ECB makes euro backstop global to bolster currency’s role

ECB makes euro backstop global to bolster currency’s role


The euro steadied near its lowest in a month on Wednesday, nursing steep losses this week as investors counted the cost of the U.S.-EU trade pact.

Olena Malik | Moment | Getty Images

The European Central Bank unveiled plans on Saturday to widen ⁠access to its euro liquidity backstop, making it globally available and permanent in a bid to bolster the international role of ​the single currency.

Access to ​such repo lines, a crucial ​source of funding during times of market stress, has been limited to just a handful of mostly Eastern European countries but ECB President Christine Lagarde has long seen the facility as a tool to ⁠boost the euro’s ‌global reach.

“The ECB needs to be prepared for ⁠a more volatile environment,” Lagarde said at the Munich Security Conference, the first time an ECB chief spoke at the event.

“We must avoid a situation where that stress triggers fire sales of euro-denominated securities in global funding markets, which could hamper ‌the transmission of our monetary policy,” she said in announcing the new facility.

The facility, to be available from the third quarter of 2026, will be open to all ​central banks around the world, provided they are not excluded for reputational reasons, such as money laundering, terrorist financing or international sanctions, the ECB said.

“This facility also reinforces the role of the euro,” Lagarde said. “The availability of a lender of last resort for central banks ⁠worldwide boosts confidence to invest, borrow and trade in euros, knowing that access will be there during market disruptions.”

Used ‌when banks are unable to obtain funding on the market, the ‌repo line allows lenders to borrow euros from the ECB against high-quality collateral, to be repaid at maturity along with interest.

Unlike previous lines, which had to be extended from time to time, the new facility will provide ⁠standing access for up to 50 billion euros.

With investors reassessing the dollar’s status due to ⁠the unpredictable nature of U.S. President Donald Trump’s economic policy, Lagarde has argued this ⁠was the time for the euro to gain market share, but this required a revamped financial and economic architecture.

The U.S. Federal Reserve maintains a similar tool, ​called the FIMA Repo Facility, which essentially protects the ‌Treasury market since stress might otherwise force lenders to sell government bonds below market value.

“These changes aim to make the facility more flexible, broader in terms of its geographical reach and more relevant for global holders of euro securities,” the ECB said in a statement.

Such guaranteed access to euros could naturally increase demand for ​euro-denominated assets and encourage banks outside the 21-nation ‌euro zone to buy assets from the bloc.



Source

Don’t ask ‘How much do you make?’ on a date—use these 7 questions instead to reveal their ‘financial mindset’
World

Don’t ask ‘How much do you make?’ on a date—use these 7 questions instead to reveal their ‘financial mindset’

Dating is full of tiny money moments: choosing a restaurant, talking about travel, splitting a check, and deciding whether a gift is “too much.”  You don’t need to ask someone how much they make, what their net worth is, or how much student loan debt they carry to learn how they approach money and what […]

Read More
Berkshire CEO Abel praises Kraft Heinz for turnaround on planned split
World

Berkshire CEO Abel praises Kraft Heinz for turnaround on planned split

(This is the Warren Buffett Watch newsletter, news and analysis on all things Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway. You can sign up here to receive it every Friday evening in your inbox.) Berkshire Hathaway’s new CEO likes the surprise course reversal announced this week by the new CEO of Kraft Heinz. In the food company’s Q4 earnings […]

Read More
TSA agents are working without pay at U.S. airports due to another partial government shutdown
World

TSA agents are working without pay at U.S. airports due to another partial government shutdown

A TSA officer’s badge can be seen on their shirt as people travel through Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on November 7, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. Megan Varner | Getty Images A shutdown of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security that took effect early Saturday impacts the agency responsible for screening passengers and bags at airports […]

Read More