European Central Bank: I see that inflation is approaching the objective of the ECB – Luis de Guindos

The vice president of the European Central Bank (ECB), Luis de Guindos, said Wednesday that “I see inflation approaching the objective of the ECB.”

More comments

I am not sure where the interest rates of the ECB will end.

The neutral rate is not very useful in policy configuration.

We could see an increase in inflation in the coming months due to energy.

The vicious circle of commercial tariffs should be avoided.

Market reaction

EUR/USD It maintains its rank about 1,0400 after these comments, rising 0.22% in the day.

BCE FAQS


The European Central Bank (ECB), based in Frankfurt (Germany), is the euro zone reserve bank. The ECB sets interest rates and manages the monetary policy of the region.
The main mandate of the ECB is to maintain prices stability, which means maintaining inflation around 2%. Its main tool to achieve this is to raise or lower interest rates. Relatively high interest rates often translate into a stronger euro, and vice versa.
The BCE Governing Council adopts monetary policy decisions in meetings that are held eight times a year. The decisions are adopted by the directors of the national banks of the euro zone and six permanent members, including the president of the ECB, Christine Lagarde.


In extreme situations, the European Central Bank can launch a political tool called Quantitative Easing (quantitative relaxation). The QE is the process by which the ECB prints euros and uses them to buy assets (normally state or business bonds) to banks and other financial institutions. The result is usually a weaker euro ..
The QE is a last resort when it is unlikely that a simple decrease in interest rates achieves the price stability objective. The ECB used it during the great financial crisis of 2009-11, in 2015 when inflation remained stubbornly low, as well as during the Coronavirus pandemic.


The quantitative hardening (QT) is the reverse of the QE. It is carried out after the QE, when economic recovery is underway and inflation begins to increase. While in which the European Central Bank (ECB) buys state and business bonds from financial institutions to provide liquidity, in the QT the ECB stops buying more bonds and stops reinvesting the main one that expires of the bonds that already already It has. It is usually positive (or bullish) for the euro.

Source: Fx Street

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