Search
00
GBAF Logo
trophy
Top StoriesInterviewsBusinessFinanceBankingTechnologyInvestingTradingVideosAwardsMagazinesHeadlinesTrends

Subscribe to our newsletter

Get the latest news and updates from our team.

Global Banking & Finance Review®

Global Banking & Finance Review® - Subscribe to our newsletter

Company

    GBAF Logo
    • About Us
    • Profile
    • Privacy & Cookie Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Submit Post
    • Latest News
    • Research Reports
    • Press Release
    • Awards▾
      • About the Awards
      • Awards TimeTable
      • Submit Nominations
      • Testimonials
      • Media Room
      • Award Winners
      • FAQ
    • Magazines▾
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 79
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 78
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 77
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 76
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 75
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 73
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 71
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 70
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 69
      • Global Banking & Finance Review Magazine Issue 66
    Top StoriesInterviewsBusinessFinanceBankingTechnologyInvestingTradingVideosAwardsMagazinesHeadlinesTrends

    Global Banking & Finance Review® is a leading financial portal and online magazine offering News, Analysis, Opinion, Reviews, Interviews & Videos from the world of Banking, Finance, Business, Trading, Technology, Investing, Brokerage, Foreign Exchange, Tax & Legal, Islamic Finance, Asset & Wealth Management.
    Copyright © 2010-2026 GBAF Publications Ltd - All Rights Reserved. | Sitemap | Tags | Developed By eCorpIT

    Editorial & Advertiser disclosure

    Global Banking & Finance Review® is an online platform offering news, analysis, and opinion on the latest trends, developments, and innovations in the banking and finance industry worldwide. The platform covers a diverse range of topics, including banking, insurance, investment, wealth management, fintech, and regulatory issues. The website publishes news, press releases, opinion and advertorials on various financial organizations, products and services which are commissioned from various Companies, Organizations, PR agencies, Bloggers etc. These commissioned articles are commercial in nature. This is not to be considered as financial advice and should be considered only for information purposes. It does not reflect the views or opinion of our website and is not to be considered an endorsement or a recommendation. We cannot guarantee the accuracy or applicability of any information provided with respect to your individual or personal circumstances. Please seek Professional advice from a qualified professional before making any financial decisions. We link to various third-party websites, affiliate sales networks, and to our advertising partners websites. When you view or click on certain links available on our articles, our partners may compensate us for displaying the content to you or make a purchase or fill a form. This will not incur any additional charges to you. To make things simpler for you to identity or distinguish advertised or sponsored articles or links, you may consider all articles or links hosted on our site as a commercial article placement. We will not be responsible for any loss you may suffer as a result of any omission or inaccuracy on the website.

    Home > Top Stories > ECB to halve bond purchases from April, say economists
    Top Stories

    ECB to halve bond purchases from April, say economists

    Published by maria gbaf

    Posted on December 13, 2021

    5 min read

    Last updated: January 28, 2026

    An illustration representing digital asset custody within the financial sector, highlighting security and management of digital assets, including cryptocurrencies and tokenization.
    Digital asset custody concept showcasing secure digital transactions - Global Banking & Finance Review
    Why waste money on news and opinion when you can access them for free?

    Take advantage of our newsletter subscription and stay informed on the go!

    Subscribe

    Quick Summary

    The ECB is set to halve its bond purchases from April, with interest rate hikes unlikely until end-2023. This decision comes as euro zone inflation eases.

    ECB to Cut Bond Purchases by Half Starting April, Economists Say

    By Swathi Nair

    BENGALURU (Reuters) – The European Central Bank is set to halve the amount of assets it buys each month from April, according to a Reuters poll of ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-KAZIMIR-00b06d9b-4b99-46ce-a2aa-458d8eb2d993>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-watchers who judged that a reprieve from high euro zone inflation by late 2022 means an interest rate rise is years away.

    Policymakers at the Dec. 16 Governing Council meeting will debate options on how to adapt the bank’s regular asset purchase programme (APP) once a much larger pandemic-fighting scheme ends in March.

    The survey found relatively steady euro zone growth forecasts, with most citing the spread of new coronavirus variants, not persistent inflation, as the biggest economic threat next year.

    While the risk of variants is global, the ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-KAZIMIR-00b06d9b-4b99-46ce-a2aa-458d8eb2d993>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB differs in its response from its U.S. and UK counterparts as they are almost certain to raise interest rates from near-zero in 2022 – the Bank of England perhaps as soon as February.

    The ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-KAZIMIR-00b06d9b-4b99-46ce-a2aa-458d8eb2d993>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB has stipulated a rate hike “shortly after” bond purchases end and so is forecast to keep its key interest rates on hold through to end-2023 at least, with the deposit rate at -0.50% and its refinancing rate at zero – in sharp contrast to recent market expectations, now abandoned, for late 2022.

    “We think that by the end of 2023, the conditions should be met for a rates lift-off, so given the rigid sequencing between the end of QE and the first rate hike, that might be when the ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-KAZIMIR-00b06d9b-4b99-46ce-a2aa-458d8eb2d993>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB announces the end of APP (Asset Purchase Programme), possibly with a short taper,” Fabio Balboni, senior economist at HSBC, said.

    The ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-KAZIMIR-00b06d9b-4b99-46ce-a2aa-458d8eb2d993>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB is buying 80 billion euros of bonds per month, under its two programmes: 60 billion under the more recent Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP), which it has said it will end in March, and 20 billion under APP.

    The Dec. 8-10 Reuters poll found that after April, the central bank is set to carry on buying 40 billion euros of bonds a month through the end of next year, with some forecasting ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-KAZIMIR-00b06d9b-4b99-46ce-a2aa-458d8eb2d993>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB buys through to mid-2023.

    The median from 21 forecasts showed a 20 billion euros APP top-up for a total of 40 billion euros.

    But 13 of a slightly smaller sample of 20 respondents to an additional question said if the ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-KAZIMIR-00b06d9b-4b99-46ce-a2aa-458d8eb2d993>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB approves an APP increase, there would be an envelope covering a longer period. The rest said it would be in set monthly volumes.

    “ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-KAZIMIR-00b06d9b-4b99-46ce-a2aa-458d8eb2d993>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB will commit to net APP purchases until at least the end of 2022, but the Council may decide to not yet commit to the 40 billion euros monthly pace for the entire year,” said Bas van Geffen, senior macro strategist at Rabobank.

    In line with many other economists, van Geffen said the APP could also run through the following year.

    About 70%, or 18 of 26, who responded to an additional question said the APP would finish by end-2023, while five said by Q4 2024 and three said Q4 2025.

    Consensus forecasts for euro zone inflation, meanwhile, rose for a sixth consecutive monthly poll, set to top the European Central Bank’s 2% target through Q3 of next year.

    “Inflation has been overshooting and the medium-term inflation outlook has become a bit more uncertain with risks skewed to the upside,” said Peter Vanden Houte, chief economist at ING.

    Inflation, which soared to a 25-year high of 4.9% in November, was predicted to average 4.4% and 3.5% this quarter and next. That compares with 4.1% and 3.1% in last month’s poll.

    It is set to average 2.5% next year after rising at the same rate this year, versus 2.2% and 2.4% predicted in November. Those are higher than the ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-KAZIMIR-00b06d9b-4b99-46ce-a2aa-458d8eb2d993>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB-POLICY-3fdc7763-f2c0-4c30-b494-8614852eaf43>ECB-POLICY-RATES-82f6314e-6203-420b-bc8b-70a978546822>ECB’s latest projections of 1.7% and 2.2%, respectively.

    The economy was expected to grow 0.6% this quarter and 0.7% in the next, a slight downgrade from 0.8% for both periods a month ago. It was expected to average 4.2% next year, unchanged from last month’s poll and slow to 2.3% in 2023, up from 2.1%.

    About 60%, or 18 of 31 respondents, said the spread of new coronavirus variants was the biggest downside risk to the euro zone economy next year. Eleven said persistent inflation, while two others said extreme fiscal tightening, and higher energy prices.

    (For other stories from the Reuters global long-term economic outlook polls package)

    (Polling by Milounee Purohit, Sujith Pai and Swathi Nair; Editing by Ross Finley, Mark John and Barbara Lewis)

    Key Takeaways

    • •ECB plans to halve monthly bond purchases from April.
    • •Interest rate hikes are unlikely until at least end-2023.
    • •ECB differs from US and UK in response to inflation.
    • •Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme ends in March.
    • •Economists predict steady euro zone growth despite COVID-19 variants.

    Frequently Asked Questions about ECB to halve bond purchases from April, say economists

    1What is the main topic?

    The article discusses the ECB's plan to halve bond purchases starting in April and its implications for interest rates.

    2Why is the ECB reducing bond purchases?

    The ECB is reducing bond purchases as euro zone inflation eases, delaying the need for interest rate hikes.

    3How does the ECB's approach differ from the US and UK?

    Unlike the US and UK, the ECB is not expected to raise interest rates soon, focusing instead on reducing bond purchases.

    More from Top Stories

    Explore more articles in the Top Stories category

    Image for Lessons From the Ring and the Deal Table: How Boxing Shapes Steven Nigro’s Approach to Banking and Life
    Lessons From the Ring and the Deal Table: How Boxing Shapes Steven Nigro’s Approach to Banking and Life
    Image for Joe Kiani in 2025: Capital, Conviction, and a Focused Return to Innovation
    Joe Kiani in 2025: Capital, Conviction, and a Focused Return to Innovation
    Image for Marco Robinson – CLOSE THE DEAL AND SUDDENLY GROW RICH
    Marco Robinson – CLOSE THE DEAL AND SUDDENLY GROW RICH
    Image for Digital Tracing: Turning a regulatory obligation into a commercial advantage
    Digital Tracing: Turning a regulatory obligation into a commercial advantage
    Image for Exploring the Role of Blockchain and the Bitcoin Price Today in Education
    Exploring the Role of Blockchain and the Bitcoin Price Today in Education
    Image for Inside the World’s First Collection Industry Conglomerate: PCA Global’s Platform Strategy
    Inside the World’s First Collection Industry Conglomerate: PCA Global’s Platform Strategy
    Image for Chase Buchanan Private Wealth Management Highlights Key Autumn 2025 Budget Takeaways for Expats
    Chase Buchanan Private Wealth Management Highlights Key Autumn 2025 Budget Takeaways for Expats
    Image for PayLaju Strengthens Its Position as Malaysia’s Trusted Interest-Free Sharia-Compliant Loan Provider
    PayLaju Strengthens Its Position as Malaysia’s Trusted Interest-Free Sharia-Compliant Loan Provider
    Image for A Notable Update for Employee Health Benefits:
    A Notable Update for Employee Health Benefits:
    Image for Creating Equity Between Walls: How Mohak Chauhan is Using Engineering, Finance, and Community Vision to Reengineer Affordable Housing
    Creating Equity Between Walls: How Mohak Chauhan is Using Engineering, Finance, and Community Vision to Reengineer Affordable Housing
    Image for Upcoming Book on Real Estate Investing: Harvard Grace Capital Founder Stewart Heath’s Puts Lessons in Print
    Upcoming Book on Real Estate Investing: Harvard Grace Capital Founder Stewart Heath’s Puts Lessons in Print
    Image for ELECTIVA MARKS A LANDMARK FIRST YEAR WITH MAJOR SENIOR APPOINTMENTS AND EXPANSION MILESTONES
    ELECTIVA MARKS A LANDMARK FIRST YEAR WITH MAJOR SENIOR APPOINTMENTS AND EXPANSION MILESTONES
    View All Top Stories Posts
    Previous Top Stories PostNHS website hit by technical problems amid rush to book COVID-19 booster doses – The Independent
    Next Top Stories PostWillkommen: Oscar-winner Redmayne stars in London revival of ‘Cabaret’