HomeNewsWorldJapan to buy euro zone bonds to bolster EFSF

Japan to buy euro zone bonds to bolster EFSF

Japan will purchase euro zone bonds to bolster confidence in the European Financial Stability Facility as the euro zone struggles with a prolonged debt crisis, Japan's finance minister said on Tuesday, boosting the euro.

January 11, 2011 / 09:39 IST

Japan will purchase euro zone bonds to bolster confidence in the European Financial Stability Facility as the euro zone struggles with a prolonged debt crisis, Japan's finance minister said on Tuesday, boosting the euro.


Tokyo is considering buying about 20% of euro zone bonds to be jointly issued later this month to raise funds to support Ireland, using euros in its foreign reserves, Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda told a news conference.


"I think it's appropriate for Japan to purchase a certain amount of bonds to boost confidence in the EFSF and make a contribution as a major country," he said.


China last week reaffirmed a commitment to buying Spanish bonds and last year offered to buy Greek bonds after Athens had to seek an international bailout.


Noda's comments came after Japan's top currency diplomat, Rintaro Tamaki, said on Monday that Tokyo could consider buying euro zone bonds to support the bloc as it struggles with a debt crisis.


Japan's foreign reserves, the world's second-biggest after China's, stood at USD 1.10 trillion at the end of December last year, after authorities spent 2.1249 trillion yen (USD 25.69 billion) on currency intervention in the month to Sept. 28, Ministry of Finance data showed on Tuesday.


The euro rose as far as USD 1.2992 on trading platform EBS from around USD 1.2925 after Noda's comments, pulling further away from a four-month low hit on Monday, although it later moved back to USD 1.2961. Against the yen, the euro rose as high as 107.86 yen .


"I don't think these comments change the backdrop for the euro at all," said Todd Elmer, currency strategist for Citi in Singapore.

"Despite the fact that we're seeing this groundswell of international support, it doesn't really change or address the underlying problem and that's not going to change until the European authorities themselves come up with a more comprehensive solution to mitigate the fallout from the debt crisis."

first published: Jan 11, 2011 09:37 am

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