The ECB ends quantitative easing
The spotlight has been on Europe in the past few days. After four years of quantitative easing (QE), the European Central Bank (ECB) has halted its €2.6trn bond-buying programme. ECB president Mario Draghi believes QE has driven economic recovery when fiscal policy and export demand were unsupportive.
What makes investors nervous, however, is that he has ended his money-printing progamme just as eurozone growth is cooling. The (usually overoptimistic) ECB has pencilled in GDP growth of just 1.7% in 2019. Meanwhile, the widely watched composite purchasing managers’ index (PMI) slid to a four-year low of 51.3 last month, says Tim Wallace in The Daily Telegraph. (A score of below 50 indicates a contraction in activity.)
Now that the ECB is to stop buying government debt, and growth is slowing, concern over the sustainability of the single currency area is flaring up again.
A rule of thumb has it that “investors can safely deploy capital in economies where the working class mostly drink beer”, says Louis-Vincent Gave of Gavekal Research, “but should be careful in places where workers mostly drink red wine.” The latter applies to both Italy and France, two countries at the centre of the eurozone’s current woes. Next year, France’s budget deficit could hit 3.4% of GDP, putting it above the 2.4% deficit proposed by Italy, which put it at loggerheads with Brussels. To quell unrest in his country, France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, has promised more welfare spending, which could result in an “Italian-type debt spiral”.
The good news
With luck, however, Europe can avoid another currency crisis in 2019. It depends more on exports than other major economies, and global growth, while cooling, still looks reasonable. There is better news on the trade front (see below), while “China seems ready, willing and able to reverse its growth slowdown with a steady diet of stimulus,” Ethan Harris of Bank of America Merrill Lynch told the FT. A weaker euro, meanwhile, should bolster profits, while there is already plenty of pessimism in the price: eurozone blue-chips stocks cost around 12 times next year’s earnings and yield 3.8%. Fidelity European Values (LSE: FEV) and JP Morgan Smaller Companies (LSE: JESC) are both worth a look.