Open-ended European QE starts 'with a bang'
Katy Barnato | @KatyBarnato
European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi announced
the launch of an open-ended, expanded monthly 60 billion euro ($70 billion)
private and public bond-buying program on Thursday.
The long-anticipated introduction of euro zone government
bond purchases, which could amount to as much as a trillion euros, will mean
the ECB will join the U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of England and Bank of Japan in
launching a quantitative easing (QE) scheme.
The program will be open-ended, lasting until at least 2016,
Draghi told reporters at his regular media conference on Thursday, and will
start in March this year. The hope is that it will boost the region's painfully
low inflation rate, which came in at an annual minus 0.2 percent in December.
Explaining the ECB's decision, Draghi said: "Inflation
dynamics have continued to be weaker than expected. While the sharp fall in oil
prices over recent months remains the dominant factor driving current headline
inflation, the potential for second-round effects on wage and price-setting has
increased and could adversely affect medium-term price developments."
The size of the program was bigger than the 50 billion euro
per month rumored prior to Draghi's announcement.
Read More: Live
blog: Markets cheer European QE
"European QE is set to start with a bang rather a
whimper, a fact that will be well received by investors," said Nancy
Curtin, CIO of Close Brothers Asset Management, in a research note after
Draghi's announcement.
"The euro zone was in need of shock-and-awe tactics
from the ECB to combat the prospect of a prolonged period of deflation, and
Draghi has finally delivered on his promise to do 'whatever it takes'."
The ECB will purchase euro-denominated investment-grade
securities only. The debt of countries like Greece, which are subject to
international bailout programs, will be subject to "additional eligibility
criteria," Draghi said.
Debt that is trading with a negative yield will also be
eligible for the program. Draghi also said that in the event of a sovereign
restructuring or default, public and private bondholders would be treated on
equal terms.
Twenty percent of the additional purchases will be subject
to risk-sharing arrangements, designed to limit the amount of risk the ECB
takes on to its balance books. The majority of risk will remain with euro zone
national central banks.
No more than 25 percent of each debt issue will be
purchased. The maturities of the debt purchases will range between two and 30
years.
The euro slid against both the sterling and the U.S. dollar after
Draghi's announcement. Europe's stock markets staged a small rally on the news
of the announcement, while 10-year yields on a range of European sovereign debt
fell to record lows.
Earlier in the day, the ECB announced it would hold its main
interest rate unchanged. It kept its main refinancing rate at 0.05 percent,
with the rate on its marginal lending facility at 0.30 percent. The rate on its
deposit facility was held at -0.20 percent.
Meanwhile Denmark, whose currency is pegged to the euro,
was forced to issue its second rate cut in a week in a bid to defend the krone.
The Danish central bank trimmed its deposit rate from minus 0.2 percent to
minus 0.35 percent.
Mario Draghi
Mario
Draghi is the president of the European
Central Bank, a member of the Group
of Thirty, and was an honorary trustee at the Brookings Institution (think tank).
Note: David Walker is a
member of the Group of Thirty, and
was an executive director for the Bank
of England.
Mervyn
Allister King is a member of the Group
of Thirty, and was a governor for the Bank
of England.
Mark
J. Carney is a member of the Group
of Thirty, a governor for the Bank
of England, a member of the Bretton
Woods Committee, and was the governor for the Bank of Canada.
Masaaki Shirakawa
is a member of the Group of Thirty, a
member of the Bretton Woods Committee,
and the governor for the Bank of Japan.
Lawrence H. Summers
is a member of the Group of Thirty, a
member of the Bretton Woods Committee,
was the National Economic Council chairman for the Barack Obama administration, a trustee at the Brookings
Institution (think tank), and a 2008 Bilderberg conference
participant (think tank).
George Soros
is a member of the Bretton Woods
Committee, was married in 2013, and
the chairman for the Foundation to Promote Open Society.
Foundation
to Promote Open Society was a funder for the Brookings Institution
(think tank).
Peter L. Woicke
is a member of the Bretton Woods
Committee, and was a managing director for the World Bank.
David de Ferranti
is a member of the Bretton Woods
Committee, and was a VP for the World
Bank.
Johannes F. Linn
is a member of the Bretton Woods
Committee, and was a VP for the World
Bank.
Caio Koch-Weser
is a member of the Bretton Woods
Committee, the vice chairman for the Deutsche
Bank, and was the managing director of operations for the World Bank.
Moises
Naim is a member of the Bretton
Woods Committee, and was the executive director for the World Bank.
Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala is a member of the Bretton
Woods Committee, was a managing director for the World Bank, and a visiting fellow for the Brookings Institution (think tank).
E. Patrick Coady
is a member of the Bretton Woods
Committee, and was the U.S. executive director for the World Bank.
Carole Brookins
is a member of the Bretton Woods
Committee, and was the U.S. executive director for the World Bank.
Jim
Yong Kim was a guest at George Soros’s
2013 wedding, and is the president
of the World Bank.
Ivo
H. Daalder was a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution (think tank),
and a U.S. permanent representative for NATO.
Anders Fogh
Rasmussen is the secretary general for NATO,
and was the prime minister for Denmark.
Lael
Brainard was the VP & director for the Brookings Institution (think
tank), is a member of the Federal
Open Market Committee, and a member of the Federal Reserve Board.
Ben
S. Bernanke is a distinguished fellow at the Brookings Institution
(think tank), was the chairman for the Federal
Open Market Committee, and the chairman for the Federal Reserve Board.
Stanley Fischer
is a member of the Federal Open Market
Committee, the vice chairman for the Federal
Reserve Board, a member of the Group
of Thirty, was a governor for the Bank
of Israel, and the chief economist for the World Bank.
Bank of Israel
is the central bank for Israel.
Shimon
Peres is the president of Israel,
and a friend of Haim Saban.
Haim
Saban is a friend of Shimon Peres,
a trustee at the Brookings Institution
(think tank), the treasurer for the Saban
Family Foundation, and a benefactor at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy.
Saban
Family Foundation was a funder for the Brookings Institution (think
tank).
Saban
Center for Middle East Policy is a policy center at the Brookings
Institution (think tank).
A.W.
Clausen was an honorary trustee at the Brookings Institution (think
tank), the president of the World
Bank, and the chairman & CEO for the Bank of America Corp. (Bailout Company).
Robert S. McNamara
was an honorary trustee at the Brookings Institution (think tank), and the
president of the World Bank.
Susan
E. Rice was a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution (think tank),
is the White House national security adviser for the Barack Obama administration, and Emmett J. Rice’s daughter.
Emmett
J. Rice was Susan E. Rice’s
father, and the U.S. alternative director for reconstruction & development
for the World Bank.
David
Dollar is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution (think tank),
was the emissary to China for the U.S.
Department of the Treasury, and the country director for China and Mongolia
for the World Bank.
Timothy F.
Geithner was the secretary at the U.S.
Department of the Treasury for the Barack
Obama administration, the vice chairman for the Federal Open Market Committee, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and a
member of the Group of Thirty.
Mario
Draghi is a member of the Group of
Thirty, the president of the European
Central Bank, and was an honorary trustee at the Brookings Institution (think tank).
Paul
A. Volcker is the chairman emeritus for the Group of Thirty, was the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the chairman for the Federal Reserve Board, and the chairman
for the Wolfensohn Fund Management.
James D. Wolfensohn is the chairman & CEO
for the Wolfensohn Fund Management, a
director at the American Friends of Bilderberg (think tank), a co-chair,
member for the Bretton Woods Committee,
was an honorary trustee at the Brookings Institution (think tank), the
president of the World Bank, and a
2008 Bilderberg conference participant (think tank).
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