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ECB hints at action if fiscal pact adopted

Brussels/Berlin - The new head of the European Central Bank (ECB) signalled on Thursday it stood ready to act more aggressively to fight Europe’s debt crisis if political leaders agree next week on much tighter budget controls in the 17-nation eurozone.

Speaking a day after the world’s major central banks took emergency joint action to provide cheaper dollar funding for starved European banks, Mario Draghi painted a dark picture of the state of the banking system.

“A new fiscal compact would be the most important signal from euro area governments for embarking on a path of comprehensive deepening of economic integration.

"It would also present a clear trajectory for the future evolution of the euro area, thus framing expectations,” he told the European parliament.

Draghi’s signal lifted stock and bond markets hours before French President Nicolas Sarkozy was to outline his vision of closer eurozone integration in a televised speech ahead of a December 9 European Union summit seen as make or break for the eurozone.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said he would propose at the summit that EU states set aside sovereign debt of over 60% of gross domestic product - the EU treaty limit - in special funds to be paid off over 20 years with national revenues.

Draghi did not spell out what action the ECB might take, but it is under huge political and market pressure to massively step up purchases of eurozone government bonds or lend money to the IMF to support ailing Italy and Spain.

In the short term, economists expect the central bank to relieve pressure on banks and an economy heading into recession cutting interest rates next week and announcing longer-term cheap liquidity tenders with easier collateral rules.

Markets are pricing in a 25 basis point cut to 1.0% on December 8 and Draghi said nothing to dissuade them.

In response to lawmakers’ comments, he added that the ECB had scope to act within the EU treaty and the most important thing was to make sure that frozen credit channels started to work again.

Draghi, who faces some of the toughest decisions in the currency’s 12-year history after just one month in the job, said the ECB was aware many European banks were in difficulty because of stress on sovereign bonds, tight inter-bank funding markets and scarce collateral.

“Downside risks to the economic outlook have increased,” he said, noting that the ECB’s mandate was to maintain price stability “in both directions” - a rare indication that the bank is concerned about deflation risks as well as inflation.

Two years into Europe’s debt crisis, investors are fleeing the eurozone bond market, European banks are dumping government debt, south European banks are bleeding deposits and a recession looms, fuelling doubts about the survival of the single currency.

The euro and European stocks extended gains after surging on Wednesday upon the joint dollar liquidity move by the US Federal Reserve, the ECB and the central banks of Japan, Britain, Canada and Switzerland.

Markets were cheered by strong demand at Spanish and French bond auctions on Thursday. France’s 10-year bond spread over safe haven German Bunds fell below 100 basis points for the first time since October 28 after peaking above 200 bps in mid-November.

Treaty change?

EU paymaster Germany is pressing for an agreement on treaty change to establish coercive powers to veto national budgets in the eurozone that breach agreed rules.

Berlin wants the European Commission to be empowered to reject national budgets before they go to parliament and to refer serial deficit offenders to the European Court of Justice.

That is highly controversial in France, which is working on joint proposals with Germany to be put to EU partners next week.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel will set out her views to parliament in Berlin on Friday, the day after Sarkozy, but they will have to try again next week to overcome their differences.

Sources close to the negotiations said they had not yet reached agreement on key issues including the role of the EU executive and court, with Paris preferring an intergovernmental approach leaving the final word with elected leaders.

The conservative Sarkozy’s main challenger in next year’s presidential election, Socialist Francois Hollande, said on Wednesday that as president he would never hand France’s budget sovereignty over to European judges.

In Berlin, leaders of Merkel’s centre-right coalition agreed that Germany’s opposition to common eurozone debt issuance was non-negotiable, slamming one door which France and other southern eurozone states have tried to open.

“We are not prepared to buy changes to the (EU) treaty in exchange for rules that other European countries want, for example euro bonds,” Economics Minister Philipp Roesler of the liberal Free Democrats said after talks with Merkel and Horst Seehofer, leader of the Bavarian Christian Social Union.

With the ECB formally barred by treaty from acting as lender of last resort to the eurozone or directly financing governments, EU officials are working on ways to support states under bond market pressure via the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

One idea under active consideration is allowing eurozone national central banks affiliated to the ECB to lend money to the IMF which could provide larger credit lines for Italy and Spain on strictly monitored policy conditions.

In a key policy shift, Schaeuble said on Wednesday Germany was now open to increasing the IMF’s resources through bilateral loans or more special drawing rights, reversing the stance it took at last month’s Cannes G20 summit.

That fuelled momentum for a global deal to boost the fund’s resources, although many other major economies want to see the eurozone put more of its own firepower on the line to defeat the debt crisis before they make commitments.

China’s vice-finance minister said the eurozone had made “positive progress” by agreeing this week to ramp up the firepower of its rescue fund, but Beijing hoped to see more progress at next week’s EU summit.

“The current crisis, to some extent, is more serious and challenging than the international financial crisis following the fall of Lehman Brothers,” Zhu Guangyao told a trade forum.

In Greece, where the eurozone debt crisis began in 2009, schools, hospitals and public transport were paralysed by a one-day general strike in protest at the new national unity government’s EU/IMF-imposed “starvation” budget.

The strike is the first such test for new technocrat Prime Minister Lucas Papademos, who has had little time to celebrate since European finance ministers this week approved an €8bn tranche of aid to prevent Greece from going bankrupt.
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