City
Epaper

ECB hikes rates by 50 bps despite financial turmoil

By ANI | Updated: March 17, 2023 12:00 IST

Frankfurt [Germany], March 17 : The European Central Bank raised interest rates by a half-percentage point (0.5 or 50 ...

Open in App

Frankfurt [Germany], March 17 : The European Central Bank raised interest rates by a half-percentage point (0.5 or 50 basis points), The Wall Street Journal reported.

The central bank also promised emergency support for eurozone banks if needed, showing the policymakers' balancing act as they seek to combat high inflation without aggravating strains in the financial system

The ECB said in a statement that it would increase its key rate to 3 per cent, following consecutive half-point rate increases in February and December. The 50 basis points (bps) rise surprised analysts who had expected a smaller uptick given the tense market situation after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, WSJ said.

At a news conference on Thursday, ECB President Christine Lagarde signalled the bank would be cautious about further rate increases, while stressing it stood ready to provide fresh liquidity to banks. Policymakers will make future rate decisions based on coming economic data, she said, a change from previously announcing plans for rate increases months in advance.

"It's not business as usual," Lagarde said. "It is not possible at this point in time...to determine what the path will be going forward."

European stock markets rallied while government bonds gyrated following the announcements, according to WSJ. Analysts said the moves suggested interest rates would be lower than expected, with markets now pricing a peak ECB rate just above 3 per cent, down from about 4 per cent one week ago.

WSJ said the yield on the 10-year German bund declined to 2.132 per cent from 2.193 per cent before the release and then rose to 2.260 per cent.

WSJ said the ECB's decision provides an early glimpse into how major central banks, including the Federal Reserve, might respond to recent signs of market distress that started with the collapse of SVB and a second large US bank last week.

Both the Fed and the Bank of England are set to hold their policy meetings next week.

The ECB decision to push ahead with its pre-announced rate rise suggests that the central bank, at least, still sees pushing down high and sticky inflation in the eurozone as its priority, WSJ said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: The Wall Street JournalGermanyChristine LagardeEuropean Central BankFrankfurtEuropean central bank mario draghiThe european central bankEuropean institutionsGult news
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: 20-Year-Old Woman Arrested for Duping Foreign Tourist Under Pretext of Selling Household Items

NationalTesla Model Y: Is It Cheaper in the US & China Than in India? Full Price Comparison Inside

MumbaiNavi Mumbai Man Arrested for Importing MDMA Worth Rs 16 Lakh via Post From Germany

National'Not Receive Permit to Land': Lufthansa Flight to Hyderabad Forced to Return to Frankfurt Airport

NationalMahua Moitra Marriage: Trinamool MP Ties the Knot with Former BJD MP Pinaki Mishra in Germany

Business Realted Stories

BusinessSunil Bharti Mittal lauds PM Modi’s forward-thinking, technology-first approach

BusinessIdentifying the road ahead for India-US trade talks

BusinessIndia’s maritime sector set to attract Rs 80 lakh crore investment, create 1.5 crore jobs: Sonowal

BusinessGlobal chip design giants coming to India as talent pipeline strengthens: Vaishnaw

BusinessEvery interaction with PM Modi filled with learning and inspiration: Uday Kotak