http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4075833,00.html

*European, British Central Banks Cut Interest Rates to Historic Lows
 *

(Jean-Claude Trichet says interest rates could still be further lowered)

*The European Central Bank* cut interest rates for the fifth time in six
months Thursday, March 5, bringing borrowing costs to an historic low of 1.5
percent. The Bank of England cut its lending rate by 50 basis points.


The hefty 50-basis-point rate cut by the ECB had been widely expected, with
market focus swiftly turning Thursday to a press conference held by the
financial body's chief Jean-Claude Trichet, who said the central bank could
further lower its main interest rate in the coming months.



"We did not ex ante decide that this was the lowest we could attain," he
said.



With inflationary pressures diminishing and a severe economic downturn
having set in, Tichet warned that inflation in the 16-member euro zone could
slip to "negative levels" in the coming months with the recession playing
havoc with public finances across the currency bloc.



But Trichet stressed that the bank saw "a number of drawbacks" with a zero
interest rate level and said the ECB was considering a series of
"non-standard measures" to help monetary policy underpin growth.



"We do not exclude anything," he said.



Non-standard monetary measures, referred to by economists as quantitative
easing, can involve printing more money to ease the pressure on banks.



"We are discussing and studying possible new non-standard measures," he told
reporters. "I will not elaborate on that. We have absolutely no
pre-commitment to any particular non-standard measure."



Many analysts believe that the ECB will lop another 50 basis points off euro
zone rates by the middle of the year, bringing the refinancing rate down to
just 1 percent. The ECB has already slashed rates by 225 basis points since
October.



Gloomy news



Frankfurt Stock ExchangeBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der
Bildunterschrift:  The euro zone economy will contract by more than first
though, the ECB says

The ECB also released Thursday a series of negative forecasts for the coming
two years, saying it expected the euro-zone economy to contract by 2.7
percent in 2009, a significantly gloomier forecast than the central bank's
previous prediction of a 0.5 percent shrinkage for this year.



The central bank said it expected zero growth in the European single market
in 2010, down from its earlier estimate of 1.0 percent growth.



The bank said output this year could be anywhere between minus 2.2 percent
and minus 3.2 percent. Official EU data showed Thursday that collapsing
exports and dwindling business investment had pushed the euro zone economy
into the deepest contraction in the bloc's 10-year history.



British cuts



Meanwhile, the Bank of England applied the twin tools of interest rate cuts
and a boost in money supply in an effort to revive the recession-hit British
economy.



The bank's Monetary Policy Committee cut the key lending rate by 50 basis
points to 0.5 percent and injected an initial 75 billion pounds (84.6
billion euros) into the economy through quantitative easing.



Under the process, so far untried in Britain, the bank will launch a program
of asset purchases -- such as government bonds and corporate assets --
financed by the issuance of central bank reserves.



Outside a Bank of England branchBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit
der Bildunterschrift:  The Bank of England also cuts lending rates to a
record low

With interest rates now close to zero, the BoE had itself admitted it was
running out of monetary tools to help revive the economy in the midst of a
deepening recession.



"World activity continued to weaken, reflecting both depressed confidence
and the persistent problems in international credit markets," the Bank said
in a statement Thursday.



Figures down across the board



At the same time, another round of grim earning results from leading banks
and financial houses has sparked renewed concerns about the state of the
global financial sector.



The International Monetary Fund predicts that euro zone economic growth will
slump by 2 percent in the wake of the global downturn, which was triggered
by a crisis in the US banking business.



Economic confidence in the euro zone plunged to an historic low last month,
the European Commission's closely watched economic sentiment indicator
showed last week, while unemployment climbed to a 28-month high of 8.2
percent in January.



Despite February's unexpected tick up in the euro zone's annual inflation
rate to 1.2 percent, consumer prices remain well below the ECB's 2-percent
inflation target.


dfm/sms/afp/reuters/dpa


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