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SF: Euro Ministers Bid for Bigger IMF Role as Fund Falls Short
 
(Adds comments from Belgium's Reynders in third paragraph. For more on the debt crisis, click on EXT4.)


Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Euro-area finance ministers said they would seek a greater role for the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank in fighting the sovereign debt crisis after conceding the effort to expand their bailout fund missed its target.

The finance chiefs of the 17 nations using the euro agreed to work on boosting the resources of the IMF so it can "cooperate more closely" with the European Financial Stability Facility, Luxembourg's Jean-Claude Juncker told reporters late yesterday in Brussels after leading the meeting.

"It's clear that we can go further through the IMF and probably action by the European Central Bank," Belgian Finance Minister Didier Reynders said today as ministers gathered for a second day of talks. "For the IMF, we are working to see how to reinforce its action and possibly contribute to a boost in its resources. As for the central bank, it's for the central bank to make its decisions."

After a series of stop-gap accords failed to protect Italy and Spain from surging bond yields, Europe is under growing pressure from U.S. leaders and international financial markets to find ways to boost the EFSF's effectiveness. The finance chiefs agreed on a plan yesterday to guarantee up to 30 percent of bond issues from troubled governments and to develop investment vehicles that would boost the facility's ability to intervene in primary and secondary bond markets.


Pivotal Summit


European heads of government meet on Dec. 9 in Brussels, with Germany pushing for governance changes that would tighten enforcement of budget rules. The move might make it easier for the ECB to play a bigger part in supporting euro-area nations, possibly channeling loans through the IMF, two officials familiar with the matter said yesterday.

"Should they fail to deliver a credible framework encompassing both these dimensions, we would expect that the ongoing 'run' on governments and banks will accelerate, and it is seriously to be feared that it can no longer be stopped," Arnaud Mares, a Morgan Stanley analyst, wrote in a research note yesterday. "The economic, social and political consequences could be unfathomable. The next few weeks are therefore a critical moment in European history."

While leaders previously said leveraging would expand the 440 billion-euro ($584 billion) EFSF's reach to 1 trillion euros, Chief Executive Officer Klaus Regling said it is "impossible to give one number" for the fund's power.


'Very Substantial'


Juncker said the EFSF's capacity will be "very substantial" though less that 1 trillion euros, and will be supplemented by the IMF. The ministers "agreed to rapidly explore an increase of the resources of the IMF through bilateral loans," Juncker said, "so that the IMF could adequately match the new firepower of the EFSF and cooperate more closely with it."

European Union Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said the issue "needs to be discussed with the IMF and this work is in progress." Neither Rehn nor Juncker named who might provide the loans.

With about $390 billion currently available for lending, the Washington-based IMF may not have enough money to meet demand if the global outlook worsens, managing director Christine Lagarde has said. The IMF is co-funding the bailouts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal and is preparing to send a team to Italy for an unprecedented audit of that country's efforts to cut its debt.


Bilateral Loans


"It's very important that the IMF globally will increase its resources either by raising its capital or by bilateral loans so that it can lend more money to euro-zone countries in need," Dutch Finance Minister Jan Kees de Jager said in an interview with Bloomberg Television last night. "If we open the IMF effort, that will be sufficient together with the leverage options in the EFSF."



Source