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No Happy New Year for Central Banks Fretting on 2019 Outlook

The warnings come a week before the Federal Reserve announces its next policy decision.

No Happy New Year for Central Banks Fretting on 2019 Outlook
Taro Aso, Japan’s deputy prime minister and finance minister, from front row left, Steven Mnuchin, U.S. Treasury secretary, Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) pose for photographs with other finance ministers and central bank’s governors during the family photo session at the IMF and World Bank Group Annual Meetings in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia. (Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Central bankers’ concerns about the coming year were on display on Thursday as they warned the global economy could be entering a period of great uncertainty.

The European Central Bank said risks to growth are mounting, even as it halted its flagship stimulus program. Authorities in Switzerland and Norway cited threats with considerable potential for damage, and China’s central bank chief said his economy is facing headwinds.

No Happy New Year for Central Banks Fretting on 2019 Outlook

The warnings come a week before the Federal Reserve announces its next policy decision. Officials appear to be reassessing the outlook after Chairman Jerome Powell hinted that path for U.S. interest-rate hikes next year won’t be as aggressive as once thought. There’s also speculation about how close the U.S. is to a recession, with Pimco saying on Thursday the risks are “flashing orange.”

Rising protectionism, emerging-market turmoil, Italy’s budget battles and Brexit have already taken a toll -- to varying degrees -- on confidence, demand and economic growth. And 2019 doesn’t offer much hope for relief. The global expansion, while unlikely to drop off a cliff, is almost certainly moving into a slower phase.

In China, new data showed the economy slowed again in November, with industrial production growth slowing and retail sales posting the weakest performance since 2003.

The upshot is that even after a decade of easy money, central bankers such as
Powell and ECB President Mario Draghi are still sounding somewhat dovish as they new year beckons.

In Frankfurt on Thursday, Draghi said the global backdrop is “characterized by increased general uncertainty.” In a key phrase that sent the euro lower, he said the “balance of risks is moving to the downside.”

“We’re seeing policies that make it more difficult for growth to continue, whether it’s deficit policies in the U.S. or trade wars,” said Jack Lew, former U.S. Treasury Secretary under Barack Obama. “So you’re seeing a lot of uncertainty and disruption put into an economy that’s already late in the cycle.”

Also on Thursday, People’s Bank of China Governor Yi Gang said growth is facing increasing downward pressure, and monetary policy will continue to be supportive. He acknowledged that relations with the U.S. have changed. The Federal Reserve is “more unpredictable in the rate-hike-cycle now than several months ago,” he said.

At the Norges Bank meeting this week, officials focused “in particular on global economic prospects,” citing “persistent trade conflicts and turbulence surrounding political processes in Europe.”

One of those political processes -- Brexit -- is holding the Bank of England hostage. Governor Mark Carney has hiked interest rates twice since late 2017, but the next move isn’t obvious as the U.K. argues with itself over a divorce deal with the European Union. Until that’s resolved, the BOE’s in wait-and-see mode.

Many central bankers see positives in their domestic economies as lower unemployment supports demand and cheap financing encourages investment. There’s also been some relief recently from a drop in oil prices, something President Donald Trump has described as the equivalent of a tax cut. But policy makers can’t ignore the shadows forever.

“The economy can handle a short period of high policy uncertainty and market volatility,” Ethan Harris, chief global economist at Bank of America Corp., told clients in a report this week. “But patience has its limits.”

--With assistance from Manus Cranny.

To contact the reporter on this story: Fergal O'Brien in Zurich at fobrien@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Craig Stirling at cstirling1@bloomberg.net, Brian Swint, Paul Gordon

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.