tommy271
Forumer storico
E probabilmente tra un pò vorrà vendere per cui vorrà far lievitare un pò le quotazioni.
Come siamo maligni ... .
Avrà in mano nuovi dati e cambiato il suo punto di vista .
E probabilmente tra un pò vorrà vendere per cui vorrà far lievitare un pò le quotazioni.
E probabilmente tra un pò vorrà vendere per cui vorrà far lievitare un pò le quotazioni.
si vede che nel frattempo si e' ricopertoE pensare che costui un paio di settimane fa, fece scendere le borse europee del 4% con una dichiarazione che la Grecia non ce l'avrebbe fatta
e questo ???
L'Ue pensa a un secondo piano di salvataggio (dopo i 750 miliardi alla Grecia) - Il Sole 24 ORE
mi scuso se già postato altrove...cancello eventualmente
Non è molto chiara la faccenda, io opterei per l'intendimento della BCE di passare al piano di riacquisto allargato massivamente anche alla Spagna.
Anche perchè dei 750 MLD messi in campo sinora ne sono stati utilizzati solo 40 MLD, ma con notevoli vantaggi specie verso Grecia e Portogallo.
Deutsche Bank CEO says Greek PM's commitment changed his mind
Edward Taylor - 14.06.2010
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou told a meeting of top bankers on Friday he would not back down in the face of the country's debt crisis but would do what was needed get Greece back onto a growth track.
His audience gave the Socialist premier a standing ovation and made host Deutsche Bank Chief Josef Ackermann announce a change of mind about Greece's ability to overcome the crisis.
Papandreou said his government made a conscious decision against default and against leaving the euro, a decision that made "good economic sense" and repeated a pledge that the country would pay its dues.
"We will honour our contracts with the financial community and yes, we will pay our debts," Papandreou told bankers at a meeting of the Institute of International Finance (IIF), a lobby group of some 400 of the world's top financial institutions.
"We take our mandate for change very seriously. And I have absolutely no intention to give up or back down," he said. "I do not care if this is my only term as prime minister. I have done what I thought was necessary to save Greece from disaster."
Ackermann, IIF Chairman and head of Germany's biggest bank, had said last month he doubted whether Greece could turn the corner but told his fellow bankers on Friday that Papandreou's personal commitment to reform had made him change his mind.
"Based on the personal commitment by the Prime Minister to implement the necessary reforms, even sacrificing his own political future, I'm convinced that it will enable (Greece) to allow them to service its debt," Ackermann told reporters on the sidelines of the dinner.
RADICAL MEASURES
Papandreou said the changes his government had started and the "radical measures" it was taking were done "... to exclude default and to exclude exit from the euro zone," he said.
"Those would have been a very different option -- which we very clearly decided not to buy into."
Papandreou said the country's banks had a strong standing and part of the rescue package put up by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund was a safety net to support them if need be.
He said he had taken tough decisions aimed at reducing the Greek deficit to 8.1 percent of GDP from 13.6 percent in 2010, by cutting public sector salaries, public and private sector pensions and public sector spending, and raising value added tax and excise taxes.
"In the first five months of the year, the deficit is down 40 percent compared with the same period last year," he said. "Revenues are up and expenditures have been severely curtailed."
A new autonomous statistics authority, an overhaul of the tax system, reforms of public sector recruitment and the pension system, and a crackdown on corruption are also under way.
"My goal is a complete reorientation of the Greek economy" through a 3-year programme, he said.
At a European level, "we should now work for a permanent stabilisation fund, a new European Monetary Fund financed by contributions of eurozone members proportionate to the size of their wealth," he said.
Papandreou also called for a more efficient financial supervisory framework with greater transparency, especially for off-balance sheet items and derivatives. Source: Reuters; Balkans.com
si vede che nel frattempo si e' ricoperto