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Goldman: Mere Nationalbank-lempelse kan være på vej

Morten W. Langer

søndag 03. januar 2016 kl. 10:37

Goldman analyse: ECB kan være på vej med yderligere pengepolitiske lempelser eller en nedsættelse af den i forvejen negative korte rente. Det vil med stor sandsynlighed tvinge blandt andet den danske Nationalbank med ned, altså med en nedsættelse af den korte rente fra minus 0,75 % til minus 0,85 % eller længere ned. Det vil blandt andet koste de danske banker dyrt.

 

As we head into 2016, a number of questions remain. Is Draghi done or will sluggish inflation “force” the former Goldmanite – gun to his head – to expand PSPP and/or take the depo rate to -0.40% (or lower)? If the ECB does cut further but doesn’t adopt a two-tiered approach to the application of NIRP, will the SNB be forced to go “nuclear” and apply negative rates to depositors in order to mitigate excess pressure on the EURCHF cross (remember, because the SNB has different rules for the application of NIRP, ECB cuts tend to impact the franc more than other currencies)? Will low inflation force Sweden to cut further despite a frightening housing bubble? Can the Norges Bank afford to keep rates in positive territory given the continued plunge in crude prices? And on and on.

For those who enjoy pondering such things, we present the following excerpts and graphics from Goldman’s Allison Nathan who looks at where we stand now, and where we’re going in the year ahead.

 

From Goldman

Where we stand

Official interest rates have fallen further in the Euro area and Sweden. The European Central Bank (ECB) lowered its deposit facility rate 10bp to -0.30% on December 3, pushing beyond levels previously described by Mario Draghi as the bank’s lower bound. The latest ECB measures fell short of market expectations, likely reducing the pressure for neighboring central banks to add stimulus; the Swiss National Bank (SNB) and Riksbank have subsequently been on hold.

Sweden’s Riksbank has been the only other central bank to push rates further into negative territory since we published in February, with cuts of 15bp in March and 10bp in July motivated by appreciation pressures on the krona. All the while, inflation—the Riksbank’s original reason for introducing negative rates—has been rising.

Government bond yields remain in negative territory. As of December 14, over 50% of European government bonds maturing in less than five years had a negative yield, roughly the same as in the run-up to the launch of ECB QE in March. Two-year government bond yields were generally lower on the year, despite some rebound after aggressively pricing further ECB easing ahead of the December meeting. (The German two-year yield, for example, bottomed out at -0.44% on December 2.) Looking beyond Europe, roughly half of two-year government bonds in the developed world trades at a negative yield.

Sovereigns have issued debt at record-low—or altogether negative—yields. In April, Switzerland became the first country to issue 10-year government bonds at a negative yield; other governments did the same at shorter maturities.

By contrast, companies with large pension deficits have struggled and continued to underperform, as the present value of their future liabilities continues to rise. Alongside mixed asset returns, pension funding ratios have continued to deteriorate. Similarly, insurance companies have struggled with falling reinvestment yields and solvency ratios.

Where we’re going

Risks that could push the ECB’s lower bound. While our base case is for the ECB to stay on hold, low inflation or a stronger euro could open the door for further monetary easing. We see the ECB’s effective lower bound in the ballpark of -0.50%. Should the ECB cut rates further, it would likely pressure neighboring economies in Europe to do the same or to implement other easing measures, particularly in cases where the local currency is pegged to the euro.

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