James Nixon News
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The bond rally that has sent Spanish borrowing costs to 10-month lows has distracted attention from the nation’s growing debt pile.
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Mario Draghi might be spared from having to make the thorniest of interest-rate cuts.
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Italian and Spanish notes advanced this week, with yields dropping the most since September, as signs the global economy is recovering spurred demand for higher-yielding assets.
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European Central Bank President Mario Draghi may need to hire hundreds of new staff after governments handed him sweeping powers to supervise the banking industry.
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The European Central Bank is eager for Europe’s rescue fund to take responsibility for buying government bonds. Germany, though, may resist the switch.
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European stocks climbed, halting a four-day decline for the benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 Index, as yields on benchmark Spanish bonds slipped amid speculation that the country’s government will soon ask for a bailout.
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Spain’s benchmark borrowing costs rose for a fourth day after touching a record yesterday, raising the specter of sovereign bailouts for the government in Madrid and then Italy that would stretch European Union finances to their limit.
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Whatever Mario Draghi does today, economists say doing nothing is not an option.
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European Central Bank President Mario Draghi may act more like Ben S. Bernanke than Jean-Claude Trichet in 2012.
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European Central Bank President Mario Draghi is struggling to find the right balance between saying too much and nothing at all.
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