Economy
The global economic outlook has
become more uncertain after Britain's vote to leave the European Union, the
European Central Bank said on Thursday, reaffirming its readiness to act if
needed to support euro zone inflation.
After a spike in volatility in the
wake of the June 23 referendum, financial markets have returned to a relative
calm, but economists have warned the full economic effect of the Brexit vote
may have yet to materialize.
"Financial market volatility
following the referendum in the United Kingdom on EU membership has been
short-lived," the ECB said in its regular economic bulletin.
"However, uncertainty about
the global outlook has increased, while incoming data for the second quarter
point to subdued global activity and trade."
Surveys suggest Britain's economy
is shrinking at its fastest rate since the 2008-09 financial crisis and the
Bank of England is widely expected to cut interest rates on Thursday.
With the euro zone economy having
largely shrugged off the Brexit vote so far, the ECB reaffirmed on Thursday its
expectation of a "moderate" recovery.
This view was shared by the head
of Germany's central bank, Jens Weidmann, one of the most hawkish ECB rate
setters.
"My impression is that the
economic outlook for the currency area has not fundamentally changed through
the Brexit vote," Weidmann told German weekly Die Zeit and Italian daily
Corriere della Sera in interviews published on Thursday.
"There may well be a small
damper, but in general the upward trend will continue," he said, adding it
was too early to give any reliable forecasts for what this might mean for
future price developments.
Investors have been betting the
ECB will soon extend its 80-billion euros a month money-printing program beyond
its current end-date in March 2017 and change the terms of the scheme to avoid
hitting constraints on sovereign debt purchases.
Echoing President Mario Draghi's
July policy statement, the ECB said it was awaiting more information, including
new staff projections to be published in September, before making any decision
on new policy moves.
"If warranted to achieve its
objective, the Governing Council will act by using all the instruments
available within its mandate," the euro zone's central bank said.
Weidmann opened the door to some
changes but drew the line at touching a rule dictating that government bond
buys must reflect each country's contribution to the central bank's capital,
which makes Germany the biggest beneficiary.
"If we grant individual
countries special conditions or concentrate increasingly on highly indebted
countries than we will blur the lines between monetary policy and fiscal policy
somewhat further," Weidmann said.
Source by Reuters

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