ECB set to raise interest rates despite debt crisis
The eurozone debt crisis will not stop the European Central Bank (ECB) raising interest rates for a second time this year on Thursday as it focuses on the "day job" of fighting inflation, economists predicted.
The central bank that sets monetary policy for the 17-country eurozone is universally expected to lift its benchmark rate by a quarter point to 1.5% at its meeting in Frankfurt, led by president Jean-Claude Trichet. City analysts reckon this could be followed by another rate rise towards the end of the year.
The ECB's willingness to battle inflation is in stark contrast to the stance adopted by its counterpart in London. The majority on the Bank of England's monetary policy committee, led by governor Sir Mervyn King, have chosen to ignore high inflation and argued for some time that interest rates need to stay at a record low of 0.5% to support the faltering economy. The Bank will announce its decision at noon while the ECB's decision is due 45 minutes later, followed by a press conference hosted by Trichet.
After supporting banks with unlimited cash through the crisis, the ECB has moved to normalise European money markets. Trichet's patience with European leaders is starting to run thin as he urges them to reduce their budget deficits.
"Trichet has drawn a line in the sand on Greece and he's now focusing on the day job," Jacques Cailloux, chief European economist at Royal Bank of Scotland in London told Bloomberg News. "The ECB has done more than governments have to prop up the euro area and it really is losing patience with political leaders. It's up to them to fix the problem."
Source: Guardian.co.ukDate: 07.07.2011 [300]
| | Rating agency Moody's downgrades 16 Spanish banks - 18.05.2012 Rating agency Moody's downgraded 16 Spanish banks on Thursday, the latest sign of distress in Europe. Among those downgraded were giants Banco Santander and BBVA, the country's two largest banks. Source: CNNMoney |
| | Middle East's Leading Banking Technology & Innovation Summit to be held in Dubai - 07.05.2012 Following on from the success of the 2011 Middle East Banking Technology & Innovation Summit, Expotrade announces that this year’s event will once again take place in Dubai on the 1-2 October 2012. This year’s conference will focus on strengthening the Middle Eastern banking and financial industry’s position within the global market. Source: Expotrade |
| | More than 2.5 billion people around the world don’t have a bank account - 23.04.2012 Three quarters of the world’s poor don’t have a bank account, not only because of poverty, but the cost, travel distance and amount of paper work involved in opening an account, according to new data released by the World Bank. Source: World Bank |
| | No breakthrough in Swiss-US tax dispute despite talks - 22.04.2012 Talks between senior U.S. and Swiss officials about a dispute over unpaid taxes on accounts held in Swiss banks led to no breakthroughs, Swiss President Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said on Saturday. Source: Reuters |
| | World's best emerging market banks in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) - 26.03.2012 The following are the «World's best emerging market banks 2012 in Central & Eastern Europe» according to rankings published by Global Finance magazine: Source: Global Finance |
| | Western Union to launch innovative payments platform WU Pay - 22.03.2012 The Western Union Company, a leader in global payment services, today announced that it will launch WU Pay, a new and innovative electronic payments platform that will significantly improve the customer experience and safety for millions of people seeking to make online payments or transfer money. Source: Western Union |
| | U.S. Banks Complete Stress Tests - 14.03.2012 The majority of the largest banks will continue to have enough capital to satisfy regulators, even if they suffer a financial shock that includes unemployment hitting 13 percent and a 21 percent drop in housing prices, the Federal Reserve said on Tuesday. Source: Reuters |