A cyclist drives along a road under a railway bridge near the headquarters of the European Central Bank (ECB) in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany, on July 18, 2024, ahead of an ECB press conference on the Eurozone’s monetary policy.
Kirill Kudryavtsev | Afp | Getty Images
Policymakers at the European Central Bank are split on the need to consider a jumbo half-point interest rate cut in December, even as downside risks dominate on both economic growth and inflation.
The comments come shortly after the ECB delivered back-to-back interest rate cuts for the first time in 13 years at its October meeting.
The move, which marked the central bank’s third quarter-point cut this year, had been fully priced in by markets after decision-makers flagged reduced inflation risks and a weakening growth outlook.
“The truth is that the print of inflation in September was very low, way lower than what we were expecting,” Portuguese central bank chief Mario Centeno told CNBC’s Karen Tso on Wednesday.
“We need to take that into our story,” Centeno said. “After that, we need to look at the incoming data, the trend in the data that we have been observing and certainly 50 basis points can be on the table because we continue to be data dependent and the data we are getting points in that direction.”
Inflation in the euro zone was recently revised to 1.7% in September, down from an earlier official estimate of 1.8%. It compares to a print of 2.2% in August.
September was the first month when inflation in the euro zone fell below the ECB’s 2% target since June 2021, marking an end to years of excessive price growth and reinforcing expectations of further rate cuts in the near term.
Alongside Centeno, Dutch European Central Bank Governing Council member Klaas Knot said a half-point interest rate cut could not be excluded at the ECB’s December meeting. He added, however, that such a move would require some deterioration in the data.
“I think we are pretty confident about the return of inflation to our 2% target somewhere in the course of next year,” Knot told CNBC on Wednesday.
“I would also say that I see the risks surrounding that baseline as reasonably contained,” he added.
“So, if that scenario indeed plays out and if the December projections continue to also confirm that scenario then it will allow us to gradually take our foot off the brake and continue to cut rates until we will, let’s say, have reached neutral territory, where we neither simulate nor slow down the economy anymore.”
‘Look at the data’
The International Monetary Fund nevertheless said on Tuesday that, while the global fight against inflation is “almost won,” the downside risks are “increasing and now dominate the outlook.”
— CNBC’s Jenni Reid contributed to this report.