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Must know things about ECB

Aug 04, 2021 08:15

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Majority of countries have their own central bank, which issues currency, defines monetary policy and ensures the proper functioning of the banking system. In Europe, however, adopting the Euro necessitated the creation of a European Central Bank (ECB).

In this article, we will explore the European Central Bank, an institution created to help implement the Euro that manages currency and manage economic crisis across the Eurozone.

EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK

The European Central Bank (ECB) is one of the seven institutions of the EU and the central bank of the entire Eurozone. It is a consortium of European countries that uses the euro as its sole official currency.  It is one of the most critically important central banks in the world, supervising over 120 central and commercial banks in the member states.  The ECB is responsible for managing monetary policy and protecting the value of the euro. In comparison to the Eurozone economy, the ECB’s actions attract the attention of US traders as well as those of the Reserve Bank of the United States.

It’s possible to assume that something like the European Central Bank would eventually be created in the European Union. After all, as early as 1962, the European Commission proposed that member states begin working toward total economic and monetary union between EU states. Only a decade later in 1973, the European Economic Community (as the EU was known at the time) implemented a system that connected its member states’ currencies to one another to ensure trade balances but also pave the way for a future monetary union.

However, the first tangible steps toward monetary union between member states did not begin until the 1990s. As part of the 1992 Treaty of European Union (which also officially changed the organization’s name to the EU), the EU set out definite rules for the implementation of a future, pan-European currency, the Euro. The Euro was implemented in 1999 for commercial and financial transactions, and in 2002, over 80 billion bank notes and coins were distributed across the EU in the largest monetary changeover in history.

Though several organizations existed before the European Central Bank, the ECB was instituted first in 1998 largely to handle the changeover to the Euro. The management of the European central currency has been its mandate ever since.

The European Central Bank was established in 1999. The governing council of the ECB is the group that decides on changes to monetary policy. The ECB is administered in the same way as the Federal Reserve.

The council consists of the six members of the executiveboard of the ECB and the governors of all the national central banks from the 19 euro area countries. As a central bank, the ECB does not like surprises. Therefore, whenever it plans on making a change to interest rates, it will generally give the market ample notice of an impending move through comments to the press. The governing council meets twice a month, but policy decisions are generally only made at meetings where there is an accompanying press conference, and those are held every six weeks.

  • To maintain price stability and safeguard the value of the Euro. The Governing Council defined price stability as inflation of under but close to 2%. Price stability is essential for spurring economic growth and job creation, which are core objectives of the EU.
  • The ECB has a monopoly on the issuing of banknotes in the Euro area. It influences the amount of money in the market by controlling money available to eligible central and commercial banks in EU member states.
  • ECB makes weekly announcements on the amount of money it wishes to supply and the minimum acceptable interest rate. Eligible banks that have provided collateral then place their bids for the ECB funds through an auction mechanism. Once the banks have obtained funds, they use them to advance loans to individuals and businesses.
  • Monitor the banking and financial institutions and ensures their compliance with the regulation and smooth conduct.
  • To control the inflation and unemployment of the member states.
  • Guides the member states on the functioning.
  • Ensures transparency and accountability at all levels and professional competency of all the members.

How ECB responses on Crisis time

The ECB was instrumental in organizing a response to the euro-zone debt crisis that started in 2009 after the spill over effects of the financial crisis of 2007–08 hit Europe. The ECB lowered interest rates to ensure a steady supply of euros into the Euro system.

Like the Fed, the ECB has responded to the COVID-19 pandemic by pledging to lend freely and stepping up its purchases of government debt.  Unlike the Fed, which had room to cut interest rates in response to the COVID-19 crisis, the ECB’s policy rate has been negative since 2014, when it was cut below zero to nudge banks to lend, rather than leaving deposits at the central bank. The deposit facility, the rate that banks receive for depositing at the ECB, is currently at minus 0.50 percent. But under a policy called ‘tiering,’ banks do not have to pay this penalty rate for a substantial proportion of their deposits. The ECB also controls two other short-term rates at which the banks can borrow from the ECB: the main refinancing operations and the marginal lending facility. These rates are largely irrelevant, however, as these facilities are rarely used today because the ECB has supplied liquidity in other ways.

Forward guidance. The ECB has offered forward guidance on the future path of its key interest rate, saying that they expect rates will remain “at their present or lower levels until it has seen the inflation outlook robustly converge to a level sufficiently close to, but below, 2 percent within its projection horizon, and such convergence has been consistently reflected in underlying inflation dynamics.” Such forward guidance on the overnight rate puts downward pressure on longer-term rates.

Conclusion

Traders and investors will monitor the impact of ECB policy decisions on securities such as currencies, stocks, indices and bonds. Traders might try to predict what monetary policy decisions get made before each meeting.ECB announcements and policies affect the interest rates set by commercial banks and other lenders, which affects spending and inflation across the Eurozone.Governing Council meetings are important dates in the economic calendar because the official interest rates for the Eurozone gets set. National central banks (NCBs) in the Eurosystem use these rates for transactions with commercial banks. The committee of the European central bank meets twice in a month to ensure smooth conduct and to formulate and discuss the plans for achieving the various objectives, which ensures the growth of the member countries.

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