The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Market outlook: “The ECB is under exceptional pressure to act”

2022-12-19T07:34:50.938Z


The asset manager Fiduka, founded by Kostolany, advises using price declines to get started. Managing director Marco Herrmann expects price fluctuations.


The interest rate outlook of the European Central Bank (ECB) and the US Federal Reserve scared investors and caused significant price losses on the stock markets.

For Marco Herrmann, Managing Director of the Munich-based asset manager Fiduka, which was founded in 1971 by André Kostolany and Gottfried Heller, nothing was announced at the Fed and ECB press conferences other than that the monetary policy reins must be tightened further - and this despite the pleasing decline in inflation rates everything in the United States.

Markus Fruehauf

Editor in Business.

  • Follow I follow

According to Herrmann, after two further interest rate hikes, the peak in key interest rates should be just over 5 percent and thus likely to be on par with inflation.

"Such a relationship used to be the norm," he adds in an interview with the FAZ.

For him, however, the pressure to act in the euro zone remains “extremely great”.

This applies in particular against the background of the increased inflation forecasts for 2023 of 6.3 percent on average for the year compared to 5.5 percent previously.

"Cosmetic in nature"

Although there will be inflation-reducing base effects in energy costs over the course of the year, the classic second-round effects can be expected in many other areas, particularly in the labor markets and in services.

The managing director of Fiduka sees the ECB's announcement that it will start reducing its bond holdings in March as of a cosmetic nature.

The ECB intends to reduce its holdings by EUR 15 billion a month by the end of June and then decide how to proceed.

According to Herrmann, the adjustments should not have a major impact on the financial markets.

The Fed is setting a completely different pace here with around six times the volume.

Use price declines to get started cheaply

Bond markets in Europe have responded to the decisions by selling, pushing up yields on both the short and long ends.

"The expectations priced in another interest rate hike of a quarter of a percentage point, which we still think is a bit too optimistic," says Herrmann.

Even now, ten-year Bunds are yielding only 2.15 percent with inflation around 10 percent.

In the United States, investors are more likely to assume a Fed-induced recession, which is why the yield curve will remain very inverted, meaning that long-term yields are significantly lower than short-term ones.

For euro investors, Fiduka still recommends investing in bonds with a maximum term of four years.

“As expected, the stock markets will initially remain volatile, but we believe that stronger price setbacks remain worth buying.” This means that investors should use stronger price falls as a cheap entry point.

"This crisis will also pass, and we will look forward to a better future again," says Herrmann with conviction.

Source: faz

All news articles on 2022-12-19

You may like

Life/Entertain 2024-03-06T20:45:32.376Z
News/Politics 2024-03-06T16:46:38.089Z
News/Politics 2024-02-26T17:32:38.226Z
News/Politics 2024-04-11T13:12:01.614Z

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.