Europe holds off on added stimulus

FILE - In this Sept. 11, 2020 file photo, European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde attends a news conference during the Informal Meeting of Economics and Finance Ministers in Berlin, Germany.   The European Central Bank held off from strengthening its stimulus programs despite growing concern that a renewed surge in COVID-19 cases could stall the economy’s recovery from the deep downturn early this year.  The bank on Thursday, Oct. 29,  made no change to its 1.35 trillion ($1.58 trillion) pandemic emergency bond purchase program, which pumps newly created money into the economy to keep credit flowing to businesses and promote economic activity.   Hannibal Hanschke/Pool Photo via AP, File)
FILE - In this Sept. 11, 2020 file photo, European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde attends a news conference during the Informal Meeting of Economics and Finance Ministers in Berlin, Germany. The European Central Bank held off from strengthening its stimulus programs despite growing concern that a renewed surge in COVID-19 cases could stall the economy’s recovery from the deep downturn early this year. The bank on Thursday, Oct. 29, made no change to its 1.35 trillion ($1.58 trillion) pandemic emergency bond purchase program, which pumps newly created money into the economy to keep credit flowing to businesses and promote economic activity. Hannibal Hanschke/Pool Photo via AP, File)

FRANKFURT, Germany -- The European Central Bank held off from strengthening its economic stimulus, but President Christine Lagarde said there was "little doubt" that more action would be coming at its December meeting as surging coronavirus infections and new restrictions on activity threaten Europe's economy.

Lagarde said Thursday that recent data show the economy "is losing momentum more rapidly than expected" and that there had been "a clear deterioration in the near-term outlook."

The bank's staff is already working on a "recalibration" of the bank's stance ahead of the Dec. 10 meeting, said Lagarde.

"We have little doubt ... that the circumstances will warrant the recalibration and the implementation of this recalibrated package," she said.

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The bank's promise to review its position in December came in an unusual introductory paragraph to its regular statement about bond purchases and interest benchmarks. The bank said it will assess the dynamics of the pandemic and prospects for vaccine roll-out as well as new staff estimates about inflation and growth. That would lead to "a thorough reassessment of the economic outlook" at the December meeting.

Lagarde said "we are looking at everything" across the bank's set of policy tools such as interest rates, bond purchases and cheap loans to banks.

As expected, the bank made no change to its $1.58 trillion pandemic emergency bond purchase program, which pumps newly created money into the economy to keep credit flowing to businesses and promote economic activity. Those regular purchases are set to run through the middle of next year.

The central bank's key goal is to raise inflation toward its target of below but close to 2%, the level considered best for the economy. Inflation was minus 0.3% in September, partly a result of temporary measures such as a value-added tax cut in Germany but also a sign of weaker-than-optimal demand.

Economic output plunged 11.8% in the 19 countries that use the euro in the second quarter but is estimated to have rebounded in July-September by as much as 10% as businesses reopened. Figures for the quarter are to be released today.

Europe has been in part sustained by business ties between Germany, its largest economy, and China, where the pandemic hit earlier but has been largely contained, allowing activity to rebound to near-normal levels. German auto maker Volkswagen said Thursday it had increased sales in China by 3% in the third quarter over the same quarter in 2019, before covid-19.

Large amounts of stimulus funds and new spending by governments has helped ward off turmoil on financial markets and cushion the downturn. Governments have deployed furlough support programs to pay worker salaries if they are put on short hours or no hours but not laid off. That has held down the rise in unemployment, which was 8.1% in August.

Yet prospects for the last three months of the year have worsened as infection numbers have risen, raising the possibility of more coronavirus restrictions.

Germany ordered restaurants, bars and theaters to close their doors Monday, and to keep them closed until December, under what is being called "lockdown light."

Chancellor Angela Merkel warned of a "difficult winter" in a speech in parliament Thursday.

While industrial firms are doing better, services companies that depend on personal contact have been hard-hit. Airlines, hotels, restaurants and other businesses big and small have suffered a devastating drop in activity.

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