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02 November 2015

Financial Times: ECB officials met bankers before key decisions


Some of the European Central Bank’s top decision-makers met bankers and asset managers days before major policy decisions, and on one occasion just hours before, copies of their diaries reveal.

The diaries, which cover meetings of the six members of the ECB’s executive board between August 2014 and August 2015, were given to the Financial Times under EU freedom of information rules and reveal engagements with the private sector, officials and the media.

The disclosure of the meetings comes at a time of heightened scrutiny of the contacts between central bankers and the financial services industry. Earlier this year, the ECB launched its own review of the issue, setting out new principles for how its officials should interact with the private sector.

The meetings offer a sharp contrast with the Bank of England, which prohibits members of its rate-setting committee from talking to media and “other outside interests” on monetary policy matters in the week before a policy decision.

The diaries show two members of the ECB’s executive board, Benoît Cœuré and Yves Mersch, met people from UBS the day before a two-day policy meeting of the central bank’s rate-setting governing council on September 3 and 4 2014.

Mr Cœuré also met BNP Paribas on the morning of September 4, the day the ECB’s governing council surprised markets by cutting interest rates. It also announced it would begin buying private sector assets to save the eurozone’s economy from the threat of deflation. UBS and BNP Paribas declined to comment.

Mr Cœuré met asset manager BlackRock the day before a policy meeting in March this year, when the council unveiled the details of how it would carry out its €1.1tn asset purchase, or quantitative easing, programme. BlackRock declined to comment.

The ECB’s vice-president, Vítor Constâncio, and its chief economist, Peter Praet, met Algebris, a hedge fund, at the height of this summer’s Greek crisis, when the governing council was holding daily conference calls on whether to continue sanctioning emergency loans to keep Greece’s banks afloat. Mr Constâncio and Mr Praet met Algebris on June 23. Mr Praet also met BNP Paribas Fortis on June 22 and bond fund Pimco on June 25. Algebris and Pimco declined to comment. [...]

Full article in Financial Times (subscription required)


© Financial Times


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