 Well, good morning, good morning colleagues, dear participants. The euro area's economy continues on a growth path, and inflation is gradually returning towards our objective. But uncertainty permeates the economic outlook. Recent data releases have created questions about the durability of the growth outlook. As we will discuss over the next two days, the crisis has presented us with new issues and fresh challenges in understanding the wage and price setting process. Regarding the ECB's monetary policy, as outlined at last week's press conference, progress towards a sustained adjustment in inflation has been substantial so far. With longer-term inflation expectations well anchored, the underlying strength of the euro area economy and the continuing ample degree of monetary accommodation provide grounds to be confident that the sustained convergence of inflation towards our aim will continue in the period ahead and will be maintained even after a gradual winding down of our net asset purchases. But this requires monetary policy in the euro area to remain patient, persistent and prudent. Let me review the recent economic developments. In 2017, growth in the euro area turned out stronger than we had anticipated. The annual growth rate in the fourth quarter was the fastest for a decade. But in 2018, growth has moderated and so far has come in below our expectations. In the latest euro system, staff projections growth for 2018 has been revised down by 0.3 percentage points. This has prompted some questions about the sustainability of the ongoing expansion, which is unusual as such an early stage of the cycle. In historical terms, the current growth period is comparatively short in length and small in size. Since 1975, there have been five growth phases in the euro area. The average duration from trough to peak is 31 quarters, with GDP increasing by 21 percent over that period. The current expansion has to date last just 20 quarters and GDP is less than 10 percent above the trough. To determine whether the moderation has any bearing on medium term growth, we need to distinguish between its underlying drivers. In part, the moderation is related to supply side factors. Some of these are temporary nature and have already subsided, such as the cold weather, cold winter weather in large parts of the euro area. There may also be broader supply factors at play. In particular, there are increasing signs that capacity constraints are starting to bind in some countries and sectors. Capacity utilization stands above its long term average in euro area and in no large economies. The question is how much and how quickly firms will be able to increase supply to relieve these limits. Adjustment is already taking place in the labor market. The labor force participation rate in your area has risen by one and a half percentage points since the crisis and now stands at an all time high. And businesses have been actively trying to expand capacity by increasing labor inputs. Employment has risen by 8.4 million since mid-2013 and is growing in nearly every euro area economy. This has indeed been a job-rich recovery. Compared with the previous growth phases going back to 1975, the contribution of labor to growth has been the highest on record, accounting for almost half of average annual growth. But the flip side of rising labor utilization has been the lack of capital deepening. Whereas capital deepening contributed at least 0.6 percentage points to annual growth in all those previous growth phases, its contribution to the current phase is approximately zero. This could explain why signs of capacity constraints are now emerging. Growth has largely been achieved by applying more labor to existing capital. Firms should increasingly turn to capital to lift capacity and this is a process that has already begun as business investment has picked up and now stands above its pre-crisis level. Certainly the conditions are in place to further foster investment, including improving profitability and supportive financial conditions. This is in line with the latest European Commission forecast for potential output, which project an increase in the contribution from capital and a decrease from labor over the coming years. All this suggests that the supply-side factors we are currently seeing are likely to slowly unwind over the medium term, where we need to pay closer attention in the nearer term is to developments on the demand side. By and large, the underlying fundamentals of the Euro area remain solid. Domestic demand is robust and the main model of the expansion, the virtuous circle between employment and consumption, is still in place. External demand has been less positive, but this may partly reflect a pullback from the very strong export performance of last year, as well as temporary factors, as we all know in our main trading partners. Yet what is undeniable is that uncertainty surrounding the growth outlook has recently increased. The downside risks to the outlook come from three main sources. The threat of increased global protectionism prompted by the imposition of steel and aluminum tariffs by the United States, rising oil prices triggered by geopolitical risks in the Middle East, and the possibility for persistent heightened financial market volatility. Set against this are some risks to the upside, stemming mainly from the fiscal expansion in the United States and more in the medium term from likely fiscal expansions in several countries in the Euro area. We will continue to monitor these developments closely, but for now, our growth expectations for the medium term remain essentially unchanged, and we view the risks around that outlook as broadly balanced. For monetary policy, the key issue is how growth feeds into wages and then inflation. It is well known that the reaction of inflation dynamics to accelerating growth has been typically slow in recent years. As I have discussed elsewhere, as a matter of fact here last year, there are a variety of factors that could explain this, ranging from mis-measurement of slack to a change in relationship between slack and wages. All this has injected quite some uncertainty into understanding and forecasting wage dynamics which persists today. But there are signs that slack is now diminishing and that the relationship between slack and wages is slowly reasserting itself. Different measures of slack such as broad and headline unemployment appear to give a similar picture of lessening spare capacity, although there is still high unemployment among specific groups and regions. In keeping with this, the unexplained residuals in the standard wage Phillips curve for the Euro area are gradually reducing and wage growth is beginning to pick up. Compensation per employee has lifted from its trough in mid-2016 is now growing at 1.9%. So far, the increase has been mainly explained by the wage drift component. Which tends to react faster to cyclical improvements in the labor market. But annual growth in negotiated wages has already started to move upwards. Looking ahead, recent wage agreements notably in Germany, but also in other large countries such as France and Spain point to a continuation of these wage dynamics. There are signs that the restraining public sector wage growth which had in the past dragged on aggregate wage growth is starting to relax. We are seeing an increase in domestic cost pressures along the pricing chain. Domestic producer price inflation for known food consumer goods is growing at its highest rate since February 2013. Producer price inflation in the services sector, where wages represent around 40% of costs also picked up. That said, higher wage growth doesn't mechanically translate into higher inflation. Even if wages continue to rise as we expect, we cannot exclude that structural factors beyond the central banks control might hamper the transmission of wages into consumer prices. For example, more intense competition through globalization or e-commerce might act to compress margins. At present we don't see much evidence that such factors have affected inflation in the euro area. What is key is that inflation expectations remain well anchored. Here we are seeing some positive signs. For example, the latest ECB survey of professional forecasters shows longer-term inflation expectations stable at 1.9%. So overall, there is growing evidence that broad-based economic growth is beginning to generate positive pricing dynamics, but uncertainty arising from economic developments lingers throughout the various stages of this process. So what does this imply for our monetary policy? We have set out three conditions that must be in place for our net asset purchases to end. We need to see the convergence of inflation towards our aim over the medium term. We need to have sufficient confidence that this convergence will be realized and the inflation path needs to show resilience and be self-sustaining without additional net purchases. Assessing these conditions is a forward-looking exercise because the full effects of monetary policy are felt only after long lags. We have to rely on our projections, the probability distributions surrounding them, and the extent to which they are dependent on our monetary policy actions. In terms of convergence, the latest projections see headline inflation reaching 1.7% in each of the next three years. Inflation excluding food and energy, simple measure of underlying price pressures is expected to climb to even higher levels over the same horizon. These are the latest in a series of projections which foresee inflation converging to our aim over a policy-relevant medium term horizon. Importantly, over the course of the past year, that convergence path has held firm and the timing of when we expect to attain our objective doesn't appear to have receded further into the future. Our confidence in inflation path is also rising. On the basis of two indicators we've been using to assess the probability of inflation convergence. The first is our own internal estimates of the distribution of future inflation outcomes. ECB staff have constructed a measure that combines the implied inflation distributions from a variety of sources, euro system staff rejections, model-based estimates, market-based measures of expectations, and surveys such as the SPF I mentioned before. These sources are then weighted by their historical ability to accurately forecast inflation. That aggregate probability distribution of two-year ahead inflation expectations has evolved in three dimensions that provide confidence that inflation adjustment is sustainable. The mean of the distribution has increased, the dispersion of the distribution has narrowed, and the downward skew has declined. Second, we've been monitoring a range of measures of underlying inflation including model-based statistical measures such as what we refer as to as the PCCI and exclusion-based methods such as inflation excluding food and energy. Measures of underlying inflation typically provide some early information about the rate at which inflation will stabilize in the future once all the noise that is affecting current observed headline measures has faded away. Though underlying inflation has yet shown a clear upward trend, the improvement in wage growth, domestic producer prices, and inflation expectations gives us more confidence that as resource utilization continues to tighten, underlying inflation will eventually begin to rise. Finally, market pricing provides some comfort on the resilience of inflation to the anticipated gradual ending of asset purchases. Inflation expectations are influenced not only by economic fundamentals and the cumulative impact of our past policies, but also by market expectations of future policy settings including net asset purchases. Ahead of our meeting last week, the medium market expectations for net purchases beyond September 2018 were small. It follows that the contribution to our inflation outlook from expected future net purchases was also modest. As a result of this assessment, last week the governing council concluded that progress towards a sustained adjustment in inflation has been substantial so far. As we announced, we anticipate that after September 2018, subject to incoming data confirming our median term inflation outlook, we will reduce the monthly pace of the net asset purchases to 15 billion euro until the end of December this year and then end net purchases. That decision, while acknowledging the increase in uncertainty, shows that we are confident that the projected convergence in the path of inflation will occur with sufficient probability without further net additions to our stimulus. The economy and the inflation process are developing an underlying strength that was previously absent. As a result I described here last year, monetary policy can accompany the economic recovery. But the projected convergence remains reliant on the substantial cumulative impact of past policies which are locked into the supportive financial conditions present today. Significant monetary policy accommodation is still needed to support the further build up of domestic price pressures and headline inflation developments over the medium term. Our latest unanimous decision ensures that the necessary monetary policy support remains in place. This support has a number of elements, including the net asset purchases until the end of the year, the sizable stock of acquired assets and the associated reinvestments, and our enhanced forward guidance on the key ECB interest rates. Our decisions also reflected the desire of the Governing Council to retain the ability to react to potential future shocks to ensure the sustained convergence of inflation to our medium term aim. They embed precise elements of state contingency into our forward guidance. By clearly specifying and communicating our reaction function we are able to act in a consistent and predictable fashion. Acting in this way helps reduce any market uncertainty that might rise concerning our future actions. Let me restate our recent decisions on our policy instruments. First, our anticipated ending asset purchase in December this year is subject to incoming data, confirming the medium term inflation outlook. Moreover, the APP can always be used in case contingencies materialize that we do not currently foresee. Second, we announced that we intend to maintain our policy of reinvesting the principal payments from maturing securities purchased under the asset purchase program for an extended time after the end of net purchases. And in any case, here is another element of optionality, and in any case for as long as necessary to maintain favorable liquidity conditions and an ample degree of monetary accommodation. Third, we conveyed our expectation that the key ECB interest rates will remain at their present levels at least through the summer of 2019 and again optionality, in any case for as long as necessary to ensure that the evolution of inflation remains aligned with our current expectations of a sustained adjustment path. This enhanced forward guidance clearly signals that we will remain patient in determining the timing of the first rate rise and will take a gradual approach to adjusting policy thereafter. The path of very short-term interest rates that is implicit in the term structure of today's money market interest rates broadly reflects these principles. As indicated at the ECB watches conference earlier this year, after the end of net asset purchases, the main tool for shaping our policy stance will become the path of our key policy rates and the forward guidance about their likely evolution. Finally, we have stated that we stand ready to adjust all of our instruments as appropriate to ensure that inflation continues to move towards our median term aim of inflation below but close to 2%. Adjustments to our instruments will remain predictable and they will proceed at a gradual pace that is most appropriate for inflation convergence to consolidate, taking into account continued uncertainty in the economy. In short, monetary policy in the Euro area, and this will not surprise you, will remain patient, persistent and prudent. Thank you.