DIVERGENT CENTRAL BANKS
Edito On the one hand, there is the Fed, which has already increased its rates 7 times since the end of 2015, and which should increase them again on September 26 (99.8% probability according to FF futures). It has also reduced the size of its balance sheet. On the other hand, there is the ECB, which continues to return its monetary policy to normal at a slow, stately rate (reduction in net monthly bond purchases in October from 30 bil . EUR to 15 bil . EUR; no rate hike before the end of Summer 2019). Between the two, is the BoE, which has taken the slightest opportunity to increase its rates, but continues to be petrified by the no-deal risk on the exit from the EU. Its behavior will be black-and-white: very cautious if there is no-deal, more hawkish if the United Kingdom benefits from a transition period.