Europe’s leaders agree to funnel cash into ailing banks

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After tough all-night bargaining, European leaders appear to have salvaged what had seemed to be a summit teetering toward failure by agreeing to funnel money directly to struggling banks, and in the longer term to form a tighter union.

The agreements at a European Union summit in Brussels suggested Germany had yielded a bit on its insistence on forcing tough reforms in exchange for rescue money. That was a victory for Italy and Spain, who have argued they have done a lot to clean up their economies yet are facing rising borrowing costs.

Asian stock markets surged after European leaders agreed to the recapitalisation plan and a tighter union. Renewed concerns about Europe’s debts have rattled investors worldwide amid fears they could threaten global economic recovery.

The importance of recapitalising banks directly became evident when Spain asked for 100 billion euros ($A125 billion) for its shaky banks.

Under current rules the bailout loan had to be made to the government, which would then lend it on to the banks. But having that debt on the government’s books spooked investors, who began demanding higher interest rates for lending money to the government.

The result was rates that would have been unsustainable in the long term. Lending the money directly to the banks would avoid putting that debt on the government’s books.

European Council President Herman Van Rompuy called it a “breakthrough that banks can be recapitalised directly.”

In addition, the leaders agreed that EU countries that were following budget rules could apply for bailouts that would not come with the stringent conditions that have accompanied previous EU bailouts – a recognition, said Italian Premier Mario Monti, who pushed for the deal, of the work such countries were already doing in reforming their budgets.

Monti said Italy did not intend to apply for a bailout.

Still, Van Rompuy said the bailout agreement was important.

“We are opening the possibilities for countries that are well-behaving to make use of financial stability instruments, the EFSF and ESM, in order to reassure markets and get again some stability around some of the sovereign bonds of our member states,” he said, referring to two bailout funds set up by the EU.

That meant, he said, that there would not be any more countries struggling under the stern conditions that have been imposed on previous EU countries that received bailouts – an apparently sharp change in EU policy.

EU leaders agreed on Thursday night to devote 120 billion euros in stimulus to encourage growth and create jobs. France had pushed for the growth package, arguing that austerity measures imposed to stem Europe’s debt crisis were stifling growth and making it worse.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said after the meetings broke up soon before dawn that she was “very satisfied that we took good decisions on growth.”

Analysts said the proposals at the summit in Brussels represented credible steps forward in the region’s efforts to contain a debt and financial crisis and to help struggling countries like Greece and Spain, whose economies are hobbled by recession and severe borrowing problems.

“Although the EU summit is still stuck on major issues including joint debt, euro bonds … the EU has laid out a long term plan in principle that can solve the problem if they can get all the leaders agreed on the details,” said Jackson Wong, vice president at Tanrich Securities in Hong Kong.

“We don’t expect a magical formula that can solve the problem right out from the EU summit. However, if we can see the stances from all the leaders, especially from Germany – that they are heading to the right direction – I think going forward, it should be OK.”