By Sakari
Suoninen and Martin Santa
(Reuters) -
The European Central Bank still has room to maneuver should the euro zone
economy continue to worsen after it cut interest rates to a new record low last
week, ECB policymakers said on Wednesday.
The ECB cut
its main rate to 0.5 percent last Thursday.
Yves
Mersch, a member of the ECB's six-man Executive Board, said the bank still had
tools at its disposal, but added that it could only spur lending to small euro
zone companies in conjunction with other European institutions.
His
colleague Joerg Asmussen said the ECB had an open mind about what it could do
to revive lending to small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) - a growing
concern for the central bank, particularly in the crisis-stricken periphery
countries.
"We
still have tools in our toolbox, we are not a toothless tiger," Mersch
said in a panel discussion in the northern German city of Aachen .
The ECB said
last week it had set up a task force with the European Investment Bank (EIB) to
assess ways to unblock lending to SMEs, for example by promoting a market for
asset-backed securities (ABS) based on SME loans.
ABS would
allow banks to pass some credit risk on to other investors, enabling them up to
lend more.
The move to
promote ABS is controversial, particularly in Germany , as during the financial
crisis such securities became toxic due to the default of housing loans that
underpinned them.
Asmussen
said the ECB's work was ongoing.
"We
have an open mind to look at all things that we can do within our mandate and
this relates to how can the market for asset-backed securities, especially
backed by SME loans, be revived in Europe," he told a European Parliament
committee.
Asmussen
was responding to a question about a Wednesday article in German newspaper Die
Welt, which cited a central bank source as saying a majority of ECB Governing
Council members seemed to be in favor of the central bank buying ABSs itself.
Mersch said
he was more skeptical about direct asset purchases by the ECB to ease SME
funding strains as these measures would be more difficult to exit than central
bank lending operations.
"We
will not subsidize markets, we will not overtake markets, that is not the task
of monetary policy," Mersch said. "We will be sure not to overstep
our mandate."
NO
DEFLATION DANGER
Asmussen, a
German and generally a more hawkish member of the 23-man Governing Council,
said the central bank was studying what it could do but that other EU
institutions may be better placed to spur lending to SMEs.
The ECB
could help with the provision of liquidity, Asmussen said, adding: "I
think we have done a lot here."
The ECB has
cut interest rates to a record low, flooded the banking sector with more than 1
trillion euros ($1.3 trillion)in ultra-cheap three-year loans, loosened its
collateral framework and launched an new yet-to-be-used government bond
purchase program.
But the
euro zone economy is still in recession. Unemployment hit a record high in
March and inflation fell to 1.2 percent in April, far below the ECB's goal of
below, but close to 2 percent.
Mersch said
inflation expectations were stable, "as far as the eye can see".
"The
risk of deflation is also not bigger than 10 to 15 percent, according to
economic forecasts. It is not an immediate danger and we do not have to steer
against it," Mersch said. (Reporting by Martin Santa; writing by Paul
Carrel and Eva Kuehnen; editing by Stephen Nisbet, Ron Askew)
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