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European Interest Rate Expectations are High, Euro Returns to Strengthen

by Didimax Team

The euro continued to perform well in the market. It was buoyed by expectations of a rate hike for the next policy meeting of the European Central Bank (ECB). 

When this news was written in the middle of Thursday's European session EUR/USD again rose by a nine-month high. Meanwhile, the EUR/GBP also rebounded from a one-month low position. 

President Christine Lagarde last December had revealed a plan to raise interest rates by 50 basis points. That may be done in the next few ECB meetings. 

This intention provoked controversy within people. That is why; some market participants doubted its realization. Bloomberg also reported rumours that the ECB might only raise interest rates by 25 basis points in March.

 

Investors Underestimated the Projected Rate Hike

The decision above was maybe taken by ECB after raising 50 basis points in February. Rumours from the unnamed source hit the euro rate earlier in the week. 

However, ECB officials immediately voiced a rebuttal to the rumors and revived the euro rate. Klaas Knot, head of the Dutch central bank and member of the ECB's Board of Governors, said investors underestimated the ECB's projected rate hike.

He even asserted that this institution may need to raise their rates by 50 basis points a few more times in order to lower the rate of inflation. It is not going to stop after one 50 basis point increase.

Knot said that and he was pretty sure about it. A lot of things need to address, and the experts are going to address that at a constant rate of 50 basis point increases.

50 BP Increase is Expected 

Another member of the ECB Board of Governors, Francois Villeroy de Galhau, expressed a similar message on Wednesday, he wants to remind people of the words from President Lagarde.

Those were stated in his last press conference in December: For this case, people should expect to raise interest rates at a rate of 50 basis points over a period of time. 

Well, those words are still valid today. The EUR/USD rally was also supported by the depreciation of the US dollar. Markets believe the US Federal Reserve will only raise interest rates by 25 basis points at its next FOMC meeting,

Meanwhile, the America’s economy shows signs of an increasingly visible recession. Elsewhere, The US dollar index (DXY) experienced further weakness in the Asian session on Thursday.

NZD/USD slipped by 5%, however, AUD/USD and NZD/USD instead fell short of previous record highs. AUD/USD has fallen about 0.6 percent to 0.6900s as this news was written.

Meanwhile, the NZD/USD slipped about 0.5 percent to 0.6400s. Several factors weighed on the antipodean currency duo today. First, market sentiment worsened as the release of U.S. retail sales data last night heightened fears of a global recession. 

The Australian dollar and New Zealand dollar are among the currencies that are very sensitive to such changes in sentiment, so they also weakened in the second half of the New York session. 

Market sentiment further deteriorated following two further news. Those are the release of Australian labor data and the resignation of the New Zealand PM. 

The Layoff Increases

Both are likely to have no impact in the long term, but are of concern to some market participants in the short term. Layoffs Increase Australia's employment data showed a 14.6k drop in the number of people employed in December. 

In fact, consensus expects an increase of as much as 22.5k. Australia's unemployment rate also stagnated at 3.5%, or worse than the consensus estimate pegged at 3.4%.

Developments in these data are relatively moderate, so they will not necessarily affect the policy making of the Australian central bank (RBA). 

The Australian Statistics Agency (ABS) also confirmed that labor market conditions are still tight. It is as immigration flows have boosted the growth of the productive age population beyond pre-pandemic times.

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