There was a bit of a cold shower for markets this morning which were merrily levitating to new all time highs on a one-two punch of far stronger European inflation and a (hawkish) ECB governing council member saying the ECB should discuss cutting crisis aid next week.
Eurostat reported that in August, flash HICP inflation for the euroarea came in a red hot 3.0%, sharply higher from 2.2% in July and smashing expectations of a 2.7% print and coming at the highest since 2011. Core HICP inflation, excluding energy, food, alcohol and tobacco, also surged, more than doubling to 1.59%yoy, an 88bps increase.
The breakdown by main expenditure categories showed services inflation rose 0.2pp to 1.1%, and non-energy industrial goods inflation rose 2.0pp to 2.7%. Of the non-core components, energy inflation rose 1.1pp to 15.4%, while food, alcohol and tobacco inflation rose 0.4pp to 2.0%.
Following the inflation print and Holzmann comment, German bunds extended a decline with 10-year yields rising four basis points to -0.40%, the highest in over a month. The euro rose 0.3% to $1.1837.
“If enough people share my opinion, we will certainly advise the Executive Board to slow down purchases in the fourth quarter and more so in the first,” Holzmann said. “We will spend as much as needed.”
The problem is that Holzmann is one of the lone hawks on the ECB council, and despite Europe's roaring inflation, it is unlikely that the central bank with the €6.5 trillion balance sheet will do anything to reverse its auto pilot in the coming months.
So what will the ECB do?
In a recent report from Nomura's Chiara Zingarelli, she laid out a blueprint for what the ECB's PEPP easing could look like.
Specifically, she said that September’s ECB meeting will see it making a decision on the pace of its PEPP purchases for Q4 2021. While the ECB is likely to discuss the future of its asset purchase programmes (APP and PEPP) in September, she believes it is only likely to make a firm decision at the end of the year – once the evolution of the pandemic becomes clearer and European countries’ fiscal plans for 2022 have been published.