Corporate bond purchases of European Central Bank drive climate change, CEO analysis reveals

The European Central Bank’s programme of ‘quantitative easing’ has seen over €46 billion of public funds invested in sectors including the oil, gas and car industries. A short report published by Corporate Europe Observatory today highlights the dubious nature of many corporate bonds bought since the bank’s economic growth scheme was launched in June 2016.

ECB funds multinationals and climate change provides the first ever analysis of these bond purchases that looks at the full list of companies benefiting from the scheme coordinated by the European Central Bank (ECB) and executed by the central banks of France, Germany, Finland, Spain, Italy and Belgium. The ECB makes it difficult to trace its links to companies, not publishing any information other than the so-called International Securities Identification Number (ISIN) of purchased bonds.

Decoding the ISINs, Corporate Europe Observatory was nevertheless able to reveal the types of companies propped up by ECB bond purchases. The distinct investment pattern that emerged points to a complete lack of consideration for the sensible use of public funds.

A big share of bonds acquired for the ECB by national central banks belong to actors in the oil, gas and car industries. Investments in the arms industry, a gambling corporation and companies driving the privatisation of water also raise eyebrows.

In the context of individual EU member states, the following ECB bond acquisitions are particularly questionable:

  • Banque de France purchases from water companies Veolia, Suez and Vivendi, as well as oil and gas companies Total and Air Liquide, car maker Renault, arms manufacturer Thales and luxury goods producer LVHM

  • Banque Nationale de Belgique purchases from oil and gas companies Shell, Apetra, SPP, Nederlandse Gasunie and aerospace manufacturer Airbus

  • Banco de España purchases from oil and gas companies Repsol, Gas Natural and Enagas

  • Bundeszentralbank purchases from car makers Volkswagen, BMW and Daimler AG

  • Banca d’Italia purchases from oil and gas companies Eni and Snam

  • Finlands Bank purchases from gambling corporation Novomatic, oil and gas companies OMV AG and Eesti Energia, as well as budget airline Ryanair

Corporate Europe Observatory’s financial policy researcher Kenneth Haar said:

"The ECB is reluctant to provide information about the value of its bond purchases and even makes it difficult to find out which companies it buys into. As they use public funds to buy these bonds, the secrecy is dubious.

"When you look at the list of companies from which the ECB has bought bonds, you can certainly see a plausible motive for not revealing too much. Apparently the bank is quite content to support car producers, a gambling corporation, arms producers, and especially fossil fuel corporations that are driving climate change. Whichever way you look at it, this investment pattern cannot be justified.

“It would have made so much sense to use these billions of euros to create employment in environmentally sustainable sectors instead, but the status quo in European politics is still to put corporate profits before public interest."

Stanislas Jourdan from the Quantitative Easing for People initiative added:

"The programme is economically unnecessary and ethically questionable. It does not benefit SMEs or the real economy, but instead subsidises large corporations which clearly do not need cheaper funding when rates are already so low.

“Ultimately it also damages the Bank's reputation and risks fuelling more populism against the EU. The Bank should therefore immediately stop its corporate bonds purchases."

 

Notes to Editors:

  • Read ECB funds multinationals and climate change in full
  • Consult the decoded list of bond purchases.
  • The Quantitative Easing for People campaign is an initiative of 20 civil society organisations which promotes alternative ways to inject money directly into the real economy. They call on the ECB to directly finance sustainable investments and the distribution of a citizens' monetary dividend – measures much more effective at boosting the eurozone economy than the Bank's current tools.

Contact details:

Corporate Europe Observatory: Kenneth Haar, kenneth@corporateeurope.org, +45 236 006 31

Quantitative Easing for People: Stanislas Jourdan, stan.jourdan@qe4people.eu , +32 489 701 086

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