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The ECB raises rates by half a point. Lunge by Crosetto: 'Christmas gift decided lightly'

2022-12-16T07:30:08.956Z


Lagarde: 'Rome should soon ratify the reform of the Mes'. Giorgetti: 'I'm not going against Parliament, he will express himself'. Crosetto: 'I didn't understand the Christmas present'. Salvini: 'Disconcerting to burn billions of savings' (ANSA)


The ECB goes into hawkish mode: a new tightening of rates, the promise that they will increase again "at a rate of 50 basis points at a time for a certain period", and from March the bonds bought in the last eight years will begin to be unloaded on the market.

And so - also thanks to a reminder from Christine Lagarde on the exposed nerve of the Mes - in a few minutes the balance that had marked the first weeks of the Meloni government wavers: the spread rears up, the Stock Exchange goes down and the majority - after a executive debut in the name of prudence on economic issues - clashes openly with a European institution.

Both the decisive tightening that brings the rate on deposits to 2% and that on refinancing to 2.50%, as well as the start of the 'quantitative tightening' that puts an end to the Draghi era were more or less expected.

ECB rate hike


The Fed and Bank of England just did the same.

However, the ECB's commitment to go straight on was not obvious: "Anyone who thinks there is a pivot is wrong", warns the president Christine Lagarde in the press conference, freezing the expectations of an ECB that has reached the 'half point'.

And so, after months of sober tones with the EU, Defense Minister Guido Crosetto is not holding back.

very close to the premier: on Twitter he posted a graph with the free fall of the price of BTPs, alongside "decisions taken and communicated lightly and detachedly".

And then: "I didn't understand the Christmas present that President Lagarde wanted to give to Italy".

It will be the impact on the Stock Exchanges that amplified the ECB effect: Milan closes at -3.45%, worst in Europe, Frankfurt and Paris lose more than 3%.

It will be that,

after weeks of respite, for the first time under the Meloni government the spread flashes red: it closes at 206 after a peak at 208, from just over 180 a few days ago.

The yield of the ten-year BTP jumps by more than 30 basis points as not seen since 2020 up to a peak of 4.18%.

The perceived Italy-risk exceeds that of Greece and all other euro partners.

In addition, there is Lagarde's exit on stomach aches in ratifying the Mes of the "outlier" Italian government, the only "exception" among the European partners after the yes of the German Constitutional Court.

"We hope that Italy will quickly ratify the reform of the Mes" to complete the banking union, Lagarde limits himself to replying.

This is enough to raise the clash on the state-saving mechanism,

uncovered nerve of sovereigns for years.

"

the nervousness revolves around a 2023 in which the ECB will step aside as a debt buyer after having accumulated something like 733 billion BTPs over the years together with Bank of Italy.

A 'heavy' 2023: 330 billion gross emissions are estimated for Italy alone, and a record 539 billion for Germany.

The effects on the markets are likely to be seen from January, when auctions will resume, and the farewell of the ECB, and also the retreating banks, explains the appeals for a 'patriotic BTP' by drawing on household savings.

The ECB, on the other hand, makes aid to politics fade on the horizon.

He forecasts a 'soft' recession (-0.2% in the fourth quarter and -0.1% in January-March), not the bloodbath feared a few months ago.

While the real problem remains inflation, at 6,

4% in 2023 and still above the 2% target in 2025. A figure that forces the ECB to show itself hawkish.

To avoid an inflation of expectations that would become self-fulfilling.

And to manage the 'hawks' in the Governing Council: the reconstructions say that over one in three would have liked a third consecutive three-quarter point hike.

They would have been satisfied with the 'half a point' only in exchange for the commitment on future increases, and on the 'quantitative tightening' that rewinds the tape of the Draghi years.

the reconstructions say that over one in three would have liked a third consecutive three-quarter point hike.

They would have been satisfied with the 'half a point' only in exchange for the commitment on future increases, and on the 'quantitative tightening' that rewinds the tape of the Draghi years.

the reconstructions say that over one in three would have liked a third consecutive three-quarter point hike.

They would have been satisfied with the 'half a point' only in exchange for the commitment on future increases, and on the 'quantitative tightening' that rewinds the tape of the Draghi years.

"It is incredible, disconcerting and worrying that while there is a government that is doing everything to increase salaries and pensions and cut taxes, the ECB, on an afternoon in mid-December, approves a law that burns billions of euros of savings in Italy and throughout Europe by making the spread jump".

Thus the leader of the League and Minister of Infrastructure, Matteo Salvini

.

"Certain choices-he added-should be pondered and explained".

The ECB's approach "is at least a questionable approach. It's not done like this, it doesn't work like that".

Source: ansa

All life articles on 2022-12-16

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