FRANKFURT // Banks grabbed €530 billion (Dh2.62 trillion) at the European Central Bank's second offering of cheap three-year funds today, fuelling hopes that more credit will flow to businesses and government borrowing costs will ease further.
A total of 800 banks borrowed money at the tender, with demand exceeding the 500 billion euros expected by traders polled by Reuters and well above the 489 billion allotted in the first such operation in late December.
"This will increase the level of excess liquidity pretty sharply which is ultimately positive or very positive for risk trades," said Luca Cazzulani at UniCredit. "Italian and Spanish bonds are likely to benefit from this and equity markets as well."
The euro rose briefly before easing versus the dollar while stocks were little changed immediately after the slightly better-than-expected take-up.The 3-year loans are the ECB's latest attempt to fight the euro zone crisis.
ECB President Mario Draghi, whose native Italy was at the epicentre of the crisis when the bank announced the measure late last year, said after the first of the operations, known as LTROs, that "a major, major credit crunch" had been averted.
Banks used much of the 489 billion euros they borrowed first time around to cover maturing debt. Draghi has urged them to lend out the funds they tap at Wednesday's operation to households and businesses, helping strengthen economic growth.
ECB officials hope banks will also use the new money to buy higher-yielding bonds more aggressively, especially from Italy.