ECB Unveils Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme
***This post has been updated with the latest information on the program. Please see here for the updated post.***
The Yale Program on Financial Stability has produced and will continue to update a spreadsheet to assist those contemplating market liquidity programs. The spreadsheet catalogs past and current examples of crisis-focused programs, identifies interesting program features, summarizes existing evaluations of programs, and shares general resources on the topic. This spreadsheet can be accessed here.
On March 18, the ECB unveiled a temporary program to purchase up to €750 billion in public and private-sector securities until the “crisis phase” of the COVID-19 crisis is over, but at least until the end of 2020.
The Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP) is an expansion of the ECB’s Asset Purchase Programme (APP), a package of asset-purchase measures that the ECB initiated in 2014 to support monetary policy. The PEPP, like the earlier APP, includes programs to buy sovereign debt, covered bonds, asset-backed securities , corporate bonds, and commercial paper. As with the APP, the ECB will make available for lending any securities that it purchases under the PEPP.
Purchasing conventions are based on the type of asset purchased. They generally follow the guidelines for the relevant ECB APP. For instance, purchases of sovereign debt under the PEPP would generally follow the same rules as purchases made under the APP’s sovereign debt program, unless otherwise specified in the PEPP framework.
The table below shows eligible securities for the PEPP, as announced on March 18. However, the ECB may waive some requirements to allow for wider participation. For example, the ECB waived the eligibility requirements for Greek debt because Greek financial markets have been severely destabilized, and previous commitments by the Greek government to achieve structural reform would be more difficult if it could not access the PEPP.
Security |
Minimum Credit Rating |
Maturity |
Purchase Limits |
Credit Quality Step 3 |
70 days – 30 yr + 364 days |
33% of total debt if issued by sovereign 50% of total debt if issued by international institution |
|
Credit Quality Step 3 |
6 mo. – 30 yr + 364 days |
70% per ISIN[1] |
|
Credit Quality Step 3 |
Unspecified |
70% per ISIN 30% per ISIN for Greece + Cyprus |
|
Credit Quality Step 3 |
Unspecified |
70% per ISIN 30% per ISIN for Greece + Cyprus |
The ECB published details of the new program in the Journal of the European Union on March 26. It had changed some details. Most significantly, it removed the limit to buy no more than 33% of any country’s bonds, which was in the initial announcement (see here, point number (6), and here, Article 5). This has given the ECB the authority to essentially purchase unlimited amounts of sovereign debt, up to the €750 billion limit.
In the updated publication, the ECB said that it would “not tolerate any risks to the smooth transmission of its monetary policy in all jurisdictions of the Euro area.” While a wide range of securities are eligible for purchase under PEPP, the vast majority of securities purchased under the APP have been government debt (see here).
Generally, the allocation of purchases will be proportionate to the amount of ECB capital subscribed to by euro-area national central banks. Therefore, it is likely that Germany, France, and Italy will obtain a sizable share of the ECB funding (see here).
Still, the language allows the ECB some discretion. The ECB can make purchases “in a flexible manner allowing for fluctuations in the distribution of purchase flows over time, across asset classes and among jurisdictions.”
The decision to remove the purchase limit on government debt suggested that the ECB prefers to use the PEPP instead of the Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT). The ECB has confirmed this. OMT, which would allow the ECB to buy essentially unlimited quantities of an individual nation’s sovereign debt, has not been used since the ECB introduced it in 2012. Countries are required to apply for aid, leading to concerns about stigmatization of OMT aid, and assistance comes with “strict conditionality,” sometimes taking the form of a macroeconomic adjustment program or even the involvement of the IMF (see here).
The ECB earlier created two covered-bond purchase programs—in 2009 during the Global Financial Crisis and in 2011 during the sovereign debt crisis. The ECB purchased €60 billion and €16.4 billion in bonds in the two programs, respectively. The purpose of the two programs was to restore liquidity to the market, tighten credit spreads, ease bank funding costs, and promote lending. Observers view the first program as a modest success, while the impact of the second is less clear. See the YPFS case for more.
[1] An International Securities Identification Number (ISIN) is a 12-digit code used to unify different ticker symbols and identifications that can vary across exchanges, currencies, and countries. As such, a 70 percent purchase limit on an ISIN indicates that the ECB can purchase up to 70% of the outstanding issue of that particular security or debt instrument (see here).