Skip navigation

Current DateTime: 04:10:41 23 Feb 2012
LinksList Documentid: 23452764
Expiration DateTime: 2/23/2012 4:12:24 AM

Current DateTime: 04:10:41 23 Feb 2012
LinksList Documentid: 23452000
Expiration DateTime: 2/23/2012 4:12:40 AM

Current DateTime: 04:10:41 23 Feb 2012
LinksList Documentid: 24355697

MOST SHARED


Current DateTime: 04:10:41 23 Feb 2012
LinksList Documentid: 31330905
Expiration DateTime: 2/23/2012 4:12:45 AM

MOST POPULAR


Current DateTime: 04:10:42 23 Feb 2012
LinksList Documentid: 35819650
    • ETF Strategist | Fixed Income

        Exchange-traded funds are hot, but are they right four your portfolio? Learn the pros and cons of various asset classes and sectors.

HOT ON FACEBOOK

European Bank Chief Urges Action on Rescue Fund

Published: Friday, 18 Nov 2011 | 7:20 AM ET
Text Size
By: Reuters

European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi told euro zone governments on Friday to act fast to get their rescue fund up and running, expressing exasperation at their lack of progress in response to an escalating debt crisis.

Mario Draghi
Bloomberg | Getty Images

With the ECB under intense pressure to play a greater role in tackling the euro zone crisis, Draghi said governments had failed to put into practice decisions underpinning the European Financial Stability Facility [cnbc explains] —the rescue fund which they have promised to give more firepower without yet explaining how.

"Where is the implementation of these long-standing decisions?" Draghi said at a banking conference in Frankfurt. "We should not be waiting any longer."

While the ECB [cnbc explains] , with strong German support, is anxious to remain free from political interference and resisting calls from some European governments to take major action in response to the spreading debt crisis, it has made limited bond purchases that have steadied investors' nerves.

European shares trimmed losses, helped by falling Italian and Spanish bond yields after the ECB intervened again to buy debt in the secondary market.

Deutsche Bank Chief Executive Josef Ackermann said European states could not rely on the ECB to solve the euro zone debt crisis. "The ECB's primary role should not be to take up these bonds," he said.

Euro zone governments have set a December deadline to strengthen the EFSF but these efforts have been undermined by delays, surging borrowing costs and scant investor interest.

Italy's new government has announced far-reaching reforms in response to the European debt crisis.

Prime Minister Mario Monti unveiled sweeping reforms to dig the country out of crisis and said Italians were confronting a "serious emergency."

Monti, who enjoys 75 percent support in opinion polls, comfortably won a vote of confidence in his new government in the Senate on Thursday, by 281 votes to 25.

He faces another confidence vote in the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house, on Friday, which he also expected to win comfortably.

"Only if we can avoid being seen as the weak link of Europe can we contribute to European reforms," said Monti, who was sworn in on Wednesday as head of a government of experts after a rushed transition from the discredited Silvio Berlusconi.

Greek Cracks

In Athens, Greece's national unity government was submitting an austerity budget to parliament, a first step towards meeting the terms of an international bailout it needs to avoid bankruptcy.

But already a widening rift between the coalition's main parties was apparent.

Technocrat Prime Minister Lucas Papademos must obtain the endorsement of the rival parties that they will do what it takes to meet the terms of the aid deal and persuade Greece's lenders to release emergency funds it needs to avoid default in mid-December, plus more longer-term financing later.

In Rome, Monti outlined a raft of policies including pension and labor market reform, a crackdown on tax evasion and changes to the tax system in his maiden speech to parliament.

He later spoke to French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who all agreed on the need to accelerate reforms, the three leaders said in a joint statement.

With Italy's borrowing costs now at unsustainable levels, Monti will have to work fast to calm financial markets, given that Italy needs to refinance some 200 billion euros ($273 billion) of bonds by the end of April.

But no amount of austerity in Greece, Italy, Spain, Ireland [cnbc explains] and France is likely to convince the markets without some dramatic action in the shorter term, involving the ECB.

Many analysts believe the only way to stem the contagion for now is for the ECB to buy up large quantities of bonds, effectively the sort of 'quantitative easing' [cnbc explains] undertaken by the U.S. and British central banks. Euro zone officials hope that if Merkel and others find themselves staring into the abyss, the unthinkable will rapidly become thinkable.

Merkel and British Prime Minister David Cameron will try to resolve opposing views on the euro zone crisis on Friday, after Berlin accused London of being selfish about Europe in comments that touched off British sensitivities about German bossiness.

The outlines of a potential deal became clearer ahead of the Berlin meeting as the Financial Times reported that Cameron would be prepared to back Merkel's plans to strengthen economic union in the euro zone, on condition he wins safeguards to protect the City of London from European legislation.

Cameron will restate his opposition to a Franco-German proposal for a so-called Tobin tax on financial transactions, which Britain believes would have a withering effect on its financial district, the FT said in an unsourced report.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

CNBC HIGHLIGHTS

  • Google Goggles
  • People who check a smartphone will soon have another option: Google-made glasses that stream information to the eyeballs.
  • Twitter
  • How does a business handle complaints on a social network site that goes out to millions of consumers?
  • Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel lays out the changes ahead from the Obama healthcare legislation he helped design. Does reform mean greater access and affordability?
  • Should a mom or dad stay at home to take care of the kids? It’s a tough issue these days. Here’s Suze Orman’s take.
  • Corruption is a major issue in developing and developed nations. So which are perceived as the most corrupt?
  • Sony Playstation Vita
  • While the handheld gaming market has evolved in recent years, Sony's betting there's still money to be made.


Current DateTime: 01:25:37 23 Feb 2012
LinksList Documentid: 29778428

Current DateTime: 03:38:30 22 Feb 2012
LinksList Documentid: 29779196

Current DateTime: 03:58:31 23 Feb 2012
LinksList Documentid: 29779197

Current DateTime: 02:40:55 23 Feb 2012
LinksList Documentid: 29779199
CNBCCNBC
About CNBC  |  Site Map  |  Video Reprints   |  Advertise  |  Help  |  Contact
Privacy Policy  |     |  Terms of Service  |  Independent Programming Report
  Data is a real-time snapshot  *Data is delayed at least 15 minutes
Global Business and Financial News, Stock Quotes, and Market Data and Analysis

© 2012 CNBC LLC.  All Rights Reserved.
A Division of NBCUniversal
Thomson ReutersThomson Reuters