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ECB May Dig Deeper Into Crisis Toolbox

Muthukali

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The European Central Bank may delve deeper into its toolbox today to stimulate bank lending and fight off a recession as Europe’s leaders gather to lay the foundations for a fiscal union.

ECB policy makers meeting in Frankfurt will cut the benchmark interest rate by a quarter percentage point to 1 percent, according to 54 of 58 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. They may also loosen collateral criteria to give banks greater access to cheap cash and offer longer-term loans, said three euro-area officials with knowledge of the deliberations.

Hours later, Europe’s leaders will convene in Brussels for talks to frame the fifth “comprehensive” solution in 19 months to a debt crisis that’s left Germany and France facing the threat of losing their AAA rating from Standard & Poor’s. The ECB says that governments must address the cause of the turmoil as it focuses on getting banks lending again rather than increasing purchases of indebted nations’ bonds.

“It’s yet another date with destiny in the euro area,” said Julian Callow, chief European economist at Barclays Capital in London. “It’s clear there won’t be the ultimate resolution, but the proposals are going in the right direction. The markets seem to have finally understood that in the ECB’s eyes it’s up to governments to solve it, and it’s worth noting that it’s doing a lot on the banking side.”

Stocks Advance [/B
]European stocks rose for the first time in three days on speculation policy makers will reduce borrowing costs and introduce new ways to tackle the debt crisis. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index advanced 0.2 percent as of 9:30 a.m. in London. The euro was little changed at $1.3400.

The ECB announces its rate decision at 1:45 p.m. in Frankfurt and President Mario Draghi holds a press conference 45 minutes later. European Union leaders will meet for dinner at 7.30 p.m. in Brussels for talks that will continue tomorrow.

Separately, the Bank of England will keep the size of its asset-purchase program unchanged at 275 billion pounds ($432 billion) and leave its key rate at 0.5 percent, according to another survey of economists. That decision is due at noon in London.

The ECB’s insistence that governments take measures to restore investor confidence appears to have paid dividends, with Italian and Spanish yields plunging after Germany and France agreed to move the 17-nation euro area toward a fiscal union, a stance they reiterated yesterday.

Joint Letter
French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel are proposing to amend European treaties to tighten controls on budgets. In a joint letter to EU President Herman Van Rompuy, the leaders said they want a decision by the close of their summit tomorrow so that the measures can be ready by March next year.

Still, Germany rejects proposals to combine the region’s current and permanent rescue funds, a German government official told reporters in Berlin yesterday on condition of anonymity.

The ECB must step up its bond purchases to stamp out the crisis, said Angel Gurria, secretary general of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

“The ECB is the ultimate weapon” and “has to be part of the solution,” he said yesterday in an interview in Durban, South Africa. “You are using a slingshot, where is the bazooka?”

‘Other Elements’
Draghi said on Dec. 1 that the ECB’s bond purchases “can only be limited.” If governments move toward a “fiscal compact,” there may be room for “other elements,” he said, without elaborating.

“Markets are clearly hoping for any signs of future ECB bond buys,” said Jens Sondergaard, senior economist at Nomura International Plc in London. “We think they’ll be disappointed. They won’t endorse or commit to anything before they see what the outcome of the EU summit is.”

Draghi did indicate a willingness to address signs of a credit squeeze, which falls squarely within the ECB’s remit.

The central bank has “observed serious credit tightening” and is “aware of the continuing difficulties for banks, due to the stress on sovereign bonds, the tightness of funding markets and scarcity of eligible collateral in some financial segments,” Draghi said.

Collateral Pool
Policy makers may broaden the pool of eligible collateral for ECB loans by loosening rules governing the use of asset- backed securities, said officials speaking on condition of anonymity. They may also increase the amount of uncovered bank bonds that can constitute a lender’s collateral portfolio from the current 10 percent limit, they said.

The ECB is already lending banks as much money as they want against eligible collateral for periods of up to a year. It is likely to add two-year loans to its arsenal, two officials said. While a three-year loan has been discussed, it is unlikely at this stage, they said.

One official said longer-term loans might encourage banks to lend to companies and households, and they would also help financial institutions meet new Basel rules on holding longer- term liquidity.

Today’s meeting is the ECB’s last scheduled opportunity to take policy action this year. It will be accompanied by publication of the central bank’s latest projections, including a 2013 inflation forecast that may justify further monetary stimulus.

Economic Outlook
Draghi said last week that the ECB’s goal is to maintain price stability “in either direction,” suggesting it would act as forcefully to prevent a significant undershooting of its 2 percent ceiling as it would to stop an overshooting.

“This applies to both the setting of official interest rates and the implementation of non-standard measures,” Draghi said.

One official said the economic outlook has deteriorated markedly since Draghi said on Nov. 3 that the ECB expected a “mild recession.”

The OECD said Nov. 28 that growing doubts about the survival of Europe’s monetary union has caused global growth to stall and represents the main risk to the world economy.

The euro area itself is already in a “mild” recession, with the region set to register growth of 1.6 percent this year and just 0.2 percent in 2012, the OECD said.

-- With assistance from Andres Martinez in Durban and Kristian Siedenburg in Vienna. Editors: Matthew Brockett, Craig Stirling
 

Muthukali

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
EU States to Send IMF $267 Billion in New Crisis Fight

European leaders added 200 billion euros ($267 billion) to their crisis-fighting warchest and tightened anti-deficit rules, seeking to lure the European Central Bank into stepping up its rescue operations.

In an accord hailed by ECB President Mario Draghi, the leaders outlined a “fiscal compact” to prevent future debt runups, accelerated the start of a planned 500 billion-euro rescue fund and watered down bondholder loss-sharing provisions.

“It’s a very good outcome for euro-area members and it’s going to be the basis for a good fiscal compact and more disciplined economic policy in euro-area countries,” Draghi told reporters after overnight negotiations in Brussels.

European leaders navigated a labyrinth of political, legal and economic constraints during 11 ½ hours of talks amid unrelenting pressure from financial markets to craft a new approach to fighting the crisis, which now threatens to engulf Italy and Spain.

At the same time, the leaders ventured into untested legal territory by plotting to anchor the tougher budget rules in a separate euro-area treaty after Britain and Hungary balked at amending the pact covering all 27 European Union countries.

The euro was little changed in reaction to the measures, the fifth wide-ranging crisis-containment package since the unprecedented 110 billion-euro bailout of Greece in 2010.

Extraction
The currency was at $1.3335 as of 2:01 p.m. Tokyo time. Stocks in Asia came off their lows of the day, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index down 1.9 percent, after falling as much as 2.3 percent. Futures contracts on the U.S. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index were little changed.

In putting the extra 200 billion euros on the line, European governments for the first time extracted a contribution from the euro region’s national central banks, getting them to lend 150 billion euros to the International Monetary Fund’s general resources. Central banks from non-euro EU states will chip in around 50 billion euros more.

European governments are counting on that downpayment to attract reserve-rich emerging markets such as China to join in the rescue, a month after Europe’s efforts to solicit outside aid ran into obstacles at a Group of 20 meeting.

“I appreciate this demonstration of leadership from Europe and I’m hopeful that others will also do their part,” IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said after attending the Brussels summit.

ECB Focus
The focus now shifts to the Frankfurt-based central bank after Draghi said last week that a commitment to greater fiscal discipline might put “other elements” in play. Draghi yesterday damped expectations that a Brussels deal would prompt the ECB to supplement its bond-buying operations, which it has spent 207 billion euros.

Draghi’s reticence triggered declines in high-yielding bond markets yesterday and sent investors into the relative safety of German debt. Italian 10-year bonds slid the most in almost a month, pushing up yields by 44 basis points to 6.43 percent.

After packages in July and October provided a brief lift to markets and then fizzled, European leaders are now under pressure to quickly deliver on today’s promises -- with the response of the politically independent ECB out of their hands.

The ECB provided breathing space yesterday, trimming its main interest rate by a quarter-point to 1 percent and pledging to offer commercial banks unlimited cash for three years.

Speeding Fund
Leaders aimed to set up the permanent rescue fund, known as the European Stability Mechanism, in July 2012, a year ahead of schedule. By March the EU will reassess plans to cap the overall lending of the ESM and the temporary fund at 500 billion euros. For the time being, Germany deflected a move to grant the ESM a banking license, which would enable it to multiply its firepower by borrowing from the ECB.

In a climbdown by Germany, the permanent fund will follow IMF practices on imposing potential losses on holders of bonds of debt-ridden states. Merkel had championed “private sector involvement” as a way of lessening the bailout burden on taxpayers.

“To put it more bluntly: our first approach to private sector involvement, which had a very negative effect on the debt markets, is now over,” EU President Herman Van Rompuy said.

Deficit Rules
The new fiscal accord goes beyond a crisis-driven toughening of the rules slated to take effect next week. It would cap structural deficits at 0.5 percent of gross domestic product and require each country to establish an “automatic correction mechanism” when budgets stray from the target.

The blueprint also foresaw a near-automatic disciplinary procedure for wayward countries and “more intrusive control” of taxing and spending by governments that overstep the deficit limit of 3 percent of gross domestic product.

“We will create a new fiscal union for the euro that is also a stability union by setting up a debt brake for all member states of the euro and those who want to join up, and by imposing much more automatic sanctions,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said.

In a clash that may reshape the European balance of power, the euro users opted to enshrine the rules in a new treaty that leaves out the U.K. and Hungary instead of going the more traditional route of amending EU treaties that date back to the 1950s. Sweden and the Czech Republic, two other non-euro countries, will decide later whether to join the separate treaty.

The trigger was the refusal by U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron to back a 27-nation treaty without ironclad guarantees of a British veto right over future financial regulations. Cameron called them a threat to London’s standing as Europe’s leading financial center.

“Our British friends made unacceptable demands,” French President Nicolas Sarkozy said. “They wanted opt-outs on financial regulation. Since we consider it was lack of regulation that caused the crisis, that was a demand that we couldn’t meet.”
 
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