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ECB to implement bond-purchase programme

Jean-Claude Trichet - Wants decision on Italian bonds today
Jean-Claude Trichet - Wants decision on Italian bonds today

In a statement this evening, the European Central Bank said it will ‘actively implement’ a bond-purchase programme that could boost Spanish and Italian bonds and drive down interest yields that threaten those countries' budgets.

That could help Rome and Madrid fend off market trouble until a strengthened eurozone bailout fund is approved to help them.

The bank did not say which countries' bonds it would buy in a statement after a crisis conference call this evening.

But the beneficiaries are expected to be Italy and Spain, market analysts say.

Italy and Spain are trying to avoid financial collapses like those that have forced Greece, Ireland and Portugal to seek bailout loans.

In a statement this evening, the ECB said it welcomed announcements by Spain and Italy on new fiscal and structural policy measures, and it urged both governments to roll them out swiftly.

‘This programme has been designed to help restore a better transmission of our monetary policy decisions - taking account of dysfunctional market segments - and therefore to ensure price stability in the euro area.

Earlier this evening France and Germany said they want full implementation of measures agreed at a eurozone summit in July in order to safeguard the single currency as markets brace for fresh turmoil this week.

‘President (Nicolas) Sarkozy and Chancellor (Angela) Merkel reiterate their commitment to fully implement the decisions taken by the heads of state and government of the euro area and the EU institutions on 21 July,’ a joint statement said.

Officials around the world are scrambling to head off fresh market turmoil on Monday as investors take on board Friday's unprecedented US ratings downgrade by Standard and Poor's on the grounds US politicians have failed to properly tackle the US debt problem.

Blame game

US political parties traded blame today for the country's loss of its top-tier AAA credit rating from Standard & Poor's, raising doubts lawmakers can still find a common ground to solve the country's debt problem.

‘It's a partial wake up call. I think this is without question, a Tea Party downgrade,’ Democratic Senator John Kerry said.

Mr Kerry, who was the Democratic Party's 2004 presidential candidate, said the conservative Tea Party movement had held the country hostage by consistently shooting down President Barack Obama's plan that would have cut the country's debt by $4 trillion over 10 years.

‘In the end they thought the hostage was worth ransoming,’ said Mr Kerry.

But Republican Senator John McCain said the downgrade was an indictment of Mr Obama's leadership.

‘I agree there is dysfunction in our system and a lot of that has to do with failure of the president of the United States to lead,’ said Mr McCain, who lost the 2008 race for the White House to Obama.

‘The president never came forward with a plan, there was never a specific plan. There was always that leading from behind.’