logo
ECB's Kazimir says big unexpected economic shift needed for September rate cut

ECB's Kazimir says big unexpected economic shift needed for September rate cut

Zawya3 days ago
FRANKFURT - The European Central Bank is not in any hurry to lower borrowing costs again and it would take a major unexpected economic shift to make a case for action in September, Slovak policymaker Peter Kazimir said on Monday.
The ECB kept rates unchanged last week as widely expected and offered a moderately upbeat assessment on the bloc's economy, prompting investors to scale back their bets on further policy easing.
"When it comes to incoming data, I don't expect anything significant to happen that would force my hand to act as soon as September," Kazimir said in a blog post. "It would take something like clear signs of unravelling in the labour market for me to act."
This assessment aligns with comments from ECB sources that the bar for a cut in September is high after the bank has already halved rates to 2% since June 2024.
Sunday's EU trade deal with the U.S. was clearly a positive since it reduces uncertainty for businesses, but the impact on prices, the ECB's chief focus, was still unclear.
"This (trade deal) can help to ease concerns and regain confidence," Kazimir said. "We now have more clarity, but we will need time to see to what extent this new environment will affect inflation."
Weighing in on a key debate among policymakers, Kazimir said he did not see a risk that inflation would now undershoot the ECB's 2% target, much like it did in the pre-pandemic decade.
Price growth is seen dipping below 2% next year and only rebounding in 2027, raising worries among some governors that once inflation is well below 2%, expectations also fall and could perpetuate weak price growth.
"I see no looming spectre of a sustained undershooting of inflation," Kazimir, an outspoken policy hawk, said. "The expected dips below target in the coming year should be temporary."
He added that trade turmoil also created upside risks for inflation, particularly if global supply chains were realigned, creating bottlenecks.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New AI search feature launched by Google
New AI search feature launched by Google

Tahawul Tech

time13 minutes ago

  • Tahawul Tech

New AI search feature launched by Google

In the UK, Google is launching a new search tool that will generate results using AI, marking a drastic change to the world's most popular search engine. Instead of a list of search results showing links to other websites in blue type, people who choose 'AI Mode' will be given an answer written in a conversational style, containing far fewer links to other pages. The new search tool will not replace Google's existing search platform, which processes billions of queries every day. But experts predict such tools will increasingly incorporate AI, a shift that is concerning organisations, firms and publishers, which rely on search traffic. Businesses ranging from retailers to news outlets are currently supported by web traffic funnelled their way from Google's search results. Firms can also pay for prime spots on the results lists, as a form of advertising. A shift towards AI-generated responses, containing fewer direct links, could up-end that model. The Daily Mail claims the number of people who click its links from Google search results has fallen by around 50% on both desktop and mobile traffic since Google introduced its AI Overview feature, which summarises results. Hema Budaraju, Google's Product Manager for search, said the firm had not yet finalised how advertising revenue for AI Mode would work, or whether firms would be able to pay to be included in the response. But it is already concerning some businesses, who say people are less likely to click through to their websites via the links contained in an AI summary. Ms Budaraju disagreed with this characterisation. 'I would say that I think people are going to use these technologies to unlock newer information-seeking journeys,' she said. 'These kind of questions didn't happen before, and now you made it really possible for people to express anything a lot more naturally.' What is Google AI Mode? People are increasingly turning to AI chatbots such as ChatGPT instead of traditional search engines to find quick, simple answers to questions, even though they are not always accurate. Google's new tool, which uses its Gemini AI platform to generate its answers, has already been launched in the US and India. It is being rolled out in the UK over the next few days. For now, AI Mode will be optional and will appear both as a tab and an option within the search box itself. The tech giant said it was responding to changes in the way people use its search engine to ask more complicated questions. 'About two years ago, if you spilled coffee on your carpet, you would have [searched for] clean carpet stain,' said Ms Budaraju. 'That's how you would have probably keyworded your way through. Now, my query is likely to be, I spilled coffee on my Berber carpet, I'm looking for a cleaner that is pet friendly'. The BBC was unable to test the tool with its own questions during the demo because the tool had not yet been activated in the UK. But Google provided a demo using the example of someone searching for suitable places to take a young family strawberry picking. However, the answers it provided seemed to be spread over a wide geographical area. It featured a handful of links to businesses, including their locations on a map, but they came lower down in the response, compared to a traditional Google search. News model A recent study by the Pew Research Centre suggested that people only clicked a link once in every 100 searches when there was an AI summary at the top of the page. Google argues the research methodology in that study was flawed. Rosa Curling, Director of the campaign group Foxglove, said she was concerned what the increased use of AI might mean for news organisations. Although AI-generated summaries are often inaccurate, people weren't clicking through to the original news items they were based on, she said, undermining the business models of news organisations. 'What the AI summary now does is makes sure that the readers' eyes stay on the Google web page,' she said. 'And the advertising revenue of those news outlets is being massively impacted.' Google said it already generates more than two billion AI Overview boxes every day in more than 40 languages, although not in the EU, where legislation precludes it. There are also significant concerns about the environmental impact of increased AI use. Running AI requires huge data centres that use a lot of power and clean water. Ms Budaraju said Google remained committed to sustainability. 'We are constantly, as Google and as Search, evolving sustainable ways to serve technology,' she said. Source: BBC News Image Credit: Google

Covestro sticks to ADNOC deal timeline as sales miss expectations
Covestro sticks to ADNOC deal timeline as sales miss expectations

Zawya

time13 minutes ago

  • Zawya

Covestro sticks to ADNOC deal timeline as sales miss expectations

German chemicals maker Covestro missed second-quarter sales expectations on Thursday as U.S. trade policies weighed on prices, but expressed confidence its takeover by Abu Dhabi's ADNOC would be sealed this year despite an EU competition probe. Covestro, whose products include foam chemicals used in mattresses, car seats and insulation for buildings, said the prospect of U.S. higher tariffs had led to a huge oversupply of products to the market there, particularly from the Asia-Pacific region, which had then caused by a big drop in prices. The company's revenues fell 8.4% to 3.38 billion euros ($3.86 billion) in April-June, missing analysts' average estimate of 3.55 billion euros in a company-provided consensus. "At the moment, demand is too weak to absorb the partial oversupply," Chief Financial Officer Christian Baier told Reuters in an interview. Earlier this month, Covestro cut its full-year earnings forecast for the second time this year. It now sees earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation within a range of 700 million euros to 1.1 billion euros, down from a previously expected 1 billion euros to 1.4 billion euros. ADNOC EXPECTATIONS UNCHANGED Baier said Covestro's 14.7-billion-euro takeover by Abu Dhabi state oil giant ADNOC should be finalised in the second half of the year, despite European Union regulators saying on Monday that they had opened an investigation into potential market distortions from the deal due to foreign subsidies. "We are very confident that we will implement the transaction in the second half of the year," Baier said. At 0835 GMT, Covestro shares were up 0.5% at 60.56 euros. ADNOC struck the deal last October, marking its biggest ever acquisition and one of the largest foreign takeovers of an EU company by a Gulf state. ($1 = 0.8751 euros) (Reporting by Bartosz Dabrowski and Patricia Weiss. Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Mark Potter)

Shell's profit drops by almost a third but easily beats expectations
Shell's profit drops by almost a third but easily beats expectations

Zawya

time2 hours ago

  • Zawya

Shell's profit drops by almost a third but easily beats expectations

LONDON - Shell's second-quarter adjusted earnings, its definition of net profit, tumbled by almost a third on Thursday, dragged down by a drop in oil prices, but still easily beat analysts' forecasts. The oil major said it would maintain the pace of its share buyback programme at $3.5 billion over the next three months, the 15th consecutive quarter of at least $3 billion. Shell has, meanwhile, achieved $3.9 billion in cost cuts compared with 2022, part of a cost-cutting programme aimed at saving between $5 billion and $7 billion by the end of 2028. It recorded cash flow from operations of $11.9 billion in the quarter, down from $13.5 billion a year ago. Together with $2.1 billion in dividends, that brings shareholder distributions to 46% of operating cashflow, within its 40% to 50% guided range. Shell's adjusted earnings reached $4.264 billion in the second quarter, smashing the $3.74 billion average in an analyst poll provided by the company but down 32% from a year ago. Global benchmark Brent crude prices averaged around $67 a barrel during the April-to-June quarter, compared with $75 a barrel in the first quarter and $85 a year earlier. Crude oil prices fell in the quarter as OPEC+, made up of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies such as Russia, began unwinding self-imposed production cuts aimed at supporting the market. Their most recent decision calls for an oil output increase of 548,000 barrels per day in August. Shell had guided in a trading update that it expected earnings to be hit by weaker trading in its integrated gas division and losses at its chemicals and products operations after an outage at its U.S. Monaca polymer plant.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store