Inflation data suggest ECB will move slowly on rates
The euro zone’s latest inflation numbers , published this week, were slightly stickier than expected with headline price growth stuck at 2.4% for April and core inflation (at 2.7%) coming down more slowly than analysts had forecast.
The headline figure was flat because food inflation accelerated from 2.6% to 2.8%, while energy prices dropped more slowly than expected, from -1.8% to -0.6% compared to April last year.
While the outlook for prices is still positive, in that the euro zone remains on a disinflationary path, the latest numbers serve as a warning that the European Central Bank (ECB), when it finally starts reducing interest rates, is likely to move slowly and will – according to Dutch bank ING – “take its time in normalising rates”.
Ironically stronger-than-expected growth numbers for EU economies represent an upside risk for inflation. With real wages rising and labour markets still strong, Frankfurt policymakers will, however, feel they have time on their side.
The more cautious outlook on rates was reflected in Bank of Ireland’s latest trading update. The lender said it now expects its full-year net interest income to decline by only 3-4 per cent compared to its previous forecast for a 5-6 per cent drop.
The bank had previously assumed the ECB would cut its key deposit rate from 4 per cent to 2.75 per cent by the end of the year. It now expects rates across the euro zone, the UK and the US to be a quarter of a percentage point higher than previously forecast at the end of the year.
The ECB’s expected pivot in monetary policy in June is still on the cards but mortgage holders won’t have much to celebrate.
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World of Work
Sleep and rest are not the same
Have we been getting it all wrong about sleep? Are the recommended eight hours not the panacea we thought they were and is there another way to fight the fatigue that has become a permanent fixture in so many people’s lives? The short answer is yes, mainly because we’ve been confusing sleep with rest and they’re not the same thing.
Saundra Dalton-Smith is a medical physician and expert on workplace wellbeing and burnout prevention. She says that by erroneously combining the concepts of sleep and rest, “we have dumbed down rest to the point where it appears ineffective”.
Dalton-Smith adds that while high-quality sleep is important, it’s a mistake to confuse it with rest. Very often what tired people need is more rest, not more sleep. This also explains why those who get a decent amount of shut-eye, and don’t have an underlying illness or medical condition, can still end up feeling chronically tired.
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In Other News
Refugee payments up for discussion as Dublin tent camp is dismantled
Ministers are set to consider a further cut in payments to Ukrainian refugees and will meet today to discuss the Government’s communication plan after a tented encampment for asylum seekers in Mount Street was removed on Wednesday.
Some 285 single men were offered accommodation: 186 at Citywest Hotel and a further 99 at Crooksling in southwest Dublin. However, at least 30 men who previously slept in tents pitched outside the International Protection Office were without accommodation last night.
Debate about the best way to manage migration comes amid continuing tension between the British and Irish governments around the issue of returning asylum seekers who arrive into Ireland over the land border.
Thursday’s most read
Inside Business podcast
Shares in Apple have fallen over 8% this year, wiping about €300 billion off its market value as it battles declining sales in China, regulatory scrutiny of its app store, and mounting concerns that the company has lost its edge on innovation, especially in the field of AI. But is Apple’s recent decline likely to continue in the longer term? Inside Business podcast host, Ciarán Hancock gets a range of perspectives on the issues affecting Apple and its prospects.
Listen to Inside Business: Has Apple Inc run out of ideas?
Highlights this week
One to Watch
Just a day after Minister éamon Ryan published The Future Framework for Offshore Renewable Energy, setting out a policy pathway for Ireland to deliver 20GW of offshore wind by 2040 - more than three times the total electricity volumes currently generated in the State - through the use of fixed turbines off the south and east coasts, Wind Energy Ireland hosts a two-day offshore wind conference today and tomorrow in Dublin. It will be attended by industry leaders and policymakers.
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