zaczął gadać o 8:30 GMTJaqueQ pisze:Maniek gadał już coś bo szału póki co na Edku nie ma? miał byc o 10.30 a narazie cisza

powiedział co wiedział, ale jak widać szału na edku nie ma...

jakby kogoś mocno interesowało to tu jest cały artykuł o czym Mario mówił:
ECB's Draghi: EMU Econ Stabilizing; Euro FX Near Long-Term Avg
15-lut-2013
MOSCOW (MNI) - ECB President Mario Draghi reiterated Friday that
the ECB is monitoring euro exchange rate movements for their impact on
inflation and growth, but discouraged public debate on the issue.
Speaking to reporters at the G20 summit here, Draghi said the
Eurozone economy was stabilizing at low levels and assured that monetary
policy would remain accommodative with generous provision of liquidity.
"You know that the mandate of the ECB is to pursue price stability
in both directions in the medium term," he said. "You know, because I
said it several times, that the exchange rate is not a policy target."
"But the exchange rate is important for growth and price
stability," he added. "To that extent, we will look at these
developments. In March we will have new projections" from the ECB's
staff on prospects for Eurozone inflation and growth.
The euro's "nominal and real effective exchange rates are by and
large at around their long-term averages," he reiterated.
"Let me stop here, because I have to repeat that all this chatter
that's been undertaken in the last few weeks about exchange rates is
either inappropriate or fruitless," Draghi said. "In all cases, it's
self-defeating."
True to his words, Draghi declined to comment on a forex statement
by his colleague, Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann, explaining, "I
will not be part of this chatter about exchange rates."
Turning to the Eurozone economy, the central banker conceded that
preliminary GDP estimates showing a 0.6% contraction in 4Q were "more
negative than expected."
"On the other side, we see increasing signs of stabilization
of economic activity, but at low levels," he continued, noting that
there are no signals of deflation. "So that's the real economy."
"Facing that, on the financial market situation .... we see
uniform signs of stabilization, of increasing confidence," he said. "We
see spreads going down, we see volatility going down, we see by and
large stock markets going up."
"Banks are funding themselves fairly well," Draghi said. "Of course
there are still fragilities which don't allow us to say that everything
is in good order."
Deficit financing of economic stimulus measures to bolster growth
is not an option now, he argued. "We don't believe that inflating budget
deficits to create demand is sustainable," he said. "You can't have
social equity built on debt creation."
Draghi emphasized that the ECB's monetary stance remains
accommodative and that it will continue to offer banks the full amount
of liquidity demanded in its refinancing operations.
Eurozone banks' repayments of three-year LTRO loans and the
corresponding decline in the ECB's balance sheet "should not be
considered as an exit" on the part of the ECB from its crisis-fighting
non-standard operational mode - or even "as the beginning of an exit at
all," he said. These repayments "are signs that confidence is returning
in the euro area."