Central bank holds off on emergency measures to keep pressure on governments
FRANKFURT (AP) ― Europe’s sinking economy and wobbly banks could get modest help Thursday from an interest rate cut by the European Central Bank.
Economists think the ECB will cut its benchmark refinancing rate by at least a quarter point to 0.75 percent, a record low. On Tuesday, the rising expectation of a rate cut helped lift stock markets in Europe, which have been rallying since European leaders last week announced new measures to fight the continent’s debt crisis.
The ECB is likely to hold off from more aggressive measures, such as new cheap loans to banks. Its president, Mario Draghi, has said there is only so much the central bank can do and that it was up to Europe’s politicians to restore confidence in the 17-country eurozone.
European leaders agreed at a summit in Brussels last week to create a banking regulator under the ECB’s aegis with the power to rescue banks directly. The goal is to spare single governments from being overwhelmed by the costs of rescuing banks and to make it easier for them to access Europe-wide bailout funds.
The measures exceeded financial markets’ hopes and triggered a drop in borrowing rates for financially troubled Spain and Italy.
Economic indicators have pointed down since the ECB’s last rate-setting meeting June 7, when Draghi conceded that there were risks to the bank’s forecast for a modest recovery this year. He also said a rate cut had been discussed at that meeting.
The ECB’s refinancing rate is what banks pay when they borrow from the ECB and therefore influences the cost of loans to the wider economy.
Marie Diron, an economist at Oxford Economics and an advisor for Ernst & Young LLP, said a rate cut was clearly warranted and would help confidence but might not increase growth that much.
“It will probably not help a great deal, but it will show that the ECB is on top of things, is aware of the potential severity of the situation, that the eurozone is shrinking and that the risks are on the downside,” she said.
A lower refinancing rate would reduce what banks are paying on 1 trillion euros ($1.26 trillion) in 3-year, emergency loans that the ECB doled out on Dec. 21 and Feb. 29. Banks have been using that money to buy government bonds or other investments bearing higher interest, so a cheaper rate would increase their profits.
But that is about as far as the ECB is likely to go. Analysts think it will not issue more emergency loans to banks in part to keep a fire lit under governments to keep moving with reforms of their economies and of the institutional foundations of the euro.
“The ECB wants to maintain pressure on governments and banks,” wrote Commerzbank analyst Michael Schubert in a note to investors.
The eurozone economy stagnated in the first quarter, meaning it avoided a technical recession, defined as two consecutive quarters of economic contraction. However, it is widely expected to shrink in the second and third quarters.
Analysts at Capital Economics expect the eurozone economy to shrink by 1 percent this year. That would be significantly worse than the relatively mild 0.3 percent contraction foreseen by the EU’s executive commission.
Other central banks are also expected to step in to support economic growth, which has been slowing across the globe. Analysts predict the Bank of England will reopen its program of buying government bonds from banks. The goal is to increase the amount of money flowing through the economy, improving banks’ ability to lend. The Bank of England’s policy committee will make a decision on Thursday.
In the U.S., the most recent economic data showed the manufacturing sector contracted for the first time since the country was in recession three years ago, fueling speculation that the Federal Reserve may consider more stimulus, as well. At its June policy meeting it said it would extend its Operation Twist, in which it sells short-term bonds and buys longer-term securities to push down long-term rates, until the end of the year using $267 billion.
FRANKFURT (AP) ― Europe’s sinking economy and wobbly banks could get modest help Thursday from an interest rate cut by the European Central Bank.
Economists think the ECB will cut its benchmark refinancing rate by at least a quarter point to 0.75 percent, a record low. On Tuesday, the rising expectation of a rate cut helped lift stock markets in Europe, which have been rallying since European leaders last week announced new measures to fight the continent’s debt crisis.
The ECB is likely to hold off from more aggressive measures, such as new cheap loans to banks. Its president, Mario Draghi, has said there is only so much the central bank can do and that it was up to Europe’s politicians to restore confidence in the 17-country eurozone.
European leaders agreed at a summit in Brussels last week to create a banking regulator under the ECB’s aegis with the power to rescue banks directly. The goal is to spare single governments from being overwhelmed by the costs of rescuing banks and to make it easier for them to access Europe-wide bailout funds.
The measures exceeded financial markets’ hopes and triggered a drop in borrowing rates for financially troubled Spain and Italy.
Economic indicators have pointed down since the ECB’s last rate-setting meeting June 7, when Draghi conceded that there were risks to the bank’s forecast for a modest recovery this year. He also said a rate cut had been discussed at that meeting.
The ECB’s refinancing rate is what banks pay when they borrow from the ECB and therefore influences the cost of loans to the wider economy.
Marie Diron, an economist at Oxford Economics and an advisor for Ernst & Young LLP, said a rate cut was clearly warranted and would help confidence but might not increase growth that much.
“It will probably not help a great deal, but it will show that the ECB is on top of things, is aware of the potential severity of the situation, that the eurozone is shrinking and that the risks are on the downside,” she said.
A lower refinancing rate would reduce what banks are paying on 1 trillion euros ($1.26 trillion) in 3-year, emergency loans that the ECB doled out on Dec. 21 and Feb. 29. Banks have been using that money to buy government bonds or other investments bearing higher interest, so a cheaper rate would increase their profits.
But that is about as far as the ECB is likely to go. Analysts think it will not issue more emergency loans to banks in part to keep a fire lit under governments to keep moving with reforms of their economies and of the institutional foundations of the euro.
“The ECB wants to maintain pressure on governments and banks,” wrote Commerzbank analyst Michael Schubert in a note to investors.
The eurozone economy stagnated in the first quarter, meaning it avoided a technical recession, defined as two consecutive quarters of economic contraction. However, it is widely expected to shrink in the second and third quarters.
Analysts at Capital Economics expect the eurozone economy to shrink by 1 percent this year. That would be significantly worse than the relatively mild 0.3 percent contraction foreseen by the EU’s executive commission.
Other central banks are also expected to step in to support economic growth, which has been slowing across the globe. Analysts predict the Bank of England will reopen its program of buying government bonds from banks. The goal is to increase the amount of money flowing through the economy, improving banks’ ability to lend. The Bank of England’s policy committee will make a decision on Thursday.
In the U.S., the most recent economic data showed the manufacturing sector contracted for the first time since the country was in recession three years ago, fueling speculation that the Federal Reserve may consider more stimulus, as well. At its June policy meeting it said it would extend its Operation Twist, in which it sells short-term bonds and buys longer-term securities to push down long-term rates, until the end of the year using $267 billion.
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Articles by Korea Herald