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World’s biggest central banks meet as pressure mounts to do more

Tan KW
Publish date: Mon, 27 Apr 2020, 10:45 AM
Tan KW
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NEW YORK: Global central banks remain under pressure to do more to support their economies through the coronavirus recession even after driving interest rates to record lows and pledging to spend trillions of dollars on asset purchases.

The US Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan (BoJ) and European Central Bank (ECB), which together cover almost half of global output, will all convene meetings of policymakers this week after the pandemic-driven freezing of economies and turmoil in financial markets propelled them into action.

With governments this week set to confirm multi-year expansions ended in the US and eurozone in the first quarter, monetary policymakers may have to do more to limit the recession and speed the recovery. Among the options: extending the quantitative easing, helping ease credit to troubled businesses and committing to rock-bottom rates for longer.

“The extremity of the virus crisis is forcing central banks to push the limits of the possible, ” said Tom Orlik, chief economist at Bloomberg Economics. “We expect the ECB to expand its fire-fighting Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme and the BoJ to roll out more support for corporates. Ahead of the game in terms of the size and scope of stimulus, the Fed won’t add additional support, but will confirm it has space to do more.”

The April 28-29 policy meeting will be the first scheduled gathering since January, but officials have met multiple times since then.

They have cut rates to virtually zero and rolled out a series of emergency and unorthodox lending facilities designed to backstop markets and keep credit flowing to businesses. The Fed’s balance sheet has already reached US$6.57 trillion.

Economists in a Bloomberg survey have limited expectations for any substantial changes at this week’s meeting. Large majorities, 90% and 87%, said they didn’t expect policymakers to offer any additional guidance on how long they intend to keep rates near zero, or on the future pace of large-scale asset purchases.

But investors will be looking for any indications from chairman Jerome Powell on how deep the Fed fears the recession will go and its outlook for recovery

The central bankers are also still being lobbied to do more as they try to get their Main Street lending programme up and running. There are calls from some lawmakers to allow more cities and small counties to borrow from it.

The ECB sets policy on Thursday with a heavy weight on its shoulders as governments argue over joint fiscal action.

After president Christine Lagarde told leaders last week that they may have done too little, too late, and warning that the eurozone economy could shrink as much as 15% this year, they still failed to agree on how to structure a recovery fund.

Most economists expect the central bank will keep monetary policy on hold this week. It only recently pledged to bump up its asset purchases by more than a trillion euros this year, and made it easier for banks to finance their loans to companies.

But one in four respondents to a Bloomberg survey said the ECB could still boost the size of its pandemic purchase programme from 750 billion euros (US$812bil) as early as Thursday. Most see it happening by September.

Having agreed last week to accept junk bonds as collateral for bank loans, there is also speculation is will add sub-investment grade assets to its purchase plan list.

 - Bloomberg

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ks55

Salient points from this writeup:

1. Eurozone economies may shrink 15% in 2020
2. 3 Central Banks i.e. FED, BoJ and ECB going to set rules and regulations for world financial order. Ignoring other economies and their voices.
3. No participation of world second largest economy will not bring fruitful expected outcome.
4. FED balance sheet stood at US$6.57 trillion. It may as well go up to US$ 10 trillion when Central Banks of other nation start selling US T-Bills and Bonds. FED need to print more money to buy those unwanted T-Bills and Bonds.
5. US$ very soon will become Banana Currency. And Gold will be US$ 1 million per kg. US dollar collapses and WW III begins.
6. US-China economy will decoupling sooner than expected. May be soon after Covid-19 pandemic, China will say we are not selling these and these to US companies, and we are not accepting US$ as payment. All quotation with third country will be RMB.

2020-04-27 11:07

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