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    ECB keeps Interest Rates Unchanged...

    ECB Keeps Rates Unchanged
    Thu Mar 8, 2012 01:16 PM CST

    FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) -- The European Central Bank saw no need to take any further action to help stabilize Europe's financial crisis Thursday as President Mario Draghi told governments and banks that, following the €1 trillion-plus offer of low interest loans, the burden of fighting the problem was now on them.

    The ECB's 23-member governing council, as expected, left its benchmark refinancing rate for the 17 countries that use the euro unchanged at a record low of 1 percent, where it has been since quarter-point rate cuts in November and December.

    The bank also gave no hint that more emergency measures were on the horizon in the wake of its cheap three-year loan offerings of €489 billion ($648 billion) in December and €530 billion ($702 billion) in February, widely credited with stabilizing markets.

    The ECB, national governments and the European Union have been struggling to contain the crisis of countries holding too much debt. Governments are being pressed to cut deficits and the EU is pushing shaky banks to add to their financial buffers against losses stemming from the crisis.

    The ECB's loan offerings have been praised for easing bank finances and preventing a looming credit crunch for businesses that would have severely worsened a mild economic downturn.

    Additionally, some of the banks used the ECB loans to buy government bonds. That brought down borrowing costs for indebted governments such as Italy and Spain. That indirect support was crucial because it is high borrowing costs that pushed Greece, Ireland and Portugal to seek international bailout loans.

    Draghi told reporters Thursday that the loans had been "an unquestionable success" in shoring up banks and restoring confidence. "The risk environment has improved enormously," he said.

    Of the 800 banks taking loans in February, more than half — 460 — were from Germany and many were small in size. Getting money to smaller lenders was a goal of the second round of loans because those banks are likely to lend to the small businesses that provide most of the jobs in the eurozone.

    "This money is now closer to the small and medium-sized enterprises than it was before," Draghi said. "I am not saying this money will necessarily go to SMEs, but at least it is one step closer."

    Now, he said, "the ball is in the governments' and especially the other actors' court, to continue their reforms and repair their balance sheets, the banks especially, so they can support the recovery."

    The bank indicated that that making loans available and cutting interest rates will not be enough to solve the crisis, and turned up the pressure on governments to act.

    That was reinforced by Draghi's warning that inflation will remain over the bank's goal of just under 2 percent into 2013. Lower interest rates can cause prices to increase, and Draghi's comments led some analysts to say the bank might not touch rates again until sometime next year.

    Draghi said keeping inflation expectations under control was "of the essence" and made several references to the bank's mandate from the basic EU treaty of keeping inflation under control as its primary goal.

    "Draghi stressed very clearly that ECB liquidity alone cannot solve the crisis and it is now up to goverments to build on this improved market mood by adopting the needed structural reforms," wrote Marco Valli, chief eurozone economist at UniCredit, in a research note.

    "In other words, the ECB has done enough and the ball is now back in the politicians' court."

    Draghi, meanwhile, downplayed news reports that Jens Weidmann, the head of Germany's Bundesbank and a member of the ECB rate council, has expressed concern about the looser collateral requirements that allowed more banks to take up the cheap three-year loans.

    Draghi said the collateral risks concerned all the board members and that "we are all in the same boat." He said risks were being managed by taking large haircuts on collateral — that is, only lending a fraction of the collateral's face value to insure the ECB against loss in case the borrower bank does not repay the money.

    He went out of his way to praise the conservative Bundesbank, saying that we "really cherish the culture and tradition of the Bundesbank in maintaining price stability. We all collectively owe a lot of what we learned about the stability culture to the Bundesbank and to Germany.

    The Bank of England also kept rates unchanged, leaving its benchmark at the record low of 0.5 percent. Though the British economy contracted in the last quarter of 2011, there have been some recent signs of an improvement.

    (KA)

    #2
    And absolutly nobody believes a word.

    If you think goods and services will magically go
    down in price.....good luck with that.

    Comment


      #3
      The ECB would scoop up fresh cowshit as as
      environmentally sound exercise, place it in an
      aerated oven until it was dried telling guests that
      the process provides time for maturity, place it in
      the open sunlight for one week while announcing
      the rates of vitamin D absorption, grind it with a
      combination of cinnamon and nutmeg and sugar
      and raisins and chopped fruit, and then marinate
      it in cowpiss rum before baking them into pies.
      With such enticement, the represetatives of the
      indebted EU nations would eat Draghi's
      mincemeat pies at his get-togethers where he
      makes an offer they cannot refuse. Pars.

      Comment


        #4
        And Draghi would choose cowshit, because he
        would never risk having some nationalistic
        dissenter exclaim. "This is a pile of horseshit.".
        Pars

        Comment


          #5
          Parsley.... I now understand the meaning of a self professed "foodie".

          BTW I apologize for this late notice of cancellation of your dinner offer!

          Thanks for the chuckles... LMAO

          Cheers... Bill

          Comment


            #6
            That is priceless, parsley well done.

            Comment


              #7
              The taxpayers of euroland now own greek debt.

              Just like the taxpayers of north dakota own the debt
              of califorina.

              Just like the taxpayers of saskatchewan own the debt
              of quebec.

              Thats what this is all about.

              Comment


                #8
                And if you really want something to chuckle
                about,remember it is ultra rich investors coming from
                insolvent provinces driving up the price of land.

                Comment


                  #9
                  How does making over $1 trillion out of
                  thin air change the economy?
                  This will affect us how?

                  Comment


                    #10
                    A farmer who truly enjoys statistics and genetics
                    and economics, all three, could make a valuable
                    contribution to society if he would map every
                    overly-ambitious politician showing measurable
                    signs of anti fiscal-responsibility traits, by posting
                    any of his progeny on worldwide electoral
                    websites, alerting voters, the moment any of them
                    submits their candidacy for election:

                    http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/econom
                    y/government-subsidized-green-light-bulb-carries-
                    costly-price-
                    tag/2012/03/07/gIQAFxOD0R_story.html

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Aren't California's movie stars heavily invested in
                      Texas?

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Cottonpicken..... Agreed. I think the example is the IMF which has been
                        appropriating taxpayer money since 1944.

                        In 1998 the IMF gave 23 billion to Russia... not that long ago at my age!

                        I think election promises and lack of economic education in school
                        curriculums are the underlying causes of new age capitalism which has
                        much government involvement.

                        Your insolvent province... e.g.Ontario.. comment could also be expanded to
                        insolvent countries.

                        The Greeks apparently have been moving euros out of Greece at alarming rates.

                        Chinese wealth has been affecting Canadian property values for years.

                        Tom... look at the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles ..GAAP.

                        The cash of our countries is only a fraction... about 3% I think... of our
                        economies.

                        Balance sheets allow leverage which buys time. Time normally allows income
                        generation and growth to facilitate repayment.

                        Interest rates are the kickers.

                        IMHO the more the central banks are involved, the more pressure economically
                        and politically to keep rates as low as their manipulations allows.

                        So I expect our "real" rates of return will remain quite low... much longer than
                        my savings deserve!

                        I think the uncertainty of economic progress is the underlying factor of soaring
                        land and precious metal values, and the rush to move money... balance sheet
                        numbers... to safer havens.

                        I could be wrong.

                        Cheers... Bill

                        Comment


                          #13
                          There are 2 ways for a government to get capital to
                          fund itself.

                          Taxation and inflation

                          40 years ago charles degaulle called bullshit on the
                          united states and started redeeming cash for
                          gold,this forced nixons hand to decouple so the
                          country could expand its wars and social programs
                          the blow back to this was inflation which 13 years
                          later was arrested by paul volker

                          Fast forward to today we are in a different world but
                          austrian economic principles can still be applied.

                          In order to fund education,healthcare,overseas wars
                          with fancy new f-35's,farm
                          subsidies,highways,parks,indians,defaulted mortgage
                          debt,etc,etc the government has to tax or print.

                          Seeing as our society is taxed to the limit,minus our
                          corporate rate which is the lowest in the world,the
                          government will sell bonds and if nobody is their to
                          buy them,they will buy them themselves,which will
                          lower the purchasing power of a dollar.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Cotton,

                            Inflation IS increasing taxation of the average citizen. It is that simple.

                            On top... the governments are saying that inflation is NOT a problem. Not for them.... they get more money... without increasing taxes... but increasing GDP.

                            What did the US do in the 1930's... they spent money domestically and built public works projects and infrastructure. China has and is doing the same thing. Japan the same...

                            Sooo the EU and US hit the 'reset' button on the big 'currency curcuit breaker' with $5T. China can do this once a month... and who even knows the difference?

                            When a tree falls in the forest... does anyone notice? Not unless you trip over it!

                            Perhaps we can make some 'firewood'!!!

                            Comment


                              #15
                              I totally agree.

                              In the thirties they changed the price of gold from 20 to 35 ....overnight.

                              And then made it illegally.

                              Land of the free,lol.

                              "no people are more hopelessly enslaved then those who believe they are
                              free"

                              goethe

                              Anyone heard the russia national anthem in english?

                              http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AOAtz8xWM0w

                              Comment

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