ECONOMY

World stocks rise on continued hopes of ECB action

World stock markets rose again Monday as expectations remained high for strong European Central Bank action to stem the continent’s chronic debt crisis.

Sentiment was also helped by US second quarter growth not slowing as much as feared. The world’s No. 1 economy grew just 1.5 percent in the April-June quarter after 2 percent growth the previous quarter but some analysts had predicted a bigger slowdown.

Markets are pregnant with speculation that the ECB will resume buying government bonds to lower the borrowing costs of struggling countries such as Spain and take other major steps to support the region’s economy.

Investors hope such moves would prevent Spain from being forced to seek a bailout that would be much more expensive than earlier rescues of Portugal, Greece and Ireland. A major Spanish crisis could imperil the euro currency union and in turn tip the world economy into recession.

Global markets were roiled early last week as Spain’s borrowing costs soared but rallied after ECB chief Mario Draghi on Thursday vowed that the central bank was ready to do what it takes to keep intact the euro currency shared by 17 European nations. A day later, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande said they too would safeguard the euro. The ECB’s next scheduled meeting is Thursday.

Meanwhile, US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner will meet Monday with Draghi and Germany’s finance minister to discuss the challenges facing Europe and the global economy.

“There is high expectation that the European Central Bank may reactivate its bond purchase program again to prevent Spain from evolving into a full-blown crisis,» analysts at Singapore’s DBS Bank said in a report.

In morning European trade, Britain’s FTSE 100 was up 0.4 percent at 5,649.78 and France’s CAC 40 added 0.7 percent to 3,303.34. Germany’s DAX rose 0.7 percent to 6,733.01. Wall Street was poised to lose ground with Dow futures off 0.3 percent and broader S

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