by Sober Look
The ECB rolled out the big guns
today but stopped short of an all-out quantitative easing. In addition
to the TLTRO, there will be ABS and mortgage bond purchases. However
these markets are relatively small in Europe – particularly the higher
rated paper that would qualify for the ECB purchases.
The deposit rate on bank excess
reserves was set to -20bp. With Germany continuing to resist full QE,
Draghi’s best two options are to try stimulating consumer and business
credit (via ABS purchases and TLTRO) as well as to push down the euro
(via negative deposit rates). So we got a “bazooka lite”.
The euro took the biggest single-day hit in over two years in response to the decrease in deposit rate.
And the French 2-year government bond yield went negative for the first time.
ADVERTISEMENT
But without the full QE in
place, longer dated bond yields actually increased, as yield curves
steepened. This carried over to the US where long-term yields rose as
well.
And by the way here is one reason Germany remains uneasy with an all-out QE program –
Source: ECB |
No comments:
Post a Comment