FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Banks will return 5.855 billion euros (4.61 billion pounds) in crisis loans to the European Central Bank next week after the central bank started offering banks new four-year loans at cheap rates.
The amount banks will repay on Oct. 15 is more than the 2.3 billion euros banks repaid this week and beats the 3.1 billion euros money market traders polled by Reuters had expected. [ECB/REFI]
Banks are returning funds they took from the ECB in late 2011 and early 2012 to ride out a funding strain at the height of the debt crisis. Last month, the ECB started offering them new long-term loans.
Banks still hold about 315 billion euros of the old crisis loans and lenders are expected to move them into the new ECB loan facility before they mature in January and February.
For now though, it is still cheaper for banks to rely on the ECB's regular refinancing operations, where they can fund themselves at record low rates of 0.05 percent. They have to pay an additional 10 basis points for the new four-year loans.
As a result, the ECB's first offer of these so-called new TLTROs fell flat last month, with banks taking 82.6 billion euros, less than expected. They can potentially borrow up to 400 billion euros in September and December offers combined.
Reuters polls of traders and economists have pointed to take-up of the December tranche totalling 175 billion euros.
On Friday, the ECB said four banks would repay 1.715 billion euros from the first LTRO on Oct. 15 and 10 would pay back 4.140 billion from the second LTRO.
(Reporting by Eva Taylor)