- Draghi in ECB euro rescue plan
- Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, has unveiled details of a new bond-buying plan aimed at easing the eurozone debt crisis.
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6 September 2012 Last updated at 14:43 GMT
ECB's Mario Draghi unveils bond-buying euro debt plan
ECB president Mario Draghi: "We will have a fully effective backstop to avoid destructive scenarios"Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, has unveiled details of a new bond-buying plan aimed at easing the eurozone's debt crisis.He said the scheme would provide a "fully effective backstop" and that the euro was "irreversible".
The ECB aims to cut the borrowing costs of debt-burdened eurozone members by buying their bonds.
Ahead of the announcement, the central bank kept the benchmark eurozone interest rate unchanged at 0.75%.
Mr Draghi said the ECB would engage in outright monetary transactions, or OMTs, to address "severe distortions" in government bond markets based on "unfounded fears".
He insisted that the ECB was "strictly within our mandate" of maintaining financial stability, but reiterated the need for governments to continue with their deficit reduction plans and labour market reforms.
He added that the ECB's actions came in response to eurozone economic contraction in 2012, with continued weakness likely to continue into 2013.
The ECB expects the eurozone economy to shrink by 0.4% in 2012 and grow by 0.5% in 2013, with inflation rising to 2.6%.
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Some in the financial markets - and many governments - will certainly be disappointed that it has taken so long for the ECB to step up to the plate”OMTs will only be carried out in conjunction with European Financial Stability Facility or European Stability Mechanism programmes, he said.In other words, countries will still have to request a bailout before the OMTs are triggered.
The maturities of the bonds being purchased would be between one and three years and there would be no limits on the size of bond purchases, he added.
The ECB will ask the International Monetary Fund to help it monitor country compliance with its conditions.
Long-term financing Responding to the plans, Peter Westaway, chief economist for Europe at asset manager Vanguard, said: "This is just the good news that was priced by the markets, and it has now been confirmed.
"There is a long-term question of whether this will be enough to meet the long-term financing needs of Italy, and that probably remains."
European stock markets reacted positively to the announcement, with the FTSE 100 rising 1.2% and the German Dax and French Cac indexes soaring over 2% in mid-afternoon trading.
Bank shares in particular rose sharply on the news, with French banks Credit Agricole and Societe Generale both up more than 7%, while in Germany Deutsche Bank rose 5.4% and Commerzbank was up 4.6%. In London, Lloyds Banking Group was up 5.7%.
Continue reading the main storyCrisis jargon busterUse the dropdown for easy-to-understand explanations of key financial terms:BondA debt security, or more simply, an IOU. The bond states when a loan must be repaid and what interest the borrower (issuer) must pay to the holder. They can be issued by companies, banks or governments to raise money. Banks and investors buy and trade bonds.However, the euro fell back against the dollar to $1.2571 following its a high of $1.265 reached before the ECB announcement.While Mr Draghi was announcing the ECB's plans, German Chancellor Angela Merkel was meeting Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy for talks on the eurozone crisis.
In a joint news conference afterwards, Mrs Merkel said: "We have to restore confidence in the euro as a whole, so that the international markets have confidence that member countries will fulfil their commitments."
Mr Rajoy said: "We want to dispel any doubts on the markets about the continuity of the euro."
Global risk Jens Weidmann, president of Germany's Bundesbank, remains vigorously opposed to the ECB's plan, concerned that member states could become hooked on central bank aid and fail to reform their economies sufficiently.
But the majority of the 23 ECB council members support the plan.
And the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) added its support for the ECB bond-buying plan on Thursday, as it warned that the eurozone crisis posed the greatest risk to the global economy.
It is calling for more action from central banks to prevent a break-up of the eurozone.
"Concerns about the possibility of exit from the euro area are pushing up [government bond] yields, which in turn reinforces break-up fears," the OECD said in its global economic outlook.
"It is crucial to stem these exit fears. This could be achieved by the ECB undertaking bond market intervention to keep spreads within ranges justified by fundamentals."
Mr Draghi is hoping that ECB intervention in the bond markets will help reduce the borrowing costs of debt-laden countries such as Spain and Italy and lessen the likelihood of them needing to ask for a full sovereign bailout, an eventuality that could bankrupt the eurozone and cause the collapse of the euro.
Spain, which has already asked for 100bn euros (£79bn) in state aid to help its debt-stricken banks, is currently paying yields of 6.42% on its 10-year bonds, while Italy's 10-year bond yields are 5.51%, below the critical 7% figure thought likely to trigger a sovereign bailout request.
In other eurozone news:
- The unemployment rate in Greece rose to 24.4% in June from a revised 23.5% in May, according to the Elstat statistics service. However, Spain remains the eurozone nation with the highest jobless rate, at 24.6% in June.
- Spain's borrowing costs fell at a debt auction in which it sold 3.5bn euros of bonds maturing in 2014, 2015 and 2016. The two-year rate fell from 4.706% to 2.798%; the three-year rate went from 5.086% to 3.676%; and the four-year fell from 5.971% to 4.603%.
- copy http://www.bbc.co.uk/news
ECB's Mario Draghi unveils bond-buying euro debt plan
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