London: Global central banks went on the offensive against the faltering world economy, cutting interest rates and increasing bond buying as a round of international stimulus gathers pace.
In a 45-minute span, the European Central Bank (ECB) and The People’s Bank of China cut their benchmark borrowing costs, while the Bank of England raised the size of its asset-purchase programme. Two weeks ago, the Federal Reserve expanded a programme lengthening the maturity of bonds it holds and chairman Ben S. Bernanke indicated more steps will be taken if needed.
“The actions had the look and feel of a coordinated global easing campaign,” said Nick Kounis, head of macro research at ABN Amro Bank NV in Amsterdam. “The central banks are trying to arrest the synchronized slowdown in global economic growth that has taken shape.”

On the offensive:?The Bank of England began Thursday’s stimulus push, announcing it would restart buying bonds two months after stopping.
The steps by the UK and the euro area pushed JPMorgan Chase and Co.’s average interest rate for developed economies to a crisis-era low of 0.48% and will add to the balance sheets of major central banks, which have already swelled 40% since mid-2007.
Some policymakers may be at the limits of their influence, UBS AG economist Paul Donovan wrote in a research report on Thursday.
First push
The Bank of England began Thursday’s stimulus push, announcing it would restart buying bonds two months after stopping. Governor Mervyn King and colleagues raised their asset-purchase target by £50 billion ($78 billion) to £375 billion, meeting the forecast of most economists, in a bid to pull its economy from recession. They said output may remain sluggish after contracting in the past two quarters.
Within a minute of that decision, the People’s Bank of China cut its key interest rate for the second time in a month and allowed banks to offer bigger discounts on their own lending costs. The one-year lending rate will fall by 31 basis points (bps) to 6% and the one-year deposit rate will drop by 25 bps to 3% effective Friday. Banks can offer loans of as much as 30% less than benchmark rates.
One basis point is one-hundredth of a percentage point.
Chinese data
The world’s largest emerging market is acting more aggressively to spur growth that may have decelerated for a sixth quarter. Officials responded after two manufacturing indexes fell in June and ahead of a report on second-quarter gross domestic product, due on 13 July.
“Policymakers have had an early look at the June data and didn’t like what they saw, suggesting the economy is weaker than they previously thought,” said Mark Williams, Asia economist at Capital Economics Ltd in London.
At 1.45pm in Frankfurt, ECB then cut its main rate by 25 bps to a record low of 0.75% and said it will no longer pay anything on overnight deposits as sovereign debt turmoil threatens to drive the 17-nation euro economy into recession. Both actions were anticipated by economists.
While ECB president Mario Draghi has questioned the economic impact of lower interest rates, they could make it easier for banks to borrow and lend as well as build on the confidence boost euro-area governments delivered last week when they moved toward a deeper economic union. He said on Thursday that the central bank is not running low on policy options, without elaborating on what else it may do.
Kenya’s cut
Elsewhere, Kenya’s central bank cut its benchmark lending rate for the first time in 18 months and Denmark’s lowered its main borrowing costs to record lows.
US and European stocks retreated as optimism over US jobless claims data fizzled after Draghi said economic risks remain. The S&P 500 declined 0.8% as of 10.07am in New York, while the Stoxx Europe 600 Index fell 0.7%. Treasuries rose, with the 10-year yield falling 4 bps to 1.587%.
Draghi told reporters that risks to the outlook remain on the downside and that heightened uncertainty is hurting confidence. Asked if there was any coordination with other central banks before Thursday’s announcements, he said there wasn’t any communication beyond the normal exchange of views.
Operation Twist
Thursday’s shifts come after the Fed expanded its Operation Twist programme on 20 June to lower longer-term interest rates in financial markets. Data on Friday is forecast to confirm the weakest quarter for US employment in more than two years, evidence the world’s biggest economy has lost momentum.
The central banks of Australia, the Czech Republic, Kazakhstan, Vietnam and Israel also cut rates in June, while the Swiss National Bank is buying euros to defend its franc ceiling.
Bank of Japan officials meet next week to review their forecasts with Governor Masaaki Shirakawa on Thursday pledging to pursue appropriate policy as the bank promotes powerful easing.
Forcing central bankers’ hands is the weakest patch of global growth since the end of the 2009 recession, which has been mainly caused by Europe’s debt woes. All but three of the 26 economies monitored by JPMorgan will see inflation undershooting their central banks’ targets by the end of the year, according to New York-based economist Joseph Lupton.
Monetary policymakers have been at the forefront of efforts to insulate economies from the crises that began to rage in August 2007. They have sometimes acted together, most famously in October 2008 when they cut interest rates in unison. Last year they intervened to check a soaring yen and six of them made it cheaper for banks to borrow dollars in emergencies.
It remains to be seen whether the additional measures can bolster growth. UBS’s Donovan said the crisis has damaged so-called monetary transmission mechanisms such as the ability of banks to pass on easier central bank policy.
“The ECB cut will have little effect on its economy and officials may have to consider quantitative easing if growth fails to improve in the second half of the year,” said Julian Callow, chief international economist at Barclays Plc.
Joy Yang, chief economist for greater China research at Mirae Asset Securities (HK) Ltd, said lower interest rates won’t support Chinese demand much and investors will prefer to see fiscal stimulus and economic reforms.
As for the Bank of England, Tom Vosa, director of economic research at National Australia Bank, said the UK economy is so stressed that 90% of the money the central bank is injecting could end up in risk-free assets or reserves.
Jana Randow and Jeff Black in Frankfurt, Zhou Xin, Nerys Avery and Scott Lanman in Beijing and Svenja O’Donnell, Jennifer Ryan and Scott Hamilton in London contributed to this story.
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