Morgan Stanley holds a contrarian view that the European Central Bank will cut rates in June and September. This is based on the expectation that an upcoming inflation print will fall below the ECB's target, fundamentally shifting the policy debate. A below-target reading would reverse the burden of proof, forcing policymakers to justify not easing policy further.
A significant policy divergence is expected in Europe. The ECB is forecast to hold rates steady, balancing cyclical growth against structural weaknesses. In contrast, the Bank of England is projected to deliver three cuts, driven by the UK's unique combination of rising unemployment and a rapidly improving inflation outlook.
In 2026, major central banks will diverge significantly. The U.S. Fed and ECB are expected to cut rates in response to slowing growth and disinflation. In stark contrast, the Bank of Japan is poised to hike rates as it finally achieves reflation, making it the sole hawkish outlier among developed market central banks.
The Federal Reserve cut rates despite inflation remaining above the 2% target. This action suggests a strategic shift towards tolerating slightly higher inflation—a "soft target" around 2.8%—to prevent the non-linear, snowballing effect of rising unemployment, which is much harder to reverse once it begins.
ECB President Lagarde's statement that disinflation is over is likely a backward-looking comment on the progress from 10% inflation. However, the ECB’s own forward-looking forecasts project inflation will fall below its 2% target, suggesting that future rate cuts are more likely than the confident public rhetoric implies.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, a rate cut is not automatically negative for a currency. In economies like Sweden or the Eurozone, a cut can be perceived as growth-positive, thereby supporting the currency. This contrasts with situations like New Zealand, where cuts are a response to poor data and are thus currency-negative, highlighting the importance of economic context.
Contradicting ECB President Lagarde, Morgan Stanley's economists believe the disinflationary process in the Euro Area is not over. They forecast an underlying output gap will cause inflation to undershoot its 2% target, necessitating two more rate cuts from the ECB in 2026.
The forecast for one or two Federal Reserve rate cuts in the second half of 2026 is conditional on a key inflation dynamic. The analyst believes firms will finish passing through tariff costs to consumers by the end of the first quarter. Only after this temporary inflationary pressure subsides can the Fed gain the confidence needed to push policy closer to neutral.
A significant split in monetary policy is expected in 2026. The US Federal Reserve and European Central Bank are predicted to cut rates in response to slowing growth and easing inflation. In stark contrast, the Bank of Japan is on a hiking cycle, aiming to reflate its economy.
As China's domestic growth slows, it is flooding the world, particularly Europe, with cheap exports. This acts as a powerful disinflationary force that may compel the European Central Bank (ECB) to cut interest rates sooner than anticipated, regardless of their current hawkish rhetoric.
Despite facing similar pressures like high inflation and slowing labor markets, the US Federal Reserve is cutting rates while European central banks remain on hold. This significant policy divergence is expected to weaken the U.S. dollar and create cross-Atlantic investment opportunities.