Europe's Domino Effect
A variety of government interventions have suddenly sprung up across the continent since Sunday: Iceland is drafting a plan to bring its banks back from the brink; Britain's treasury secretary is "looking at some pretty big steps" to do the same; Spain and Portugal are set to guarantee all bank deposits; Sweden's central bank is upping its loans to Nordic banks; and Greece, Denmark, Ireland and Germany have all made moves to guarantee bank deposits.
Some still think Europe is forgetting its key unifying force: the European Central Bank. Cantor Fitzgerald Strategist Stephen Pope thinks the best way to calm markets is for the ECB to step in and act as a kind of clearing bank, or middle man between lenders, in order to help keep the faith that banks' loans will be returned. That could be more effective than even a rate cut, or the central bank's current method of offering overnight loans to individual banks, or injecting liquidity.
No comments:
Post a Comment