FRANKFURT, Germany — Europe's indebted countries have seen their borrowing costs edge higher after the U.S. Federal Reserve signaled it could start phasing out its bond-buying program.
The market shift raises concerns that governments will face a bigger financial burden in their struggle to escape the financial crisis that has plagued Europe for the last 3 ½ years. But borrowing costs are still far below crisis levels from last summer, and some analysts say home-grown problems are the bigger risk.
The Fed's stimulus, which was aimed at boosting the U.S. economy, has also helped financial markets around the world. The Fed — along with other central banks — cut short-term interest rates to near zero and pushed newly created money into the financial system by buying longer-term bonds with the aim of stimulating the economy.
The bond-buying — which is known as quantitative easing, or QE — has driven down longer-term interest rates. It also sent money flowing into stocks and riskier bonds as investors sought higher returns than the near-zero rates available on safe investments.
Thanks to QE, bonds issued by the shakier governments — such as Portugal, Italy and Spain — rose in price, sending their interest yields lower, since price and yield move in opposite direction. For a time, governments enjoyed those lower interest costs each time they borrowed on bond markets, taking some pressure off their finances. The yield on Italy's 10-year bond, for example, fell from 4.72 percent in February to 3.78 percent at the beginning of May. Spain's fell from 5.35 percent to 4.06 percent over the same time.
Bernanke said this week that the Fed expects to begin tapering the purchases at end of this year — and end them around middle of next year — so long as the economy improves according to its forecasts.
This has sparked the fear that the end of the Fed's stimulus will erode Europe's bond-market respite — that bond prices will fall and yields and rate costs will rise.
Portugal, Italy, and Spain saw bond market borrowing rates rise Thursday as the Fed's new message made stocks and bonds plunge worldwide. Yields on 10-year Italian, Spanish and Portuguese bonds rose about a third of a percentage point. By Friday, they had stabilized — Italian bonds were little changed Friday, yielding 4.50 percent, while Spanish bonds saw yields decline slightly to 4.80 percent. Bonds in bailed-out Portugal bonds are yielding a higher 6.41 percent.