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1970-01-01 02:00:00
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THE European Central Bank (ECB) tends to take the long way around. When in 2009
the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England slashed interest rates towards zero
and started quantitative easing (buying government bonds with central-bank
money), the ECB was more circumspect. It was reluctant to cut its main rate
below 1% and loth to buy government bonds directly.
Instead it adopted its own non-standard measures. It offered unlimited loans to
commercial banks for up to a year against a broad range of collateral. The ECB
s oblique approach had much the same effect as the route taken by the Fed and
others. A flood of liquidity from a 442 billion ($611 billion) auction of
one-year ECB loans in June 2009 pushed short-term interest rates close to
levels in America and Britain. Banks used much of the cash to buy government
bonds, driving down long-term interest rates.
More than two years on, and in far more trying circumstances, the ECB seems to
have repeated the trick. Faced with renewed recession, a bank-funding crisis
and investor revulsion against all but the safest euro-zone government bonds,
the ECB said on December 8th that it would provide unlimited funds for 36
months at its main interest rate (which it cut to 1%), at two auctions. The
first of these, on December 21st, attracted bids of 489 billion. That more
than matched the amount lent for one year in June 2009, and has had similar
effects. Overnight interest rates have fallen to around 0.4%, well below the
ECB s benchmark rate. Longer-term bond yields for investment-grade euro-zone
countries ie, everyone but Cyprus, Greece and Portugal have dropped, too (see
left-hand chart).
The decline in short-term rates is not surprising, given the excess liquidity
washing around the euro-zone banking system: banks have almost 500 billion on
overnight deposit with the ECB earning interest of 0.25%. A fall in longer-term
bond yields looked less of a sure thing when the two auctions were announced.
Borrowing money from the ECB for three years at 1% to buy bonds with much
higher yields might look an obvious carry trade. But it seemed that only the
bravest or most desperate banks would want to risk loading up on government
debt issued by Italy or Spain so soon after being told by the European Banking
Authority (EBA) to raise capital against declines in the value of that very
debt. Even so, ten-year Italian bond yields have dropped by around one
percentage point so far this year, to below 6%; Spanish yields have fallen
sharply, too.
The rally in bond prices may be as much to do with a change in expectations as
with the direct use of the three-year money in bond purchases. The ECB says
that the net increase in liquidity owing to the December auction was a more
modest 193 billion, because banks retired some shorter-term loans at the same
time. They have done more of the same since then, which means the incremental
increase in liquidity is closer to 150 billion, says Laurent Fransolet at
Barclays Capital. Perhaps two-thirds of that total was raised to replace bank
bonds that are set to mature soon, he reckons, and only a third to finance
carry trades. That is a fraction of the total the ECB has spent since the
summer, trying in vain to cap bond yields of peripheral countries.
Yet the headline number of 489 billion and the promise of a second
(potentially larger) three-year auction later this month have been enough to
turn sentiment around especially as non-bank investors had started 2012 short
of euro-zone government paper. Before the end of the year everyone was
underweight Italy because they were worried about being fired for being long,
says the head of capital markets at one large investment bank. Now the job
risk has shifted to being underinvested in Italy.
Banks may also be more inclined to use the February auction to finance
sovereign-debt carry trades following assurances from the EBA that it will not
mark down the value of government bonds in its next round of stress tests. The
test was a one-off, says one senior EBA official. Several banks say that they
have had similar encouragement from regulators. We re going to use it, says
the boss of one large bank in a peripheral country, of the ECB facility. It
doesn t matter if we buy government debt with public money, or the ECB buys it
directly. It has exactly the same result.
Fringe benefits
So the ECB seems to have stopped the rot. Banks have secure financing for three
years, which has militated against the risk of a liquidity shortage that could
lead to bank failures. A run on illiquid but solvent governments has been
halted.
But this being Europe, a host of worries remains. Banks are still required to
meet the minimum capital ratios set by the EBA by June 30th. Since equity is
hard to raise, banks have to marshal their existing capital carefully, which
will make loans for consumers and firms hard to come by. A worrying sign that
recession may linger is that euro-area bank loans to the private sector, as
well as bank deposits, fell sharply in December (see right-hand chart). The ECB
s quarterly bank-lending survey on February 1st reported a substantial
tightening of credit conditions. Banks also expect to tighten credit standards
over the next three months.
Bond purchases will leave banks at greater risk if anxieties about public
solvency return. The more banks pledge collateral to draw on long-term ECB
financing, the less attractive it is for investors to buy banks unsecured
bonds, as they will be further behind in the queue in the case of bankruptcy.
The issue of addiction to ECB funds is particularly acute in the peripheral
countries that need to finance large current-account deficits (and to refinance
accumulated deficits) through their banks.
That helps explain why Portugal has not shared in the rally. Investors fear
that it, like Greece, may not be able to repay its public debts. If
negotiations over private-sector losses on Greek government debts end in a
coercive deal or a messy default, the appetite for other risky euro-zone debt
could also fade. The ECB may yet be forced to take the direct route to
bond-market stability.
www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange
from the print edition | Finance and economics