Skip to content
Bull Bear Daily

Bull Bear Daily

Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Business
  • Domestic
  • Economy
  • Money
  • Politics
  • Top News
  • Newsletters
  • Home
  • 2025
  • January
  • 20
  • Market pricing of up to four ECB rate cuts this year is reasonable, Vujcic says
  • Economy

Market pricing of up to four ECB rate cuts this year is reasonable, Vujcic says

Bull Bear Daily January 20, 2025
2025-01-20T150609Z_2_LYNXNPEL0J0M0_RTROPTP_4_ECB-POLICY

FRANKFURT (Reuters) – Market expectations for European Central Bank interest rate cuts are reasonable and risks around the inflation outlook are broadly balanced, Croatian central bank chief Boris Vujcic said on Monday.

Investors expected as many as five rate cuts from the ECB this year but dialled back those bets since the turn of the year, primarily because they are also seeing fewer cuts from the U.S. Federal Reserve.

“There has been a repricing recently from four to five (rate cuts this year) to three to four cuts and I think it’s reasonable,” Vujcic told a webinar with LC Macro Advisors. “I don’t feel uncomfortable with the current market pricing.”

“Markets have to make these predictions, we don’t. We can always wait for the data and then decide,” Vujcic, a member of the ECB’s Governing Council, said.

Investors have fully priced a cut in the 3% deposit rate on Jan. 30 and see the benchmark down at 2% by the end of the year.

Economic data since the ECB’s last policy meeting in mid-December have been broadly in line with expectations, bolstering the credibility of projections and indicating that the current policy stance remains appropriate, Vujcic added.

Inflation, at 2.4% in December, is expected to ease back to the ECB’s 2% target by around mid-year and a key reason for easing price pressures is the weak economic outlook.

Vujcic argued that the ECB had managed to engineer a so-called soft landing, or taming inflation without causing a recession, but there was no significant upturn in growth in sight, raising the risk of economic stagnation.

Industry has been in recession, government investment is weak and private consumption has been especially low as households bolster their savings. A rise in foreign trade income has been among the few bright spots but even that came because of lower imports and not due to higher exports.

(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Tomasz Janowski and Alex Richardson)

About the Author

Bull Bear Daily

Administrator

Visit Website View All Posts

Post navigation

Previous: Trump’s crypto and Truth Social media believers bet on presidency
Next: TikTok awaits Trump reprieve as China signals open to deal

Related Stories

2025-08-22T130058Z_1_LYNXMPEL7L0IA_RTROPTP_4_EU-RUSSIA-FERTILISER-1
  • Business
  • Economy

European farmers facing higher costs after EU tariffs on Russian fertiliser imports

Bull Bear Daily August 22, 2025
2025-08-22T131240Z_2_LYNXMPEL7L0ID_RTROPTP_4_CANADA-ECONOMY-GDP
  • Economy

Canadian dollar weakens, benchmark yield slips

Bull Bear Daily August 22, 2025
2025-08-18T163721Z_1_LYNXMPEL7H0QY_RTROPTP_4_ARGENTINA-ECONOMY-RATES-3
  • Economy

Argentina’s economy expected to grow 6.4% y/y in June

Bull Bear Daily August 18, 2025

Live Market Pulse

The charting technology is provided by TradingView. Learn how to use theTradingView Stock Screener.

Sign up for our free Bull Bear Daily Newsletter!

Discover new market trends and ideas directly to your inbox.

Recent Posts

  • Tesla’s cheaper Model Y faces crowded field in Europe
  • UN chief tells countries new climate targets must go ‘futher, faster’
  • Capital One $425 million settlement with depositors should be rejected, US states say
  • Dollar extends post-Fed rebound; sterling hit by fiscal worries
  • BWX Technologies secures naval nuclear reactor component contract worth up to $2.6 billion

You may have missed

  • Newsletters

Tesla’s cheaper Model Y faces crowded field in Europe

Bull Bear Daily October 8, 2025
2025-09-24T180509Z_1_LYNXNPEL8N0W3_RTROPTP_4_UKRAINE-CRISIS-UN
  • Uncategorized

UN chief tells countries new climate targets must go ‘futher, faster’

Bull Bear Daily September 24, 2025
2025-09-24T180137Z_2_LYNXNPEL8N0W1_RTROPTP_4_CAPITAL-ONE-FIN-SETTLEMENT-2
  • Uncategorized

Capital One $425 million settlement with depositors should be rejected, US states say

Bull Bear Daily September 24, 2025
  • Newsletters

Dollar extends post-Fed rebound; sterling hit by fiscal worries

Bull Bear Daily September 19, 2025
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
Copyright 2025 © All rights reserved | Bull Bear Daily | bullbeardaily.com