Stocks on Wall Street and in Europe rose after an unexpected interest rate cut by the European Central Bank. Meanwhile, Greek leader George Papandreou bowed to pressure by Germany and France to shelve plans for a referendum on the latest bailout package for the beleaguered country.
Papandreou called off his plan to hold a referendum on Greece's new loan deal with the European Union, the New York Times reported. The Greek prime minister made his comments in an address to his party's central committee on Thursday evening.
"The question was never about the referendum but about whether or not we are prepared to approve the decisions on October 26," Papandreou said, referring to the EU debt deal, the Times reported. "What is at stake is our position in the EU."
Investors welcomed the news on a day they already applauded a surprise reduction of borrowing costs in the euro zone.
In his first act as president of the European Central Bank Mario Draghi cut the benchmark interest rate to 1.25 per cent from 1.5 per cent showing that he prioritises reviving a faltering economy as the euro zone's fiscal crisis drags on. The cut was a unanimous decision by the central bank's 23-member Governing Council, Draghi said.