ECB, Bank Of England Raise Interest Rates
"); jQuery("#212 h3").html("
"); });
2022-12-15 HKT 21:35
The European Central Bank (ECB) raised interest rates by half a percentage point on Thursday, its fourth successive hike, and outlined plans to shrink its bloated balance sheet from March, hoping that higher borrowing costs will finally arrest runaway inflation.
The central bank for the 19-country euro zone raised its deposit rate to 2 percent, as expected, and kept further hikes firmly on the table, as fresh economic projections indicated it would still take years to get price growth back to 2 percent.
The ECB has raised interest rates by a combined 2.5 percent percentage points since July, its fastest pace of monetary tightening on record, to counter inflation driven above 10 percent this autumn by soaring food, energy and now services prices.
"Based on the substantial upward revision to the inflation outlook, expects to raise them further," the ECB said in a statement.
Thursday's 50 basis point move marks a slowdown after back-to-back 75-basis-point hikes and mirrors the US Federal Reserve's own change of pace just a day earlier.
The ECB's next step in policy tightening will be a reduction in its 5 trillion euro stock of bonds, bought when it was trying to stimulate economic activity, which will make it more expensive for firms and governments to borrow.
"From the beginning of March 2023 onwards, the asset purchase programme (APP) portfolio will decline at a measured and predictable pace," the ECB added. "The decline will amount to 15 billion euros per month on average until the end of the second quarter of 2023."
This process, known as quantitative tightening, will raise longer-term borrowing costs whereas more traditional rate hikes mostly lift short-term funding costs.
Also on Thursday, the Bank of England (BoE) raised its key interest rate to 3.5 percent from 3 percent and indicated that more hikes were likely, despite a looming recession, as it tries to speed inflation's return to target after price growth hit a 41-year high in October.
The BoE's Monetary Policy Committee voted 6-3 in favour of the move, and said "further increases in Bank Rate" may be required to tackle what it fears could prove to be persistent domestic inflation pressures from prices and wages.
"The labour market remains tight and there has been evidence of inflationary pressures in domestic prices and wages that could indicate greater persistence and thus justifies a further forceful monetary policy response," the BoE said.
The BoE statement did not repeat unusual language from November which said rates were unlikely to need to rise as far as markets expected. (Reuters)
US Stocks Rise On Hopes Of Pause In Rate Increases
Wall Street stocks finished solidly higher on Thursday, reflecting better sentiment on the US economy and a consensus vi... Read more
China's Financial Risks 'controllable': Regulators
The head of the National Financial Regulatory Administration on Thursday told a high-profile forum in Shanghai that the ... Read more
Banks Cut Yuan Deposit Rates, Could Boost Consumption
China's biggest banks on Thursday said they have lowered interest rates on yuan deposits, in actions that could ease pre... Read more
Cheese And Wine Put EU, Australia Deal In Peril
Australia on Thursday threatened to walk away from a blockbuster free trade deal with the European Union unless its prod... Read more
US Stocks End Mixed As Tech Shares Are Sold Off
Gains by industrial companies lifted the Dow on Wednesday, while weakness among technology shares pushed the Nasdaq deci... Read more
Amazon 'plans Prime Video Streaming Service With Ads'
Amazon.com is planning to launch an advertising-supported tier of its Prime Video streaming service, the Wall Street Jou... Read more