What to look out for from the European Central Bank meeting | Fox News

English: The European Central Bank. Notice a s...

English: The European Central Bank. Notice a sculpture of the euro sign. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This article from Fox World News is worth a read. It questions whether the European Central Bank should give another push to an economy that’s not rolling fast enough to raise excessively low inflation? It suggests that’s the question facing the bank’s 25-member governing council when it meets Thursday at its skyscraper headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany.

Source: What to look out for from the European Central Bank meeting | Fox News

Personally, I would like to see further stimulus from the ECB. With national elections in both Germany and France in 2017, additional financial stimulus would be welcomed.

Because of the Euro and the EU’s fiscal constraint policy, individual Eurozone countries cannot decide their own fiscal policies – this has damaged growth in Southern Europe and austerity has been the prevailing policy for too. One important lesson from Brexit is that voters feel passionately about both immigration and excessive austerity.

If I were a betting man, I’d go for more stimulus on Thursday from the ECB.

Thoughts?

What The First 100 Days After Brexit Would Look Like | Zero Hedge

ECB Hazard Very Toxic Symbol

ECB Hazard Very Toxic Symbol (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Zero Hedge looks at post Brexit crisis management. It argues that before dawn on June 24, if an exit vote becomes clear, the EU’s top brass from Berlin to Brussels will be forced into damage control. It suggests that in echoes of the Greek debt crisis, euro-area finance ministers may hold an emergency meeting as soon as that evening. It concludes that wild swings in the pound, more aggressive interventions by the Swiss National Bank and a ratcheting up of global instability rank as likely market reactions.

Source: What The First 100 Days After Brexit Would Look Like | Zero Hedge

Elsewhere in the news the French Republican Party is signalling that the ultimate failure for the EU would be to let the UK leave and invite Turkey instead.

There is still room for Europe’s politicians to make last minute concessions to the UK. Will we see Angela Merkel riding in on a white horse coming to David Cameron‘s rescue?