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The European Central Bank will probably keep interest rates unchanged, shelving a planned increase as the U.S. housing slump threatens to slow the region's expansion, a survey of economists shows. Policy makers meeting in Frankfurt today will leave the benchmark refinancing rate at 4 percent, according to 44 of 56 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The bank probably will raise the rate once more this year, a separate survey shows. An increase would be the ninth since December 2005.
The collapse of the U.S. subprime-mortgage market made banks reluctant to lend, pushing up the cost of credit and roiling world financial markets. The ECB said yesterday it's ready to act to rein in borrowing costs. President Jean-Claude Trichet has already retreated from a stance of ``strong vigilance'' on inflation, language he used to signal previous rate increases.
``The most likely scenario is a small pause to let the market get its breath back'' without withdrawing the tightening bias, said Gilles Moec, a senior economist at Bank of America Corp. in London. ``The easiest for the ECB would be not to raise rates in September, but to maintain the word `vigilance' in the statement.''
The central bank will announce its decision at 1:45 p.m. and Trichet will hold a press conference 45 minutes later. Separatoldy, the Bank of England will probably leave its benchmark rate at 5.75 percent, a Bloomberg survey shows. That decision is due at noon in London.
Not `Pre-Committed'
After signaling a September rate increase on Aug. 2, Trichet declined to repeat the ``vigilance'' phrase Aug. 27. The ECB isn't ``pre-committed'' to higher rates and ``what I said Aug. 2 was before market turbulence,'' Trichet said.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development yesterday lowered its forecasts for economic growth and said they may be reduced further following the rout triggered by U.S. subprime mortgages, which are aimed at borrowers with a poor credit history. ``Downside risks have become more ominous,'' Jean-Philippe Cotis, the OECD's chief economist, said in Paris.
Several European banks acknowledged Aug. 9 they had investments in defaulted U.S. mortgages, prompting central banks to inject more than $350 billion of funds into money markets after inter-bank borrowing costs soared.
While that action succeeded in reducing money-market rates for a time, by yesterday the overnight deposit rate for euros climbed to 4.68 percent, the highest in six years. Should volatility persist today, ``the ECB stands ready to contribute to orderly conditions,'' the bank said.
Cash Shortage
``A lack of cash and reluctance to lend is pushing the cost of term money well above that set by the central bank,'' said Jacques Cailloux, chief European economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Plc in London. ``The probability that growth could turn out far weaker than expected due to financial-market turmoil and the possibility of a sharper slowdown in the U.S. has risen significantly.''
The U.S. Federal Reserve will do what's needed to prevent the credit rout from undoing the six-year American economic expansion, Chairman Ben S. Bernanke told the Kansas City Fed's symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, on Aug. 31. The Bank of Japan has already stepped back from raising rates.
The ECB will publish new growth and inflation forecasts today, its first estimate of how the credit squeeze may affect the economy.
Economic Forecasts
In June, the ECB predicted economic growth of about 2.6 percent in 2007 and 2.3 percent in 2008, and said inflation would average about 2 percent this year and next. The bank aims to keep inflation below 2 percent.
Policy makers have expressed concern that inflation will accelerate after the fastest growth since the turn of the decade last year gave companies leeway to increase prices and wages.
Since then, Europe's economy has cooled. The expansion ebbed to 0.3 percent in the second quarter from 0.7 percent in the first. Manufacturing and service-industry growth slowed in August, and consumer and business confidence dropped more than economists forecast.
``With growth slowing down, a rate increase that would take effect 12 months later seems hard to justify,'' said Jean- Francois Robin, an economist at Natixis in Paris, who expects rates to remain on hold until the end of 2008. |
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