(Bloomberg) -- Traders' conviction that the European Central Bank will deliver a 75 basis point interest-rate hike at Thursday's policy meeting has receded slightly amid mounting concerns about the region's economy.Â
Swaps tied to ECB meetings show that money markets are pricing in a 66 basis point increase, about 3 basis points less than a recent high. It will be the ECB's first monetary policy meeting since July, when officials raised the key rate for the first time since 2011. Â
German data added to concerns on Tuesday, as factory orders in Europe's largest economy fell for a sixth month. A deep euro-area recession could damp inflation, limiting the need for aggressive tightening.Â
Still, the majority of economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect a 75 basis point raise. Searing inflation has bolstered bets on a large move and Governing Council members have committed to lift policy above the so-called neutral rate if necessary.
European bonds rallied Tuesday, led by shorter maturities. The two-year German yield -- which is the most sensitive to changes in monetary policy -- is about 5 basis points lower at 1.08%, around 20 basis points below a recent peak on Sept. 1.Â
Read more: ECB's Kazaks Says Broad, Protracted Recession Could Slow Hikes
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