Musk says this is his „best and final offer“ and that if it isn’t accepted, he would „need to reconsider my position as a shareholder“. Before yesterday, Musk held a 9.1% stake in the company after this move here.
Let the memes begin.
In my view, the ECB will do what it does best. That is to kick the can down the road for as long as they possibly can afford to. However, there is a growing divide between policymakers in the central bank on the urgency to take action. As such, it isn’t going to be as straightforward as seeing the ECB sit on its hands.
The first thing to watch today will be any changes to the timeline of tapering. For now, Q3 remains the target but if the ECB brings that forward to Q2, that will start to see more hawkish undertones grow.
That said, the next policy meeting will be on 9 June so that does give the ECB some time to tinker with this. So, today may not likely be the day where they announce any hasty changes to the outlook and their plans.
As such, sticking with the status quo seems like the most viable option. And that perhaps poses some downside risk (or at least limits any major upside) to the euro and European bond yields, even if markets aren’t expecting much from the ECB today.
The next key thing to watch will be Lagarde’s press conference. The ECB will want to bide its time to wait on inflation data in the coming months before reacting. As such, Lagarde will have to try and communicate that in a clear and concise manner. Any error in communication could swing the euro either way and that is always a risk to be mindful about.
TLDR: Barring any unintended hawkish signals, the ECB is to stick with venting about the risks of higher inflation amid the Russia-Ukraine conflict while arguing to be data-dependent i.e. wanting flexibility. The door remains open for a rate hike later in the year but not before APP purchases are concluded, and that is still seen in Q3. That should keep EUR/USD between the 1.0800 to 1.0940 range at the moment.
As you can see, there’s quite a skew towards being above the expected +8.4% y/y estimate. While this is just a forecast, it does point to some expectation that there are certain quarters of the market expecting higher inflation numbers. As such, I’d wager anything above +8.7% y/y or closer towards +9.0% y/y to produce a stronger „beat“.
Meanwhile, a reading closer towards +8.0% y/y is likely to help soothe the market a little that at least the inflation ‚blow up‘ isn’t as uncontrollable as feared.
As for the reaction, the bond market is the first place to look at. The recent selling is continuing as yields are running higher and a beat on estimates will surely spur further momentum in that. In turn, the dollar is likely to catch a further tailwind – especially against the yen.
On the flip side, the opposite reaction to the above will apply; all else being equal that is.