ECB Expected to Raise Key Rate
The European Central Bank is expected to raise its key interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 4 percent when it meets today, taking the borrowing cost in the 13-nation euro zone to its highest level in six years. The corresponding benchmark rate is 5.25 percent in US and 5.50 percent in Britain.
Besides the rate decision today, on which there is a near unanimity, the markets will be looking for clues on future rate moves.
The euro zone economy has been growing at a healthy pace, unemployment is at its lowest level since the launch of the euro while business and consumer confidence are up. ECB has been calling for “strong vigilance" to keep inflation under control – a phrase considered by the market as a signal of continued rate increases, typically a quarter of a percent. Year-on-year inflation in the zone was 1.9 percent in May — unchanged from the previous two months, and around the ECB's guidelines of just under 2 percent. While there are concerns about inflationary risks, the ECB will also have to consider global developments such as the problems in the US housing market and uncertainty about Chinese stock markets.
The European Central Bank is expected to raise its key interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 4 percent when it meets today, taking the borrowing cost in the 13-nation euro zone to its highest level in six years. The corresponding benchmark rate is 5.25 percent in US and 5.50 percent in Britain.
Besides the rate decision today, on which there is a near unanimity, the markets will be looking for clues on future rate moves.
The euro zone economy has been growing at a healthy pace, unemployment is at its lowest level since the launch of the euro while business and consumer confidence are up. ECB has been calling for “strong vigilance" to keep inflation under control – a phrase considered by the market as a signal of continued rate increases, typically a quarter of a percent. Year-on-year inflation in the zone was 1.9 percent in May — unchanged from the previous two months, and around the ECB's guidelines of just under 2 percent. While there are concerns about inflationary risks, the ECB will also have to consider global developments such as the problems in the US housing market and uncertainty about Chinese stock markets.
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