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efta-01458963DOJ Data Set 10OtherEFTA01458963
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8 December 2015
World Outlook 2016: Managing with less liquidity
easing moves of the cycle. The outlook for economic recovery is not strong,
but modestly above-trend economic growth means a gradual narrowing of the
output gap and hence a gradual normalisation of core inflation. We expect that
roughly a year from now the ECB will have to think about whether to extend
QE again or to taper in 2017. It may be slightly more marginal after what
happened on 3 December, but the balance of probabilities suggests that a
tapering discussion is likely to take place.
On current expectations, core inflation will have risen to within a couple of
tenths of Its historical average in H2 2016 and
be on course for a further
correction upwards in 2017 and 2018. The ECB has tended to announce new
unconventional policy measures when the two-year ahead consensus headline
inflation forecast is 1.6% or lower and tighten policy when it is 1.9% or higher.
If our forecasts for cons and non-core inflation are correct
in particular ow
expectation for rise in oil prices in 2017 — headline inflation ought to satisfy
the criterion for tightening policy.
Mario Draghi is likely to be cautious. A sustainable correction in inflation is the
objective - this means more than just reaching the inflation target for one year.
The ECB will be nervous of creating its own 'taper tantrum'. We expect the
ECB to taper its QE purchases, meaning that purchases will continue after the
current scheduled end date of March 2017 at a declining rate. A decision to
taper is the first step towards exit and that is likely to result in a euro fixed
income market correction/normalisation later in 2016, tightening financial
conditions. We see the first ECB policy rate hike only at the end of 2018.
The risk is that oil prices continue to decline in the near term and weigh on
headline inflation. If this weakens medium-term inflation expectations, the late-
2016 tapering risk will dissipate and the pressure for further ECB easing will
grow.
Political risks to rise into 2017
In Spain we think the tail risk of a radical party having a position of influence
within the new government is low. Beyond that, however, the euro area is
dotted with potential risks. Portugal's minority Socialist government looks
unlikely to survive a major test, particularly if it requires more austerity and
reform. The Catalan independence bid is a source of uncertainty. Ireland's
outgoing coalition has a tailwind from strong GDP growth but is short of
majority on current polls. Italy is the peripheral with the largest proportion of
votes going to eurosceptic and populist parties. The risk is that the 2018 Italian
election is brought forward one year. Opinion polls leave the UK referendum
on EU membership — possibly in late 2016 — too close to call for now.
The areatest political tests for Europe next year come from the refugee and
terror crises. The conservative backlash in Germany against Merkel's initial
welcoming is very gradually narrowing differences across countries on how
best to address the refugee wave. The new terror dimension to the iefugee
crisis we believe will more likely than not lead Europe to a more unified stance.
Germany may be more willing to compromise on otherwise more divisive
issues like Greece debt and fiscal easing to secure a better deal for refugees,
for example, or more funds to deal with the crisis 'at source'.
However, we do not expect any real progress on euro area integration —
greater fiscal autonomy as a compromise for Catalonia would be the opposite
of what a stronger euro area requires — nor do we expect the unified stance
to last into 2017. The closer we get to the German, French and Dutch
elections in 2017. the more disharmonious Europe is likely to sound. Political
uncertainty will likely be another hurdle to growth in 2017 while elections
create reasons for further delays to structural reforms.
Page 26
Figure 8: Balance of probabilities
points to initial ECB tapering
discussion in late 2016
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CONFIDENTIAL - PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e)
CONFIDENTIAL
SDNY_GM_00265317
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