Archive of topic posts
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Croatia to join euro area
27.12.2022 DE
Croatia is introducing euro cash on 1 January 2023, making it the 20th Member State of the euro area. Croatian kuna banknotes can be exchanged for euro free of charge at all Bundesbank branches between 1 January and 28 February 2023. Croatia’s accession to the euro area will change the composition of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank (ECB) and the ECB’s capital, as well as the capital key used to calculate it.
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Bundesbank President expects significant decline in inflation from 2024 at the earliest
20.12.2022
Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel anticipates continued high levels of inflation next year and does not see them declining markedly until 2024. “
We expect the average annual inflation rate in Germany to be around 7% in 2023,
” Mr Nagel explained in an interview with the “Stern
” magazine, adding that it would then be significantly lower in 2024. “Nevertheless, the road immediately ahead remains rocky. That is why we are resolutely maintaining our monetary policy stance.
” -
Monthly Report: Relative energy price rise hurting, euro depreciation supporting Germany’s international price competitiveness
16.12.2022 DE
How is Germany’s international price competitiveness faring in light of high energy costs? The Bundesbank’s experts explore this question in the latest edition of the Monthly Report. To this end, they examined the impact of the higher energy costs, on the one hand, and the euro's depreciation against the US dollar, on the other. Their result was that, at least from a macroeconomic perspective, the depreciation of the currency is probably still offsetting high energy prices.
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Bundesbank projections: Despite energy crisis, no severe economic downturn
Despite the energy crisis, the Deutsche Bundesbank does not expect the German economy to experience a severe downturn in the winter. “While economic output is likely to contract initially, we expect that the economy will gradually recover from the second half of 2023 onwards,” said Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel upon the release of his staff’s latest projections. However, the report states that inflation is high and only likely to decline gradually. “According to our projection, the rate of inflation in Germany is likely to fall to 2.8% by 2025,” Mr Nagel explained.
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Interview: Nagel and Villeroy de Galhau at Phoenix
04.12.2022 DE
In a joint interview, Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel and François Villeroy de Galhau, Governor of the Banque de France, discussed “Germany, France and inflation – ways out of the crisis”. Their discussion centred on the question of when the current monetary policy stance will bear fruit and the medium-term inflation target of 2% will be achieved again. “I am firmly convinced that we will see significantly lower inflation rates from 2024 onwards. We will reach 2% with the monetary policy measures we have initiated this year,” Mr Nagel said.
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Johannes Beermann: Extensive crisis preparedness ensures cash supply
24.11.2022
Bundesbank branches can pay out cash at any time, even in contingency and crisis situations – according to Executive Board member Johannes Beermann, comprehensive risk preparedness measures have put the Bundesbank in a good position to deal with such cases, too. At a meeting with the press in Frankfurt, he noted that successful crisis preparedness was predicated on interplay between all cash handlers, however.
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Nagel: Stop fully replacing maturing bonds
23.11.2022
Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel, speaking at an event for Frankfurt economic journalists, has doubled down on his calls to set about downsizing the Eurosystem’s large stocks of bonds in the near future. “
I can imagine no longer replacing maturing APP assets as from the beginning of next year,
” he said. Mr Nagel is also expecting a further key interest rate hike to be decided at the ECB Governing Council’s December monetary policy meeting. -
Bundesbank expects recession in final quarter of 2022 and first quarter of 2023
23.11.2022 DE
Contrary to expectations, German economic activity expanded in the third quarter of 2022, the Bundesbank writes in its current Monthly Report. Despite high inflation and uncertainty about future energy supply, real gross domestic product surpassed its pre-pandemic level for the first time. However, the Bundesbank’s experts believe that downward forces are likely to clearly predominate in the coming months. They still expect the German economy to enter a recession in the final quarter of 2022 and the first quarter of 2023, though the scale of the recession is extremely uncertain. “Double-digit inflation could even persist into the new year,” the report states.
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Joachim Nagel repeats call for further interest rate steps
21.11.2022 DE
Speaking at this year’s European Banking Congress, Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel repeated his call for a further increase in key interest rates. “
To ensure the return to price stability, long-term nominal and real interest rates must sufficiently increase
,” he said. Fellow Congress speakers Christine Lagarde, European Central Bank President, and Klaas Knot, ECB Governing Council member, also argued in favour of raising interest rates. -
Rising risks: Nagel and Wuermeling advise banks to be vigilant
In view of high inflation rates, energy shortages and a looming recession, Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel and Bundesbank Executive Board member Joachim Wuermeling have advised banks in Germany to be vigilant. “
The turnaround in interest rates is upon us, and that’s good news for banks in the medium to long run
,” Mr Wuermeling remarked at this year’s Bundesbank symposium “Banking supervision in dialogue
”. What matters, though, he continued, is how they deal with, and weather, the short-term burdens. Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel, meanwhile, stressed the importance of a strong capital base.