Thursday, October 04, 2007

ECB AND BANK OF ENGLAND HOLD INTEREST RATES

From The New York Times:

The European Central Bank held its benchmark interest rate steady at 4 percent on Thursday, resisting pressure for a cut in the face of a rising euro that some fear will hurt Europe's economies.

Markets will be paying close attention to what ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet says about how the central bank plans to ward off more disruption from U.S. subprime credit woes and the dollar, which has weakened since the U.S. Federal Reserve made a larger-than-expected rate cut.

In London, the Bank of England decided to leave its key interest rate unchanged at 5.75 percent, a move most analysts had predicted. Howard Archer, chief U.K. and European economist at Global Insight, said a move by the British bank to cut rates would have been premature.

"Indeed, a cutting of interest rates at this stage could have been seen as a panic move and risked damaging the bank's anti-inflation credibility," he said in a statement.

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