Tightening Comes Even to Ridiculous ECB Sooner, Faster as Seven EU Countries Hit by 10%-16% Inflation, Four by over 9%
The ECB created the greatest corporate bond bubble ever. Now junk bonds get crushed, yields already doubled, set to double again, and again, cleansing out the zombies.
The end of QE “is very likely to happen in the course of the third quarter with a high probability that it will be early in the quarter if numbers continue to be the way we have seen them,” President Christine Lagarde told CNBC in an interview today.
“But we have to be data-dependent and we will be sequential,” she said.
This moves the end of QE to the early part of the third quarter, so July, and maybe August. In the ECB policy statement last week, the ECB only said that QE “should be concluded in the third quarter,” and that had moved the end of QE to September.
With “data dependent” she means the ECB will watch with stunning open mouth how inflation is now raging further and deeper and more insidiously into the economy, tearing up the ECB’s philosophy that NIRP [Negative Interest Rate Policy] and QE don’t destroy the monetary system.
With “sequential” she means that QE will end first before rates are being hiked. So if QE ends early in Q3, rates could be raised starting in Q3, rather than Q4.
And now it’s not just once before year-end. “How much, how many times, remains to be seen,” she said, leaving the number and size of the rate hikes up to our imagination.
This has now been the crescendo all year: Every time someone at the ECB says something, it’s a little more hawkish – if that’s the right term – than before, and everything is getting moved forward. The taper has already been sped up. Now the end of the taper is being further sped up. And the rate hikes are being sped up.
The ECB’s deposit rate is still negative (-0.5%), and some banks are charging their customers, even retail customers, for their deposits, thereby turning interest rates into ECB-inflicted punishment rates.
Now the bets are lining up that the ECB will abandon NIRP this year, and raise its policy rate above 0% before the end of the year, something that ECB Governing Council member Pierre Wunsch suggested this week.
While the raging inflation in the US is terrible, with CPI inflation at 8.5% in March, in numerous EU countries, it is much worse.
In seven of the 29 EU countries, the “harmonized” (calculated the same way for all countries) inflation rate is in the double digits topping out in Lithuania at 15.6%. In four more EU countries, including Spain, the inflation rate is above 9%. Germany’s inflation rate of 7.6% is sending shockwaves through the country.
This inflation shock is not kidding around:
EU countries by inflation rates, for March |
|
Lithuania | 15.6% |
Estonia | 14.8% |
Czechia | 11.9% |
Netherlands | 11.7% |
Latvia | 11.5% |
Bulgaria | 10.5% |
Poland | 10.2% |
Spain | 9.8% |
Romania | 9.6% |
Slovakia | 9.6% |
Belgium | 9.3% |
Hungary | 8.6% |
Greece | 8.0% |
Luxembourg | 7.9% |
Germany | 7.6% |
Croatia | 7.3% |
Ireland | 6.9% |
Italy | 6.8% |
Austria | 6.7% |
Sweden | 6.3% |
Cyprus | 6.2% |
Denmark | 6.0% |
Slovenia | 6.0% |
Finland | 5.8% |
Portugal | 5.5% |
France | 5.1% |
Malta | 4.5% |
The ECB’s NIRP policy, and its policy of buying not only government bonds and housing bonds, but large amounts of corporate bonds, has created the greatest corporate bond bubble of all times, with even the average euro junk bond yield falling to a ridiculously low 2.1% in November 2017. And still in September 2021, it was back at 2.25%, for an average junk bond!
These companies have a considerable chance of defaulting on their bonds – that’s why they’re junk-rated. And now the holders of these bonds are not only confronted with credit risk (default), but also the end of the ECB’s corporate bond-buying orgy, and higher interest rates that will make it more difficult for these cash-flow negative companies to borrow to fund their negative cash flows and keep operating.
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