The Pak Banker

Coronaviru­s: ECB launches mammoth 750b debt purchase

- FRANKFURT -REUTERS

The European Central Bank launched a 750 billion euro (Dh3.01 trillion) emergency bond purchase scheme after an unschedule­d meeting today, attempting to stem a spiralling economic and financial crisis. With much of Europe in lockdown amid the coronaviru­s outbreak, economic activity has come to a near standstill and markets have been in a tailspin, foreshadow­ing a deep recession on par with the downturn seen in the 2008 global financial crisis.

"Extraordin­ary times require extraordin­ary action," ECB President Christine Lagarde said. "There are no limits to our commitment to the euro. We are determined to use the full potential of our tools, within our mandate."

The bond purchases will continue until the "crisis phase" of the epidemic is over and nonfinanci­al commercial paper will also be included for the first time among eligible assets, the ECB said. Although the ECB's purchases will be done according to each country's shareholde­r in the bank, the so-called capital key, the ECB said it would be flexible and may deviate from this rule, a hint that it will not tolerate a surge in yield spreads between euro zone members.

The purchases will also include for the first time debt from Greece, which has been shut out of ECB buys because of its low credit rating. However, the ECB left its minus 0.5 per cent deposit rate unchanged just as it did last Thursday, another sign that policymake­rs may now see a further cut doing more harm than good.

Meeting in a regular session last Thursday, the ECB approved a large stimulus package but the measures disappoint­ed investors, prompting some to question the bank's commitment to former ECB boss Mario Draghi's

pledge to do "whatever takes" to save the euro.

With bond yields on the bloc's periphery soaring and the spread between Italian and German tenyear debt doubling in just a few days, pressure has been mounting on the ECB

it

to do more.

Panic selling pushed 10- year Italian yields above 3 per cent briefly on Wednesday, raising concerns about the sustainabi­lity of its debt, before ECB purchases and verbal interventi­on pushed it back to

around 2.3 per cent.

Additional measures from Frankfurt may not of course fix the issue - aggressive rate cuts and far greater bond-buying by the US Federal Reserve haven't calmed sentiment. US stocks deepened their

selloff on Wednesday and the Dow erased virtually the last of its gains since President Donald Trump's 2017 inaugurati­on, as the widening repercussi­ons of the coronaviru­s pandemic threatened to cripple economic activity.

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