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ECB: A disputed 25bp rate cut

Next week, the ECB is set to cut rates for the fourth time this year. Unlike the previous three cuts, the outcome of next week’s rate decision is not given as 1) the restrictive policy stance, 2) the deteriorating growth outlook, and 3) inflation at target has opened discussions of a 50bp cut. While a 50bp cut will certainly be discussed, we judge that the ECB will ultimately deliver a 25bp rate cut, and guide that they are open to any size of rate cuts at future meetings, subject to the incoming data. A 25bp cut next week will bring the ECB’s deposit rate to 3.0%. In the coming year, we expect a string of rate cuts, leading to a terminal rate of 1.5% being reached in September 2025.

We expect a benign market reaction, even if Lagarde decides to twist guidance towards an increasing likelihood of a faster rate of normalisation.

Change guidance of policy restrictiveness

Since last year, the ECB has included a reference that it aims to keep monetary policy ‘sufficiently restrictive’ for as long as necessary. Following the disinflationary process that has gained traction through 2024, the updated staff projections next week are likely to forecast inflation on target from 2025 and onwards. Thus, whether monetary policy should stay restrictive is likely going to be debated. We believe that the slightly hawkish bias in the ECB’s communication is set to change as the need for a restrictive monetary policy stance in the Eurozone is no longer obvious. But the camps inside the GC are obviously divided. In a recent interview the ECB’s Schnabel said that in her view the restrictive part of the monetary policy stance is already fading. At the same time, we see the dovish camp, for example Villeroy, saying that there ‘won’t be any reasons’ for policy to remain restrictive.

A 25 or a 50bp rate cut? It is not the most important question

With activity indicators looking bleak heading into 2025, the case for a 50bp rate cut has strengthened, as the starting-point for financial conditions is restrictive based on most measures. However, given the ECB’s sole inflation mandate, and the ‘political’ aspect of having a gradual rate cutting cycle, we believe it will favour a 25bp rate cut.

However, whether the ECB will deliver a 25bp rate cut or 50bp rate cut in December is not that important in isolation, as the communication around it will be key as well. There seem to be diverging views on how to cut the cake. Most recently, Schnabel’s interview clearly suggested that she would opt for a 25bp rate cut, as would Vujcic, while others such as Lane, Villeroy and Centeno are more open to discussing a 50bp rate cut.

That said, rather than focusing on the rate cut next week, we should focus on where the policy rate will end in this cutting cycle, albeit we do not expect any verbal guidance on this. Markets may though interpret a 50bp cut as a signal of a lower terminal rate – and that may even be a signal that the ECB wants to send.

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Danske Research Team

Danske Research Team

Danske Bank A/S

Research is part of Danske Bank Markets and operate as Danske Bank's research department. The department monitors financial markets and economic trends of relevance to Danske Bank Markets and its clients.

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