“It will have serious side effects,” Deutsche Bank (DB) CEO Christian Sewing said Wednesday at a banking conference in Frankfurt.
Investors and companies expect the European Central Bank to cut interest rates to new record lows when it meets later this month as storm clouds gather over the global economy. The manufacturing industry is shrinking around the world, the trade war is hurting businesses and consumers are beginning to get nervous.
Rates in Europe have been negative since 2014. They helped the region recover from its debt crisis but have hurt banks, eating into their lending profits, and people with savings.
Sewing argued Wednesday that pushing interest rates further into negative territory would do little to stimulate the region’s economy, which is once again in a precarious position.
Small and medium-sized businesses have told Deutsche Bank they won’t invest more just because credit is 10 basis points cheaper, Sewing said. Cutting rates will only “only serve to drive assets prices even higher and penalize savers,” he continued.
Sewing also made a social case against persistently low interest rates. Such policies feed inequality by continuing to reward the privileged few who benefit from access to cheap credit, he said, while savers in Europe were losing 160 billion euros ($145 billion) a year because of negative rates.
“That further divides society,” Sewing said.
Sewing’s remarks come as concerns about Germany’s economy, Europe’s largest, shows increasing signs of weakness. The country’s central bank has warned that it could be slipping into a recession.
That’s bolstered the case for the ECB to take action at its next meeting on September 12. In addition to potentially cutting interest rates, the central bank is expected to announce that it will restart its bond-buying program in the hope of providing more stimulus to the economy.
It is also thought to be weighing a so-called tiering system that would lessen the impact of negative interest rates on the banking sector.
The prospect of more deeply negative rates is particularly painful for Deutsche Bank, which recently announced a massive turnaround effort that includes 18,000 job cuts. The bank has pledged to increase revenues by 10% to €25 billion ($28 billion) by 2022, leaving little room for error or higher costs.
— Mark Thompson contributed to this report.