/

Lagarde concerns over Eurozone growth dampen Euro outlook

2211 views
1 min read

EURUSD broadly consolidated near 1.0470 in Friday’s European session, staying under bearish pressure after comments from European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde on Thursday indicated that more interest rate cuts are in the pipeline, a scenario that has dampened the Euro’s outlook.

After the ECB opted to reduce its Deposit Facility rate by 25 basis points (bps) to 3%, Christine Lagarde highlighted the deteriorating Eurozone growth outlook amid a slowdown in exports and weak business investment, which points to the need for further policy easing.

“Surveys indicate that manufacturing is still contracting and growth in services is slowing,” she said, adding that “firms are holding back their investment spending in the face of weak demand and a highly uncertain outlook.”

Lagarde’s comments also indicated that a handful of ECB officials supported a larger-than-usual interest rate cut of 50 bps, suggesting that policymakers are worried about faltering economic growth.

The new ECB staff projections forecast the Eurozone economy to grow by 0.7% in 2024 and 1.1% in 2025, less than previously expected.

Christine Lagarde was confident about inflation returning to 2% on a sustained basis.

“Our projections are telling us that we will be at 2% target in the course of 2025.”

Asked about the impact on inflation from higher import tariffs by the US, Lagarde said that these are “probably net inflationary” in the short term, but that “It is going to depend on the scope of the measures and retaliation that is decided, on the rerouting of trade traffic from other parts of the world”.

Going forward, investors will look to commentaries from ECB officials on the interest rate guidance, given that the blackout period is over.

The DXY Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback’s value against six major currencies, climbed above 107.00 on expectations that the Federal Reserve could deliver a slightly hawkish interest rate guidance after cutting its key borrowing rates by 25 basis points (bps) to 4.25-4.50% in the policy meeting on Wednesday.

According to the CME FedWatch tool, traders have priced in a 25-bps interest rate reduction on Wednesday, but are confident about leaving them unchanged at 4.25-4.50% in the policy meeting in January.

“The recent slowdown in the pace of US disinflation, a lower Unemployment Rate than what the Fed projected in September, and exuberance in US financial markets are contributing to this more hawkish stance,” analysts at Macquarie said.

A faster-than-expected acceleration in the US Producer Price Index (PPI) data for November has also added to evidence that the Fed could turn slightly hawkish on the interest rate outlook. The US PPI report showed that the annual headline and core PPI – which excludes volatile food and energy prices – rose by 3% and 3.4%, respectively.

EURUSD chart by TradingView

(Source: OANDA)