ECB governing council member Gabriel Makhlouf on Tuesday argued that the euro area would need a stronger monetary policy response if it ends up in a wage-price spiral.
German industrial orders rose more than expected in February, increasing by 4.8% from the previous month. In the United States, Treasury yields slid on Tuesday after U.S. job openings suggested the labour market was finally cooling and could allow the Federal Reserve to loosen its grip on monetary policy.
After the release of data, the Fed's Loretta Mester said the
U.S. central bank likely has more interest rate rises ahead amid
signs the recent banking sector troubles have been contained.
STICKY INFLATION
Analysts said that even a recession and a drop in inflation might not end inflation fears. The so-called "Three Ds" - demographics, decarbonisation, and deglobalisation – are fueling some investors' view that a subsequent economic recovery will see a return of above-target inflation.
That is one of the reasons why some expect long-dated rates to have little to fall in this cycle, as more dovish action from central banks would result in a more significant inflation premium. Market expectations about the ECB terminal rate stood at around 3.5%, with the September 2023 ECB euro short-term rate (ESTR) forward at 3.45%, implying an ECB deposit facility rate at 3.55% by summer.
The November 2023 forward peaked at around 4% before fears of a banking crisis hit markets in mid-March.
"Yesterday's price action was another sign that lower inflationary pressures may not be enough to content the ECB," said Antoine Gaveau, European rate strategist at Citi, who pointed to recent ECB officials' comments "keeping the door to a 50bp hike in May open." Data on Tuesday showed euro zone producer prices fell more than expected, while consumers cut their inflation expectations. Italy's 10-year government bond yield rose 1 bp to 4.14%, with the spread between Italian and German 10-year yields -- a gauge of confidence in the euro zone's more indebted countries – at 186 bps. (Reporting by Stefano Rebaudo, Editing by Conor Humphries)