GrowthAces

EUR/USD: Eurozone inflation goes up, but ECB will stay dovish

Long
FX:EURUSD   Euro / U.S. Dollar
Macroeconomic overview

We do not expect new policy announcements when the ECB meets this week (Thursday). Therefore, the monetary policy framework will remain the same as announced on 8 December: EUR 80 billion of monthly asset purchases until March, with a slowdown to EUR 60bn per month in the remaining nine months of the year.

We think that ECB President Draghi will sound constructive, but dovish. In this regard, separating short from medium-term developments may be an important part of his communication strategy. He will probably acknowledge that risks in the short term are moving towards faster-than-expected headline inflation and a more balanced growth assessment. Importantly, however, we also expect Draghi to emphasize that uncertainty remains elevated and the medium-term outlook – most relevant for monetary policy – has not changed much from last month. Therefore, the ECB still wants financial conditions to remain very loose.

Since the December meeting, incoming data have pointed to a strengthening of the economic recovery and a sharp acceleration in headline inflation driven by energy prices, while underlying price pressure has remained weak. The good news is that most survey indicators suggest GDP growth accelerating to a pace of about 2% annualized at the turn of the year: if confirmed by hard data – and this is happening for now - this would imply some upside risks to the ECB’s growth projections. On a similar note, the inflation jump between the end of 2016 and the beginning of 2017 is likely to exceed ECB expectations, as euro-denominated oil prices are currently about 15% higher than the central bank’s technical assumption for the 2017 average.

The ECB may acknowledge recent progress on the price front, but is unlikely to be impressed by survey-base evidence, especially after having systematically revised down its core CPI and wage growth projections over the last several quarters. Benoit Coeure, usually very aligned to Draghi’s thinking, linked the 8 December announcements to shifting inflation risks, largely on the account of higher oil prices. However, he rebuffed the view that the ECB is moving towards the exit, because “we are still waiting for signs that core inflation is on the rise and will clearly exceed 1%”. Last week, Yves Mersch, a hawkish member of the Governing Council, claimed, “It is absolutely premature today to claim victory over a weak economy”.

The EUR/USD has started 2017 on a strong footing. Its upward move can be ascribed to three factors. First of all, investors have reassessed their “euphoria” that followed Donald Trump’s election and the consequent USD rally. Second, the December FOMC minutes showed some board members concerned about the impact of the strong USD on exports. And third, inflation and early activity indicators are picking up across Europe. Although the consumer price increase has been mostly oil-driven, this broad-based improvement is affecting, in a positive way, investors’ perception of the outlook and the debate has already resumed about how much accommodative monetary policy is needed across the Eurozone. Although this-week ECB meeting of 2017 is unlikely to impact the currency, the forward-looking nature of markets should keep the EUR/USD supported.

Technical analysis

The EUR/USD is weaker today in a calm trade, but remains above 14-day exponential moving average. Technical analysis supports bullish view in the short term. RSIs are biased up again and a long lower wick is in place on the monthly candle. Long upper wicks on recent daily candles are concerns though. A break above 1.0700 will have us in solid shape to reach the target.

Trading strategy

(GrowthAces.com)

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