The eurozone economy is expected to witness a steady recovery this year but with downside risks on an unfavorable external environment, including post-Brexit uncertainty. Expectations of a sharper pick-up in 2017-18 inflation are mainly reflective of a rise in the ECB’s oil price assumptions and unfavorable base effects.
The European Central Bank (ECB) left key benchmark rates and the asset purchase program unchanged yesterday, in line with our expectations. The central bank nonetheless reiterated its ability, willingness and capacity to take further action. But there was no explicit mention of fresh measures under consideration, spurring a kneejerk negative reaction in the markets.
Further, gross domestic product in 2016 estimate was revised up to 1.7 percent, compared to 1.6 percent previously, while 2017 forecasts are cut by -0.1 percent to 1.6 percent. On inflation, 2016 estimate at 0.2 percent was maintained, 2017 cut by -0.1 percent to 1.2 percent and kept 2018’s at 1.6 percent.
Moreover, inflation remains way below the central bank’s 2 percent target. Jan-Aug 2016 inflation averaged 0.03 percent y/y, flat from 2015, mainly weighed by energy prices. Core inflation is relatively firm but struggling to break higher due to excess capacity and limited wage pressures, DBS reported.
"Notwithstanding limited options here on, we expect the ECB to keep the door for further policy action, possibly in 4Q16, contingent on renewed downside risks to growth and/or the risk of negative inflation," DBS commented in its report.
Meanwhile, the next step(s) could be a combination of QE timeline extension beyond Mar17, ease restrictions surrounding these purchases, expand assets’ categories or consider further negative rates. Besides the timeline extension, any decision on altering the eligibility criteria is unlikely to come easy.


Singapore Budget 2026 Set for Fiscal Prudence as Growth Remains Resilient
Japanese Pharmaceutical Stocks Slide as TrumpRx.gov Launch Sparks Market Concerns
FxWirePro: Daily Commodity Tracker - 21st March, 2022
Australian Household Spending Dips in December as RBA Tightens Policy
RBI Holds Repo Rate at 5.25% as India’s Growth Outlook Strengthens After U.S. Trade Deal
China Extends Gold Buying Streak as Reserves Surge Despite Volatile Prices
Asian Markets Surge as Japan Election, Fed Rate Cut Bets, and Tech Rally Lift Global Sentiment
Trump Signs Executive Order Threatening 25% Tariffs on Countries Trading With Iran
India–U.S. Interim Trade Pact Cuts Auto Tariffs but Leaves Tesla Out
South Africa Eyes ECB Repo Lines as Inflation Eases and Rate Cuts Loom
Gold and Silver Prices Slide as Dollar Strength and Easing Tensions Weigh on Metals 



