Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

ECB fires off volley of anti-deflation shots

-

The European Central Bank rolled out Thursday an unprecedented package of measures, including negative interest rates, in its fight to head off the spectre of deflation in the euro area.

ECB chief Mario Draghi insisted that the 18 countries that share the euro are not actually on the brink of deflation, a potentially crippling downward spiral of falling prices.

But action was needed to kick-start ailing lending in the region, Draghi argued.

Thus, the ECB entered unchartered waters, taking one of its key interest rates into negative territory for the first time.

The ECB lowered all three of its key interest rates: the benchmark refi refinancing rate was cut to 0.15 percent from 0.25 percent, the interest rate on the marginal lending facility was trimmed to 0.40 percent from 0.75 percent.

And the deposit rate, the rate at which the central bank pays commercial banks for depositing their unused cash, was reduced from zero percent to minus 0.10 percent.

This means that banks will be charged for parking funds at the ECB in the hope they might lend it on to businesses and consumers instead.

- Rates can't go lower -

The logo of the European currency is pictured in front of the European Central Bank (ECB) in Frankfu...
The logo of the European currency is pictured in front of the European Central Bank (ECB) in Frankfurt.
Daniel Roland, AFP/File

Draghi admitted that interest rates cannot go down any further.

"For all the practical purposes we have reached the lower bound," he said.

But on top of the rate cuts, Draghi unveiled a series of measures to spur bank credit, which has been contracting for months now.

And "if required, we will act swiftly with further monetary policy easing," Draghi pledged.

The ECB already pumped vast amounts of liquidity into the banking system at the end of 2011 and the beginning of 2012 using so-called Long-Term Refinancing Operations (LTROs).

But at that time, banks did not lend the cash on to the small and medium-sized companies that form the backbone of the eurozone economy.

So this time, the ECB is targeting the loans so as to encourage banks to lend to households and non-financial corporations.

Draghi said the ECB was also working on US Federal Reserve-style bond-buying by purchasing asset-backed securities (ABS) from banks.

And the ECB has decided to stop "sterilising" the liquidity injected from its Securities Markets Programme, under which the ECB purchased bonds from troubled "peripheral" eurozone countries, he said.

All in all, the combination of measures would "provide further monetary policy accommodation and support lending to the real economy," Draghi said.

- ECB action 'strongly welcome' -

A photographer takes a picture of the graph of the German stock market index DAX at the stock exchan...
A photographer takes a picture of the graph of the German stock market index DAX at the stock exchange in Frankfurt am Main on June 5, 2014
Boris Roessler, DPA/AFP

The markets hailed the ECB's action, with European stock markets jumping on the news and Germany's blue-chip DAX index hitting a record high, breaching the 10,000 level for the first time.

The euro, the strength of which has been a growing source of concern, also fell on the news to its lowest level in four months at $1.3503.

In Washington, the International Monetary Fund "strongly welcomed" the ECB's "very pro-active stance."

Analysts were similarly cheered, but cautioned that the initial euphoria might evaporate.

"Taken together, today's package of policy measures is a strong one, underlining the ECB's determination and willingness to act," said ING DiBa economist Carsten Brzeski.

"However, as so often during the euro crisis, first-glance-enthusiasm doesn't always last," he warned.

"The ECB has no guarantee that the economy and lending to the private sector can really be kick-started. The ECB is still dependent on banks. To some extent, the wish is still father to the thought."

Markit economist Chris Williamson was more hopeful.

"It will take some time to gauge the longer term effectiveness of the measures," he said.

"The effectiveness of a negative deposit rate is uncertain and the (new liquidity measures) may also have only a limited impact on actual lending."

But more importantly, "it is probably the lift to business and consumer confidence that will result from the decisiveness of the policy action that will do the most to help the economic recovery find its legs," Williamson said.

Tom Rogers at EY Eurozone Forecast said was "moderately encouraged" by the ECB action.

"But we remain concerned that the ECB is continuing to understate the risk of a prolonged period of low inflation or falling prices," he warned.

The European Central Bank rolled out Thursday an unprecedented package of measures, including negative interest rates, in its fight to head off the spectre of deflation in the euro area.

ECB chief Mario Draghi insisted that the 18 countries that share the euro are not actually on the brink of deflation, a potentially crippling downward spiral of falling prices.

But action was needed to kick-start ailing lending in the region, Draghi argued.

Thus, the ECB entered unchartered waters, taking one of its key interest rates into negative territory for the first time.

The ECB lowered all three of its key interest rates: the benchmark refi refinancing rate was cut to 0.15 percent from 0.25 percent, the interest rate on the marginal lending facility was trimmed to 0.40 percent from 0.75 percent.

And the deposit rate, the rate at which the central bank pays commercial banks for depositing their unused cash, was reduced from zero percent to minus 0.10 percent.

This means that banks will be charged for parking funds at the ECB in the hope they might lend it on to businesses and consumers instead.

– Rates can’t go lower –

The logo of the European currency is pictured in front of the European Central Bank (ECB) in Frankfu...

The logo of the European currency is pictured in front of the European Central Bank (ECB) in Frankfurt.
Daniel Roland, AFP/File

Draghi admitted that interest rates cannot go down any further.

“For all the practical purposes we have reached the lower bound,” he said.

But on top of the rate cuts, Draghi unveiled a series of measures to spur bank credit, which has been contracting for months now.

And “if required, we will act swiftly with further monetary policy easing,” Draghi pledged.

The ECB already pumped vast amounts of liquidity into the banking system at the end of 2011 and the beginning of 2012 using so-called Long-Term Refinancing Operations (LTROs).

But at that time, banks did not lend the cash on to the small and medium-sized companies that form the backbone of the eurozone economy.

So this time, the ECB is targeting the loans so as to encourage banks to lend to households and non-financial corporations.

Draghi said the ECB was also working on US Federal Reserve-style bond-buying by purchasing asset-backed securities (ABS) from banks.

And the ECB has decided to stop “sterilising” the liquidity injected from its Securities Markets Programme, under which the ECB purchased bonds from troubled “peripheral” eurozone countries, he said.

All in all, the combination of measures would “provide further monetary policy accommodation and support lending to the real economy,” Draghi said.

– ECB action ‘strongly welcome’ –

A photographer takes a picture of the graph of the German stock market index DAX at the stock exchan...

A photographer takes a picture of the graph of the German stock market index DAX at the stock exchange in Frankfurt am Main on June 5, 2014
Boris Roessler, DPA/AFP

The markets hailed the ECB’s action, with European stock markets jumping on the news and Germany’s blue-chip DAX index hitting a record high, breaching the 10,000 level for the first time.

The euro, the strength of which has been a growing source of concern, also fell on the news to its lowest level in four months at $1.3503.

In Washington, the International Monetary Fund “strongly welcomed” the ECB’s “very pro-active stance.”

Analysts were similarly cheered, but cautioned that the initial euphoria might evaporate.

“Taken together, today’s package of policy measures is a strong one, underlining the ECB’s determination and willingness to act,” said ING DiBa economist Carsten Brzeski.

“However, as so often during the euro crisis, first-glance-enthusiasm doesn’t always last,” he warned.

“The ECB has no guarantee that the economy and lending to the private sector can really be kick-started. The ECB is still dependent on banks. To some extent, the wish is still father to the thought.”

Markit economist Chris Williamson was more hopeful.

“It will take some time to gauge the longer term effectiveness of the measures,” he said.

“The effectiveness of a negative deposit rate is uncertain and the (new liquidity measures) may also have only a limited impact on actual lending.”

But more importantly, “it is probably the lift to business and consumer confidence that will result from the decisiveness of the policy action that will do the most to help the economic recovery find its legs,” Williamson said.

Tom Rogers at EY Eurozone Forecast said was “moderately encouraged” by the ECB action.

“But we remain concerned that the ECB is continuing to understate the risk of a prolonged period of low inflation or falling prices,” he warned.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

Let’s just hope sanity finally gets a word in edgewise.

World

An Iranian military truck carries a Sayad 4-B missile past a portrait of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during a military parade on April...

World

Iranians lift up a flag and the mock up of a missile during a celebration following Iran's missiles and drones attack on Israel, on...

World

Tycoon Morris Chang received one of Taiwan's highest medals of honour to recognise his achievements as the founder of semiconductor giant TSMC - Copyright...