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Friday, March 14, 2014

Draghi Says ECB Guidance May Help to Curb Euro Strength

European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said his forward guidance may help to weaken the euro and lower real interest rates, easing the risk that inflation won’t return to the goal set by policy makers.

Guidance “creates a de facto loosening of policy stance, as real interest rates are set to fall over the projection horizon,” Draghi said in a speech in Vienna today.

“At the same time, the real interest-rate spread between the euro area and the rest of the world will probably fall, thus putting downward pressure on the exchange rate, everything else being equal.”

Draghi’s comments add to those after last week’s monetary-policy meeting when he said a strengthening euro since 2012 has kept consumer prices subdued.

While the exchange rate isn’t a policy target for the ECB, Draghi said today that the currency’s level is becoming “increasingly relevant in our assessment of price stability.”

The euro has gained about 7.2 percent against the dollar in the past year and is up 7 percent against a basket of developed-market peers.

The euro fell 0.4 percent to $1.3854 after Draghi’s remarks. It had reached $1.3967 earlier, the highest level since October 2011.

The ECB’s forward guidance states that policy makers will keep official interest rates at present or lower levels for an extended period of time.

Draghi said that too-low inflation is “currently more relevant” than too-high inflation, though the risk of deflation is “quite limited.”

Consumer price growth was 0.8 percent in February, less than half the ECB’s definition of price stability.

“Any material risk of inflation expectations becoming unanchored will be countered with additional monetary policy measures,” he said.

bloomberg.com

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