The European Central Bank’s move to keep euro-area banks afloat is buying governments more time to recapitalize them as Greece edges closer to default.
The ECB said today it will reintroduce year-long loans, giving banks access to unlimited cash through January 2013, and resume purchases of covered bonds to encourage lending. At the same time, the European Commission is pushing for a coordinated capital injection into banks and German Chancellor Angela Merkel said policy makers “shouldn’t hesitate” if it turns out financial institutions are undercapitalized.
“Politicians, including Angela Merkel, have finally realized the urgency in protecting banks as a Greek default can no longer be ruled out and no-one wants a Lehman in Europe,” said Christoph Kind, head of asset allocation at Frankfurt Trust, which manages $24 billion. “From its side, the ECB is making sure that banks won’t face funding issues throughout that period.”
Financial shares advanced after Merkel fed speculation that policy makers are working on plans to boost bank capital to stem the spread of the sovereign debt crisis. Europe’s rescue fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, could be relied upon as a last resort to bolster banks if needed, she said, adding Germany is ready to discuss possible bank aid at this month’s European Union summit.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-06/ecb-buys-governments-time-on-banks-as-greece-moves-closer-to-debt-default.html
The ECB said today it will reintroduce year-long loans, giving banks access to unlimited cash through January 2013, and resume purchases of covered bonds to encourage lending. At the same time, the European Commission is pushing for a coordinated capital injection into banks and German Chancellor Angela Merkel said policy makers “shouldn’t hesitate” if it turns out financial institutions are undercapitalized.
“Politicians, including Angela Merkel, have finally realized the urgency in protecting banks as a Greek default can no longer be ruled out and no-one wants a Lehman in Europe,” said Christoph Kind, head of asset allocation at Frankfurt Trust, which manages $24 billion. “From its side, the ECB is making sure that banks won’t face funding issues throughout that period.”
Financial shares advanced after Merkel fed speculation that policy makers are working on plans to boost bank capital to stem the spread of the sovereign debt crisis. Europe’s rescue fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, could be relied upon as a last resort to bolster banks if needed, she said, adding Germany is ready to discuss possible bank aid at this month’s European Union summit.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-06/ecb-buys-governments-time-on-banks-as-greece-moves-closer-to-debt-default.html
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