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The European Central Bank will debate next week whether to end bond purchases later this year, the bank’s chief economist said on Wednesday, a hawkish message seen preparing investors for another cut in stimulus.

Having revived growth with an unprecedented 2.55 trillion euro ($3-trillion) bond-buying scheme, ECB policy-makers must decide when to end the purchases as the threat of deflation is long gone and the bloc is on its best growth run in a decade.

While policy-makers are in broad agreement that the purchases should end this year, ECB president Mario Draghi has avoided any formal discussion about winding down the program, looking for more evidence that inflation is on a sustained rebound.

But comments from Peter Praet, a close Draghi ally, suggest that the ECB is pleased with the rise in inflation, raising the risk that a decision may come sooner rather than later.

“Next week, the Governing Council will have to assess whether progress so far has been sufficient to warrant a gradual unwinding of our net purchases,” he said in his last remarks before the ECB’s next policy meeting, noting that it will be a “judgment” call.

Euro zone bond yield rose and the euro hit a 10-day high against the dollar on comments from Mr. Praet, seen as one of the most dovish members of the Governing Council.

Some analysts took the comment to suggest a decision is coming at the June 14 meeting, but others saw it as the starting gun in a debate that will likely culminate in a decision in July.

“We still don’t think that the ECB will easily give away flexibility and room for manoeuvre on QE in a situation in which downside risks to the economic outlook have increased and political risks could easily re-emerge,” ING economist Carsten Brzeski said.

JUNE OR JULY?

Major policy changes have been taken in two steps in recent years with Mr. Draghi announcing preparations for a change in one meeting, then following through six weeks later.

The bank’s meeting next week is in Riga, Latvia, making a major decision more difficult. External meetings away from the ECB’s Frankfurt headquarters, held just once a year, involve protocol functions with local officials, leaving less time for substantial work.

But Mr. Praet’s comments were a clear signal that when a decision is made, it is likely to be about gradually winding down the program as progress has been made in the ECB’s three inflation criteria.

“Signals showing the convergence of inflation towards our aim have been improving, and both the underlying strength in the euro area economy and the fact that such strength is increasingly affecting wage formation supports our confidence that inflation will reach a level of below, but close to, 2 per cent over the medium term,” Mr. Praet said in Berlin.

“Waning market expectations of sizable further expansions of our program have been accompanied by inflation expectations that are increasingly consistent with our aim,” Mr. Praet said.

Inflation surged to 1.9 per cent last month to hit the ECB’s target but most of the rise was owing to higher energy prices. While the ECB tends to look past oil price shocks, it targets headline inflation suggesting that rising prices, even if fuelled by those higher energy costs, support the case for curbing stimulus.

Several Governing Council members including two board members have recently argued for an end to the bond buys this year and Bundesbank president Jens Weidmann, among the most conservative rate setters, renewed his call on Wednesday to end the purchases.

The buys, now reduced to 30 billion euros ($45-billion) a month, are due to run until the end of September, but policy makers have long argued they should be wound down gradually, over the course of several months.

Reuters

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