The European Central Bank has dismissed the idea of no-strings-attached funding to ease Ireland's return to financial markets.
ECB executive board member Jörg Asmussen said yesterday that any further assistance to Ireland, if granted, would come with conditions imposed by the ESM bailout fund.
"It could well be that the Irish will find a solution on their own," he told the Börsenzeitung financial daily.
Confirming he had read recent comments by Minister for Finance Michael Noonan about the possibility of a €10 billion precautionary credit line from the bailout fund, Mr Asmussen added: "He knows that a precautionary ESM programme comes with conditions."
Mr Asmussen said Ireland would not automatically qualify for the ECB’s OMT bond-buying programme – another proposed financial backstop to reassure investors ahead of Ireland’s return to markets.
The ECB official said the rules for activating the as-yet untouched OMT programme were known: a country needs to be an ESM programme country with IMF involvement.
“This can also be a precautionary programme with the possibility of primary market purchases by the ESM,” he said, “but particularly important, and we’ve always repeated this, is that a country under an EFSF or ESM programme has to be in a position to win full access to capital markets.”
The ECB would not accept short-term debt obligations, so-called treasury bills (T-bills) as proof of financing.
Capital markets
"OMT is a finance market instrument, not a replacement for the lack of access to capital markets."
Asked whether OMT could be employed to assist capital market returns of programme countries, Mr Asmussen said the bank’s governing council would “decide on a case-by-case basis”.
Last week ECB president Mario Draghi said a decision on Ireland's request would be taken "in due time" and would be decided by euro zone finance ministers.