London - Financial markets stepped back from a potential abyss on Monday after the European Union and International Monetary Fund agreed a bumper rescue package to prevent a sovereign debt crisis spreading.
World stocks rose more than 2%, the euro gained and corporate and peripheral debt yields narrowed against benchmarks.
"Eurozone policymakers surprised probably even the most optimistic observers by presenting a quick and forceful, unprecedented crisis package," ING said in a note.
"It does not solve the fundamental fiscal problems but it gives countries now several years."
The package agreed earlier on Monday pledged €500bn of loans and loan guarantees to any eurozone countries needing funds, plus about €250bn from the IMF.
It was a package on the scale of the $700bn Troubled Asset Relief Programme (TARP) launched by the United States to fend off the financial crisis of 2007-2009.
There were also measures by central banks to address funding strains and a European Central Bank plan to buy the region's government bonds.
Questions remain about the package
The moves followed sharp sell offs in riskier assets across the world last week prompted by fears that Greece's struggle to avoid default on its debt would spread to other eurozone economies and potentially elsewhere.
Global stocks as measured by MSCI were up 2.3% with its emerging market-only counterpart jumping close to 3%.
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300, having fallen to $1.2510 on trading platform EBS last week.
Mounting short positions on the euro prompted investors to cover their positions, helping the single currency recover.
Some questions remained about the package, however.
"It is still unclear where the money for the funds is going to come from," said Valentin Marinov, currency strategist at Societe Generale.
On bond markets, the premiums investors demand to buy peripheral eurozone government bonds rather than German benchmarks fell.
The Greek/German 10-year bond yield spread narrowed sharply to 786 basis points versus an indicative 1,047 basis point at Friday's settlement close.
Liquidity in Greek bonds dried up last week with no trades going through.
There was little sign, meanwhile, that British assets were being driven by anything other than the global sentiment following a weekend of negotiations to try to create a government.
- Reuters