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Mario Draghi's newest stimulus tool will hand banks more than 700 billion euros ($950 billion) of cheap funding, economists say. The European Central Bank president's targeted lending program for banks will boost credit for the real economy as planned, and at the same time help keep the financial system flush with cash, according to the Bloomberg Monthly Survey of 45 economists. Draghi highlighted the measure in testimony to lawmakers today in Strasbourg, saying that it has "strong incentives" built in to spur lending. The ECB has identified loans to companies and households as a key weakness in the euro area's fragile recovery. The so-called TLTRO program, part of a wider package of measures announced in June, offers as much as four years of low-cost funding tied to bank lending that Draghi said this month could ultimately provide as much as 1 trillion euros.
Mario Draghi's newest stimulus tool will hand banks more than 700 billion euros ($950 billion) of cheap funding, economists say.
The European Central Bank president's targeted lending program for banks will boost credit for the real economy as planned, and at the same time help keep the financial system flush with cash, according to the Bloomberg Monthly Survey of 45 economists. Draghi highlighted the measure in testimony to lawmakers today in Strasbourg, saying that it has "strong incentives" built in to spur lending.
The ECB has identified loans to companies and households as a key weakness in the euro area's fragile recovery. The so-called TLTRO program, part of a wider package of measures announced in June, offers as much as four years of low-cost funding tied to bank lending that Draghi said this month could ultimately provide as much as 1 trillion euros.
Draghi said this month could ultimately provide as much as 1 trillion euros.
Operative word: 'could'
Conspicuously omitted is the somewhat salient fact that there's next to nothing to invest in Europe in that brings the kind of 20% ROI the market craves.
That ship sailed long ago.
So keep mouthing truthy platitudes so your paymasters can cling on to their oh-so uninflated gold turds Mario, while you're at it why not add a unicorn or two as well?
Does anyone believe this claptrap any more? (Except the ones very well-paid to pretend to!). 'The history of public debt is full of irony. It rarely follows our ideas of order and justice.' Thomas Piketty
And there is lots to invest on in Europe, just not to speculate on. A society committed to the notion that government is always bad will have bad government. And it doesn't have to be that way. — Paul Krugman
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