Central banks from Tokyo to London checked their ammunition yesterday in preparation for any turmoil from Greece’s election, with the European Central Bank hinting at an interest rate cut and Britain set to open its coffers. Tensions were high about how to manage the eurozone’s debt crisis - epitomised by Greece’s bankruptcy and need for international aid - and a rare fight broke out between Germany and France, normally the glue that keeps the bloc together. German Chancellor Angela Merkel criticised France’s economic performance, effectively taking a swipe at Socialist President Francois Hollande who has called for more emphasis on economic growth and less on budget austerity. The feeling of crisis was real. “We must do everything possible to prevent the eurozone from falling apart,” Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said on television. ECB President Mario Draghi, one of many policymakers gearing up for trouble after today vote in Greece, said his bank was ready to step in and fund any viable eurozone bank that gets in trouble. He painted a picture of a deteriorating eurozone economy with no inflation danger - conditions for monetary easing. “There are serious downside risks here,” Draghi told the annual ECB Watchers conference in Frankfurt, two days before the vote that could set Athens on a path out of the eurozone and stoke turmoil in financial markets. “This risk has to do mostly with the heightened uncertainty.” Japan’s top financial diplomat Takehiko Nakao warned that authorities in Tokyo would respond to unwelcome currency moves as appropriate, a clear threat of intervention if investors seeking safety push the yen too high. It was an echo of strong pledges from the Swiss National Bank on Thursday that it would do what it takes to protect the franc from soaring. The Bank of England followed up on Thursday’s joint announcement with the government of a £100bn ($155bn) offer of loans to banks by saying it will start next week with a charge of just 0.75%. In the US, Treasury Under Secretary for International Affairs Lael Brainard offered assurance that Washington has a”tool kit” and stood ready to preserve market confidence. “Everyone is well prepared, too, in the wake of the elections on Greece, to work together to make sure there is a path forward that is sustainable for Greece and bolsters confidence more broadly,” she said. Officials from the G20 nations, whose leaders are meeting in Mexico next week, say numerous central banks are preparing to take steps to stabilise financial markets - if needed - by providing liquidity and prevent any credit squeeze. European Council President Herman Van Rompuy convened a conference call yesterday afternoon with the leaders of Germany, France, Italy and Britain, officially to discuss preparations for the G20 summit, expected to be dominated by the eurozone debt crisis. Depending on the depth of any turmoil, an emergency meeting of ministers from the Group of Seven developed nations could be held on Monday or Tuesday during the summit in Los Cabos, Mexico, sources said. The focal point for all is tomorrow’s repeat general election in Greece, a knife-edge race that could be won by parties vowing to tear up the harsh economic terms that the European Union and International Monetary Fund imposed as conditions of a bailout for the near-bankrupt state. Such an outcome could drive Greece into default and possibly out of the eurozone, a prospect that could undermine faith in the currency bloc and add to pressure on the finances of bigger economies such as Italy and Spain. Madrid’s borrowing costs rose above 7% on Thursday, a level that is widely considered unsustainable. They fell slightly yesterday and European shares gained on expectations of global central bank response. The euro was lower, however. “At best, we are going to have a situation that is extremely serious on Monday,” Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg told journalists. “In all likelihood, whatever the outcome, we are going to have a government which is going to find it hard to live up to the agreements they (the Greeks) have signed up to.” Draghi said the ECB was ready to provide money to solvent banks if they needed it, a clear plan to avoid the kind of credit crunch that occurred during the Lehman Brother crisis in 2008. In Athens, the election was seen as too close to call. Alexis Tsipras, leader of the main anti-bailout leftist party SYRIZA, said on Thursday the deal with Greece’s international lenders, which has helped push the economy into a depression, would not last beyond the weekend. “The memorandum of bankruptcy will belong to the past on Monday,” Tsipras, who has rapidly emerged from fringe politics to challenge the mainstream for power, told his last campaign rally in Athens.from gulf today.
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