserve could hold-off before raising interest rates. That was bullish for the dollar," Resnick said. "But this week we've seen a reversal. The talk now is about [European Central Bank President Jean-Claude] Trichet beating [Fed Chairman Ben] Bernanke to the punch on interest rates, and that put a lot of traders in euro-buy mode." Resnick added that he is presently flat, or has no open currency trading positions.
Continue reading Dollar heads for weekly decline as traders debate next Fed, ECB action
Posted Jun 16th 2008 5:45PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Bad News, Economic Data, Federal Reserve
Notch yet another data point in the monetary policy tightening camp.
Inflation in the euro-zone accelerated in May to a 3.7% annualized rate, as surging fuel, food, housing forced up costs across the 15-nation currency area, Eurostat, the European Union's economic statistics agency, announced Monday. (
pdf)
Further, euro-zone inflation is now running at its highest rate since 1996. Inflation had increased at a 3.3% annualized rate in April, Eurostat said. Food prices and transportation prices, up 6.4% and 5.9%, respectively, in the past year, were major factors in inflation's rise.
Currency traders responded to the inflation news by bidding up the
euro and short-circuiting - - at least for the time being - - a recovery in the
dollar. The euro gained about 1 cent to $1.5483 versus the dollar in Monday afternoon trading.
Trans-Atlantic two-stepLondon-based economist Mark Chandler told BloggingStocks Monday the May euro-zone inflation data is another debating point for the inflation hawks on the European Central Bank. "Even before the latest data everyone had pretty much discounted that [ECG President Jean-Claude] Trichet wants and is going to get a rate increase. But now there's concern there may be more than one rate increase ahead. The currency markets certainly reflected that," Chandler said. "It's a bit premature to start talking about multiple rate hikes, in my view."
Continue reading Euro-zone inflation rises to 3.7% annual rate on higher food, energy prices
Posted Jun 11th 2008 12:12PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Federal Reserve, Recession
It goes without saying that central bankers can alter economic sentiment in a hurry.
Confidence in the global economy declined in June as central bankers signaled they may be ready to increase interest rates,
a new Bloomberg survey indicated Wednesday. The
Bloomberg Professional Global Confidence Index fell to 21 in June from 22.7 in May, with respondents more pessimistic in every region. A reading below 50 indicates negative sentiment.
Economists, investors, and traders need not look much farther than the newspaper (or web site) headlines to confirm their worst fears regarding the likely track for interest rates. Last week, the notoriously-hawkish European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet became notoriously clear: he said the ECB could possibly increase interest rates as early as its next meeting to check the continent's inflation rate, which like the U.S.'s, is rising due to sky-high oil prices,
The Economic Times reported. Then on Monday, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said he'll "strongly resist" any increase in inflation expectations,
Reuters reported.
Ahead: Rate hike or hikes?
Economist Peter Dawson told BloggingStocks Wednesday it's clear interest rates are headed higher up ahead, but he's hoping the central bankers aren't acting too soon.
Continue reading Confidence in global economy falls in June on rate hike concerns
Posted Jun 11th 2008 10:48AM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Economic Data, Recession

To paraphrase
Mark Twain, if you don't like the monetary policy climate in the world's major economies, wait awhile.
Monetary policy, historically the super oil tankers of the international finance world -- slow to get in motion, with only gradual course adjustments -- have in recent times approximated quicker responses typically found elsewhere in the markets.
Up until about a week ago, the mantra was lower interest rates, liquidity to guard against the credit squeeze/crisis, with a bias toward stimulating economic growth. For example, economists and analysts generally expected the European Central Bank to (finally) lower its benchmark, short-term interest rate to stimulate the euro-zone's slowing economy.
But then last week the notoriously hawkish ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet became notoriously overt: he said the ECB would likely increase interest rates at its next meeting to check the continent's inflation rate, which like the U.S.'s, is rising due to sky-high oil prices.
Then on Monday, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said he'll "strongly resist" any increase in inflation expectations,
Bloomberg News reported. The markets interpreted Bernanke's comments as a sign the Fed will seek to both quell inflation and limit a further decline in the dollar -- the latter itself a source of rising commodity costs and inflation. Bernanke's comments caused the
dollar to strengthen Monday against the world's other major currencies -- a strengthening that continued through Tuesday afternoon. (Still, traders are reluctant to declare it a dollar rally, given the dollar's many, prior, false break-outs.)
Continue reading Major central banks' stance seen shifting to inflation containment
Posted Jun 6th 2008 11:00AM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Other Issues, Federal Reserve
In the final analysis, the European Central Bank may not attend the Fed's rate cut party, after all.
ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said Thursday the ECB may increase interest rates as soon as next month to check euro-zone inflation,
Bloomberg News reported Friday.On Thursday, the ECB kept its key, short-term interest rate at 4%. That pause, combined with the U.S. Federal Reserve's rate cut pause, suggests that the world's two strongest central banks believe there may be enough monetary stimulus in the system to avert a regional recession prompted by the worst housing slump in the United States in more than 15 years.
Trichet: the hawk of hawksThe Fed has cut short-term interest rates by 325 basis points to 2% since September 2007. Further, while some economists had forecast a mild ECB easing in mid-2008 to stimulate euro-zone growth and avert a regional recession, throughout the Fed's easing cycle Trichet has maintained his notoriously hawkish stance and has repeatedly underscored the need to check oil-fed inflation in Europe.
Inflation is running about at 3.1% annual rate in the euro-zone, and May data indicated inflation continues to trend higher.
Trichet's Thursday comments represent the most specific signal to-date from the ECB that the bank's bias concerns checking inflation, not stimulating growth, given its read on economic conditions.
Economic Analysis: Trichet's stance is not surprising, but in this case he may be hitting the monetary policy brake too soon. The legendary inflation hawk would dearly love to get out of this economic slowdown without an interest rate cut, but it may not be possible. Economic growth in the euro-zone's border economies is slowing, while the U.S. economy is barely showing a pulse. If the euro-zone falls into a recession, Trichet's hawkish stance will be viewed as a needless -- and avoidable -- monetary policy error.
Posted Jun 5th 2008 10:23AM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Other Issues, Federal Reserve

The
European Central Bank and the
Bank of England Thursday each kept their key, short-term interest rates the same, at 4% and 5%, respectively, the banks announced.
Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected both the
ECB and
BOE to maintain current interest rate levels.
Also, in their previous meetings, both the ECB and BOE kept their benchmark interest the same at 4% and 5%, respectively. The BOE's last rate cut occurred on 10 April 2008, when it lowered its key rate by 25 basis points to 5%.
In contrast, since September 2007 the U.S. Federal Reserve has lowered its key, short-term interest rate 5 times, or by 325 basis points, to 2% from 5.25%, attempting to jump-start a U.S. economy dragged down by its worst housing slump in a generation. Given the extensive monetary stimulus buy the Fed, many economists now expect it to at least take a pause in its rate cut cycle, with Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke recently signaling his concern about rising inflation and the decline in the U.S. dollar.
Continue reading ECB, Bank of England keep rates the same; Fed may hike rates soon
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