ADVERTISEMENT

Italy Denies Reaching Out to ECB for Help on Bond Purchases

Italy Reportedly May Reach Out to ECB on New Bond Purchase Plan

(Bloomberg) -- Italian Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio denied Italy is looking for help from the European Central Bank after a media report suggested that the cabinet in Rome is reaching out to the Frankfurt-based institute for a new round of government-bond purchases.

“We are not asking for any help from anyone, as there is no speculative attack” at present against Italy, he told reporters in Cairo on Wednesday during an official visit to Egypt. “Should such an attack take place, we will verify its nature, given that Italy is not new to speculative attacks aimed at bringing down governments”

Newspaper La Stampa reported earlier that Italy may be calling on the ECB to pass a new QE-styled program to shield its public debt from financial speculation and the threats of a rating downgrade. The program could have a different name if needed, La Stampa said, citing an unnamed official and providing no further details. The ECB declined to comment on the media report.

Italy Denies Reaching Out to ECB for Help on Bond Purchases

The euro weakened for the first time in four days during early trading, slipping 0.2 percent to $1.1678. Italian bonds rose, pushing 10-year yields down as many as 6 basis points. The yield was down 1 basis to 3.16 percent as of 3:41 p.m. Rome time.

Italian officials have previously voiced a desire for support from the ECB. Cabinet Undersecretary Giancarlo Giorgetti said earlier this month he hoped that the ECB’s quantitative easing program would be extended to help protect the country from financial speculators.

The La Stampa story follows a report last week from Corriere della Sera on Giuseppe Conte winning a pledge from Donald Trump at a July meeting in Washington that the U.S. will buy Italian government debt. In a summer dominated by news and commentary on Italy’s budget plans and fiscal issues, yet another report said Italy called on China to buy its bonds. That was dismissed as groundless by Finance Minister Giovanni Tria who is currently in China on an official visit.

The goal of the mission to China is “certainly not to seek buyers for government bonds,” Tria told China Radio International in an interview posted Monday on the station’s website.

Speaking to reporters in Beijing on Tuesday, the finance chief said that Italy isn’t planning to breach the European Union’s budget deficit limit of 3 percent of gross domestic product, in contrast to remarks made just hours earlier by deputy premier and leader of Italy’s ruling Five Star Movement party Luigi Di Maio.

“We are finalizing our program based on the goal we already explained of maintaining the debt-to-GDP ratio on a downward path,” Tria said, adding that he expects the pressure on Italian bonds to lift as soon as the cabinet in Rome approves next month its public-finance targets.

Last week, Moody’s Investors Service said it was extending a review of Italy’s ratings “pending greater clarity” on the government’s fiscal path and reform agenda, with a conclusion likely by the end of October. Fitch Ratings is scheduled to assess the nation on Friday while a decision by S&P Ratings is due in October.

--With assistance from Carolynn Look and Alessandro Speciale.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lorenzo Totaro in Rome at ltotaro@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Fergal O'Brien at fobrien@bloomberg.net, Alessandra Migliaccio

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.