by MrBill » Mon 13 Aug 2007, 04:48:24
Thanks for the link DantesPeak.
I must say, I find the logic baffling? This is first and foremost a US subprime fiasco where US banks are clearly at most risk. Why they would not lend to European banks is strange?
Many European banks have already declared healthy Q2'07 profits, and more have declared they have no exposure to US subprime markets.
The couple of minor names mentioned in the papers for bailouts were comparatively small like IKB. Germany alone has 1200 banks. Of which only a few are large like DB, HVB, Commerzbank and Dresdner.
One Landesbank has been mentioned as having liquidity problems, and I must admit, they along with the other Landesbanks do have a history of stepping into financial messes with great regularity. However, when I spoke to them this morning they indicated that last week they were punished like everyone else when Fed funds went to 6.25-6.50%, but slowly that situation is righting itself. They did not indicate that our own roll-overs would be affected, but naturally 6% for O/N funds is quite pricey compared to 5.36% last week.
I am a little confused about this FX swap between the Fed and the ECB. Basically, there are too many euros and not enough US dollars. So no one wants to lend dollars interbank.
So the ECB gives the Fed euros, and the Fed gives the ECB dollars (the term was not mentioned, so I do not know when the end date is), and then at maturity vice versa. As mentioned in the article this was supposed to ease lending pressures. But I cannot see how, unless European banks that need USD can borrow them from the ECB through an FX swap of their own?
As far as I know Italian banks deal with the Bank of Italy. German banks deal with the Bundesbank. France banks deal with the Bank of France, etc. I assume the ECB can carry out commercial operations with banks, but I do not know if this is how they are spreading USD liquidity in European markets or not? The article does not say.
UPDATE:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')his time, though, the ECB moved to inject unlimited liquidity only two days after the Fed retained its focus on inflation at its August policy meeting.
The stand-out nature of the ECB move was partly driven by the way it interacts with financial markets. Unlike the US Fed, it does not inject or withdraw liquidity every day, but instead conducts what it calls “fine-tuning” every now and then to regulate liquidity – and such actions were not scheduled for some time.
Many analysts applauded the ECB for its decisive action. Erik Nielsen, an economist at Goldman Sachs, said “This is outstanding central banking by the ECB and ought to provide a lot of comfort to the market.”
Bruce Kasman, an economist at JPMorgan, said the move sends two signals: first, that the ECB is “ready to provide liquidity to ensure the smooth operation of European money markets” and second, that for now it is happy doing so at its current interest rate.
However, some central bank officials fretted that the ECB move could cause market participants to worry more than they needed to.
“The aggregate liquidity conditions are usual even if there is a bit of turbulence. But there is the risk that banks may not really have needed this amount of liquidity and that the market therefore reads something into this action that they shouldn’t do,” says one ECB official.
Source:
Central banks’ aggressive moves stun markets
Note to Gideon: Obviously, headlines like in the FT, 'Central banks’ aggressive moves stun markets' do indicate that I may have been too sanguine about it. My sincerest apologies.
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