The bank's 25-member governing council startled markets today by reducing the monthly amount of its bond purchases, by which it performs the stimulus, but extending them for six months instead of nine.
ECB President Mario Draghi said the reduction did not mean the bank was tapering, or phasing out, the stimulus.
The chief monetary authority for the 19 countries that use the euro said the bond purchases would continue at least through December, past the previous earliest end date of March.
Draghi said the central bank could increase the monthly purchases if needed and that there is still no firm end date for the stimulus program. He said it meant "a more lasting transmission of our monetary stimulus," not a reduction in support.
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The euro fell in international markets, declining 0.9 per cent against the dollar to USD 1.0655. More stimulus like bond-buying tends to weigh on a currency.
"Even without calling this tapering, the ECB just announced tapering."
The bond purchases pump freshly created money into the banking system in hopes of increasing weak inflation and boosting growth. The flood of cash also helps keep financial markets calmer as Europe faces elections in the Netherlands and France next year where anti-EU, populist candidates are expected to do well.
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