Arab Times

Europe and Fed moves show global shift away from easy money policies

Move pushes stock markets to record highs

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RIGA, Latvia, June 18, (AP): Two of the globe’s most powerful central banks are gradually withdrawin­g the easy money policies that helped repair the damage wrought by the Great Recession and push stock markets to record highs. It’s a sign of confidence in the economy, but with uncertain consequenc­es for consumers and businesses.

As growth picks up in the US and Europe and more people finding jobs, the European Central Bank and the US Federal Reserve are deeming it unnecessar­y to support the economy with policies created in darker days of financial uncertaint­y.

The ECB on Thursday said it would phase out by the end of this year its bond-buying stimulus for the 19 countries that use the euro. It had deployed the program in 2015 to save the region from the risk of falling prices and growth, and as Greece’s debt crisis raised questions about the euro’s future.

The move came less than a day after the US Federal Reserve raised interest rates for the second time this year on Wednesday, reversing rate cuts it started making almost ten years ago during the financial crisis.

“We are in an altogether different world to only a couple of years ago,” said Patrick O’Donnell, senior investment­s manager at Aberdeen Standard Investment­s.

The central bank moves, he said, are “another step on the way to removing the extraordin­ary global monetary stimulus over the last decade.”

The ECB’s bond purchases were a way of pushing newly created money into the economy. That sought to lower borrowing rates and improve growth and inflation. The ECB wants inflation at just under 2 percent, and the last figures show it at 1.9 percent — technicall­y in line with the goal, but the ECB must also be sure inflation will stay high when stimulus is removed.

The ECB’s 25-member governing council said Thursday that the bond purchases would be cut to 15 billion euros ($17.7 billion) a month in October, from the current 30 billion euros. The purchases would then be wound up completely after December.

The bank was careful to stress that it would withdraw support for the economy only gradually, saying its key interest rate would not rise from its record low of zero until at least the summer of 2019.

That means it will be years before monetary policy and interest rates return to more historical­ly normal levels. The goal: avoid a sharp rise in market rates like one that occurred in 2013 when then-Fed chief Ben Bernanke mentioned withdrawin­g stimulus.

However gradual, the exit is nonetheles­s a milestone for the eurozone economy, which recovered more slowly from the Great Recession than the US Unemployme­nt in the US is 3.8 percent, less than half the eurozone’s 8.5 percent.

Both the ECB and Fed moves will allow market borrowing rates to rise gradually. That could make loans somewhat more expensive for homebuyers and companies looking to invest.

But it could also increase returns for savers and make it easier for pension savings to grow.

The ECB’s effort in recent years to drop those borrowing rates has had its critics in some parts of Europe, especially Germany, who said it harmed savers and reduced the incentive for indebted government­s to repair their finances by lowering borrowing costs. ECB President Mario Draghi says the bank’s policy of easy money has helped create millions of new jobs, with unemployme­nt falling from over 12 percent during the crisis.

There’s little doubt, however, that the ECB stimulus program has helped heavily indebted countries like Italy borrow at unusually cheap rates. Its 10-year bonds yield only 2.76 percent despite sluggish growth and a government whose officials have in the past speculated about leaving the euro. US 10-year Treasurys yield 2.95 percent.

Italy is in focus in Europe at the moment after a populist government came to power. A coalition between the anti-establishm­ent 5-Star Movement and the anti-immigratio­n League has promised spending that could add to the country’s already heavy debt load. At various times the parties have also questioned Italy’s membership in the euro, though the finance minister this week calmed markets by saying the country has no intention to leave.

The Fed has already ended its own bond-buying program, which had similar goals, and has made seven interest rate increases to the current policy rate of 1.75-2.0 percent. At that, the Fed is also moving gradually; with core inflation at 2.2 percent in May, and headline inflation at 2.8 percent, the US central bank benchmark is only around zero in real terms, when inflation is taken into considerat­ion.

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