Bundesbank reiterates 'steady hand' policy

Bundesbank president Mr Ernst Welteke reiterated today that he favoured a "steady hand" policy on European interest rates and…

Bundesbank president Mr Ernst Welteke reiterated today that he favoured a "steady hand" policy on European interest rates and said he did not expect the slowdown in the euro-zone economy to last long.

In a foreword to the Bundesbank's annual report, published today, Mr Welteke said that a "steady-hand" monetary policy on the part of the European Central Bank was required to calm the financial markets.

"A predictable 'steady-hand' monetary policy can make a decisive contribution to stabilising expectations on the financial markets," he wrote.

The primary task facing the ECB was "to continue to keep inflationary risks to a minimum and counter any second-round effects arising from high oil prices."

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The report was released just a day before the ECB's governing council, the body responsible for setting euro-zone interest rates, was scheduled to hold its regular fortnightly meeting.

A large number of economists expect the euro bank to shave just a quarter of a percentage point off its key rate which has remained unchanged at 4.75 per cent since October.

But Welteke's "steady-hand" comment, a key phrase regularly interpreted by the markets as a signal for no change in rates, dampened the rate cut speculation and the euro eased against the dollar.

AFP