- Italy's Di Giannantonio to miss final two MotoGP for surgery
- Hard talk on migration expected at EU summit
- South Korea's Hwang Ui-jo faces four years in jail for sex video
- Israel pounds Hezbollah strongholds in Lebanon
- India slams 'cavalier' Trudeau in Sikh separatist murder row
- 'Love match' apps rival traditional matchmaking in Pakistan
- Asian markets rally but China's latest stimulus leaves traders wanting
- UN report says 1.1 billion people in acute poverty
- Vietnam death row tycoon awaits verdict in new trial
- 'Our time has come': the female Indian director hoping to make Oscars history
- Bondi beach 'closed' as Sydney shores hit by 'tar balls'
- Dodgers smash Mets to seize lead in MLB playoff series
- China to almost double support for unfinished housing projects
- King Charles heads to Australia, a nation shrugs
- China to boost credit for property market, renovate 1 mn homes
- New York fight back to take 2-1 lead over Lynx in WNBA Finals
- Family feud reignites over Singapore ex-PM's historic home
- ECB set to cut rates again as inflation cools
- Malinin, Sakamoto headline pre-Winter Olympics figure skating season
- Prospective Paris FC takeover could transform French football landscape
- Asian markets rally, with eyes on China housing briefing
- China's underground lab seeks answer to deep scientific riddle
- China toughens Taiwan stance over president's sovereignty defence
- BTS member J-hope discharged from South Korean military
- How Indigenous guards saved a Colombian lake from overtourism
- Despite threats, Florida abortion advocate fights on
- Garcia Luna: Mexico's 'supercop' turned cartel abettor
- North Korea says constitution now defines South as 'hostile' state
- Vietnam death row tycoon faces verdict in new trial
- Menendez brothers' family call for release as US prosecutors review evidence
- Fiery Harris vows break from Biden in testy Fox interview
- Fiery Harris claims break from Biden in testy Fox interview
- Raytheon to pay $950 mn over fraud, bribery schemes: US
- Fiery Harris uses testy Fox interview to claim break from Biden
- Water crisis threatening world food production: report
- Mexico's ex-security chief sentenced to over 38 years in US prison
- One Direction's Liam Payne falls to death at Argentina hotel
- Climate change worsened deadly Nepal floods, scientists say
- Alcaraz will face 'difficult' clash with 'idol' Nadal
- US says India has removed alleged agent in assassination plot
- Barca hit nine in Women's Champions League, Bayern overcome Juve
- Harris courts Trump-skeptic Republicans with Fox interview
- Global stock markets diverge as investors focus on earnings
- Worms and snails handle the pressure 2,500m below the Pacific surface
- Serena Williams has grapefruit-sized cyst removed from neck
- Lavreysen wins record-equalling 14th world cycling track title
- School's out! Argentina students study in the street to protest budget cuts
- Lower rates, surging stock market fail to ignite US IPO market
- Pogba 'willing to give up money' to stay at Juve
- Few countries have drawn up nature protection plans: UN
ECB set to cut rates again as inflation cools
European Central Bank policymakers meet on Thursday with fading price pressures and weaker economic activity in the eurozone nudging them towards making another cut to interest rates.
The 26 members of the governing council are gathering in Slovenia, as they make one of their regular tours away from the ECB's headquarters in Frankfurt.
ECB President Christine Lagarde arrived ahead of her colleagues, "checking on prices" at a market in the capital Ljubljana, she said in a video posted on social media on Tuesday.
What she heard from traders might well have reassured her -- recent data show that inflation in the eurozone has slowed considerably.
In Slovenia, the annual rate of consumer price rises was a mere 0.6 percent in September.
For the whole of the eurozone, the figure was 1.8 percent -- the first time it has been below the ECB's two-percent target in three years.
After cutting rates twice already this year, including at their last meeting in September, policymakers initially signalled a preference to wait until December to cut again.
But September's below-expectations reading has added to the sense that consumer prices are back under control after they soared in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
"Victory against inflation is in sight," French central bank governor and ECB rate-setter Francois Villeroy de Galhau said last week.
"A cut is very likely," he said of Thursday's meeting, adding that "it will not be the last".
- 'Significant' -
From its peak of four percent, the ECB has cut its key deposit rate in two increments of 25 basis points, once in June and another time in September.
Among ECB policymakers, there was "little apparent opposition" to another cut of the same size on Thursday, Deutsche Bank analysts said, describing the move as potentially "significant".
"As the first back-to-back cut of the cycle, it would signal a pivot into a faster easing cycle," they said.
Trends in both inflation and the real economy supported a case for a "straightforward" cut, Berenberg bank analyst Holger Schmieding said.
A surge in wages to make up for spikes in food and energy prices "seems to be petering out", Schmieding said, and the ECB would look through a small, anticipated rebound in inflation towards the end of this year.
The eurozone meanwhile has looked weak. The ECB's forecasts, published last month, already predicted that growth would slow to a meek 0.2 percent in the third quarter.
A slew of negative sentiment indicators in the weeks that followed have confirmed the impression that action is needed to bring relief to households and businesses.
- More cuts? -
Looking ahead, the ECB would continue to stress its actions were "data dependant" even as it increased the pace of its interest rate cuts, Schmieding said.
The oft-repeated phrase is likely to appear in Lagarde's planned statement at 2:45 pm in Slovenia (1245 GMT) after the ECB's decision has been announced.
Analysts will parse her remarks for any hints of the thinking among ECB policymakers and the future path of rates.
At the very least, Lagarde would not "correct market expectations for another 25 basis point move" at the ECB's next meeting in December, Schmieding said.
The fourth cut since the ECB started easing borrowing costs would put the key deposit rate at three percent, but the bank was unlikely to stop there, according to observers.
"The ECB is on a path to cut interest rates at each one of the next five policy meetings," including Thursday's gathering, HSBC bank analyst Chris Hare said.
A string of quarter-point cuts through to April would lower the deposit to 2.25 percent, a level which was having a neutral effect on the economy to being "slightly accommodative", Hare said.
A.Rodriguezv--AMWN