May 10 (Bloomberg) -- Euro-area central banks said they are buying government bonds as part of a program to counter a sovereign debt crisis and defend their common currency.
âWe confirm that we are buying today,â said a spokesman for Germanyâs Bundesbank in Frankfurt. The Bank of France and Bank of Italy also said they have started purchasing government bonds. The European Central Bank, which announced the unprecedented initiative at 3:15 a.m. this morning, declined to comment. President Jean-Claude Trichet will hold a press briefing in Basel later today.
The euro strengthened 2 percent and stocks climbed around the world after European policy makers unveiled a $960 billion loan plan overnight to end a crisis of confidence in the currency that was triggered by Greeceâs budget deficit. The ECB, whose resistance to buying government bonds last week exacerbated market turmoil, this morning said it will purchase assets to âensure depth and liquidity.â
âThe buying today is an obvious gesture to impress investors,â said Ciaran OâHagan, a fixed-income strategist at Societe Generale SA in Paris. âAnd it requires very little cash right now to push the yields down on the riskier sovereigns.â
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=adZGdKgAJtio
Ant it requires very little cash...
âWe confirm that we are buying today,â said a spokesman for Germanyâs Bundesbank in Frankfurt. The Bank of France and Bank of Italy also said they have started purchasing government bonds. The European Central Bank, which announced the unprecedented initiative at 3:15 a.m. this morning, declined to comment. President Jean-Claude Trichet will hold a press briefing in Basel later today.
The euro strengthened 2 percent and stocks climbed around the world after European policy makers unveiled a $960 billion loan plan overnight to end a crisis of confidence in the currency that was triggered by Greeceâs budget deficit. The ECB, whose resistance to buying government bonds last week exacerbated market turmoil, this morning said it will purchase assets to âensure depth and liquidity.â
âThe buying today is an obvious gesture to impress investors,â said Ciaran OâHagan, a fixed-income strategist at Societe Generale SA in Paris. âAnd it requires very little cash right now to push the yields down on the riskier sovereigns.â
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=adZGdKgAJtio
Ant it requires very little cash...
