The European Central Bank’s latest decision to raise interest rates by 0.5% was widely expected as was the indication that the bond portfolio will be reduced by EUR15bn per month from 1 March. Even the forewarning in the policy statement that rates will be raised again by 0.5% in March was already discounted by investors.
But the tone of the ECB statement and of President Lagarde during the press conference was hawkish. Lagarde emphasised that markets should note the ECB's determination to raise interest rates 'as much as necessary' to lower inflation to 2% in a timely manner.
Although not unanticipated, such a hawkish message would normally be expected to depress market sentiment as expected short-term interest rates and long-term government bond yields are adjusted higher. This would also usually result in a strengthening of the euro exchange rate but weigh on equity prices.
However, last week’s market reaction was the opposite. Futures contracts on short-term interest rates lowered by about 0.25% both the expected peak and the level at which rates are expected to settle in the medium term (see Chart 1). Government bond yields fell violently with German 10-year bonds falling by 20 bps and Italian yields by 40 bps. The rally in equity markets intensified and the EUR/USD exchange rate lost everything it had gained the day before after the Federal Reserve meeting.