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Lagarde: G-20 May Boost IMF for Europe Crisis
Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) --
International Monetary Fund chief
Christine Lagarde said Group of 20 nations are prepared to boost the fund’s resources as the European debt crisis threatens the global recovery.
“If circumstances require, the G-20 will commit the resources that are necessary for the IMF to play its systemic role,” she said during a joint press conference with Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega in Brasilia today.
“That gives you a range that is almost without a cap, without a limitation.”
Lagarde has indicated that the $390 billion the IMF currently has available for lending may not suffice should the global outlook worsen. The Washington-based lender to nations will probably cut its global growth forecast next month as the European crisis roils financial markets and slows output, spokesman Gerry Rice said.
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EU Commission extends bank aid rules, cites market tensions
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European Union regulators extended looser rules allowing governments to bail out troubled banks until market conditions improve, citing the sovereign debt crisis and banks' resulting funding difficulties for the move.
New guidelines, valid from January 1,
will make it easier for governments to help struggling banks as the 27-country EU grapples with a credit squeeze, a capital shortfall and the sovereign debt crisis.
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My intention had been to put an end to the crisis regime... this month," EU Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia told a news conference on Thursday, adding the rules had already been extended by 12 months until the end of 2011.
"But since last summer I was obliged to change my mind, given the stronger tensions in sovereign debt markets and the transmission of those tensions to interbank markets and to the funding conditions for banks."
The rules were introduced during the credit crisis in 2008 for lenders that received a capital injection or transferred loans into so-called "bad banks."
Under some revisions, the fees paid by banks for guarantees on their liabilities will reflect their intrinsic risk, rather than their country's risk or market conditions, the Commission said.
The average price for a guarantee will be about 1 percent, including a minimum fee of 0.4 percent. The terms apply to bonds with a term of 1-5 years or 7 years for covered bonds.
The Commission said it expected guarantee costs to fall about 0.2 percent due to the new pricing policy, adding it also expected banks would increasingly use shares rather than cash to remunerate the state for support.
Lenders benefiting from recapitalization or other support will still need to restructure to win regulatory approval and banks that are "heavy users" of state guarantees will need to show they are viable.
Almunia said he would have preferred a mutualized or pooled system of EU state guarantees for banks seeking to borrow.
But the bloc's finance ministers decided on Wednesday to leave it to individual member states to back their banks alone, a move that will do little to lift confidence in struggling financial institutions based in countries too weak to help them.
EU governments injected 1.6 trillion euros ($2.15 trillion)into the financial sector via state guarantees, recapitalization and impaired asset and liquidity measures between October 2008 and December 2010, Commission data showed. That was equivalent to 13 percent of the region's gross domestic product.