Titoli di Stato area Euro GRECIA Operativo titoli di stato - Cap. 1 (2 lettori)

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Grisù

Forumer attivo
Mezza verità ma comunque almeno hanno integrato la dichiarazione precedente:

Non chiediamo alla Grecia di fare ulteriori tagli alla spesa", ha precisato il portavoce della Commissione Amadeu Altafaj, chiarendo le conclusioni di una comunicazione della Commissione ai ministri delle Finanze Ue.
Altafaj ha spiegato che i 4 miliardi di euro in ulteriori risparmi erano un impegno esistente da parte del governo greco e che il governo ha già sovraperformato rispetto a questo impegno nei primi sei mesi dell'anno.
 

Grisù

Forumer attivo
Qualche dato in più sullo stato del debito:
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tommy271

Forumer storico
Greek Stocks Hammered – ATHEX Below 1,600



Greek stocks moved sharply lower on Friday extending their losses after a two-day losing streak.

On weak trading activity the General Index ended the session below the 1,600 level, while the banking index fell almost 4%.

“The market will continue to slide in the absence of hard news domestically and internationally” a local analyst told Dow Jones Newswires. “We could have a technical rebound on Monday and all eyes next week will on blue chips and bank’s 2Q earnings results” he said.

Analysts also refer to rising concerns about “the re-emerging potential threat of sovereign default” explaining that the Greek market is a “high-beta” equity market “so when international markets fall, we fall further”.

Across the board, the General Index fell 3.53% at 1,589.74.

In the FTSE20 Index Ellaktor fell 7.35% at 3.15 EUR followed by Viohalco (-6.90%) and Motor Oil (-6.53%). Shares of Eurobank, Jumbo and Bank of Piraeus shed 5.91%, 5.46% and 5.39% respectively, while Alpha Bank and Titan lost 4.74% and 3.70%.

National Bank of Greece also moved lower, losing 3.61% at 10.15 EUR.

Total turnover stood at 81.42 million euro.


(Capital.gr)


***
Oggi pesanti perdite alla Borsa di Atene.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Hypo Real Estate, BNP, SocGen Hold Most Greek Sovereign Debt

August 20, 2010, 10:56 AM EDT




By Niklas Magnusson
Aug. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Germany’s Hypo Real Estate Holding AG and France’s BNP Paribas SA and Societe Generale SA have the biggest holdings of Greek sovereign debt among European Union banks, according to a European Commission report.
Hypo Real Estate held 7.9 billion euros ($10 billion) of Greek government bonds in March, the Commission said in a report today, citing data from the EU’s bank stress tests published last month. BNP Paribas held 5 billion euros of debt and Societe Generale had 4.2 billion euros.
Hypo Real Estate was one of the seven out of 91 EU banks that failed the stress test because they lacked adequate reserves to maintain a Tier 1 capital ratio of at least 6 percent in the event of a recession and sovereign-debt crisis. European banking stocks, including BNP Paribas and Societe Generale, have fallen this year amid concern Greece may default.
“Not only would debt restructuring come at very high costs for Greece, also other euro-area countries would suffer high costs,” the commission said. “French, German and British banks are most exposed in nominal terms, although claims on Greece represent a relatively small fraction of their balance sheets.”
The following is a table of the top 10 banks by gross sovereign exposure to Greece, according to Committee of European Banking Supervisors stress test data, which was compiled by the European Commission. The numbers are in billions of euros.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
PREVIEW-Retail to boost C.Agricole profit, Greece weighs


By Lionel Laurent and Matthieu Protard


PARIS, Aug 20 (Reuters) - French bank Credit Agricole (CAGR.PA), bearing the scars of struggling Greek unit Emporiki, was expected to post a 39 percent rise in second-quarter net profit next week, driven by domestic retail operations.
Credit Agricole's relatively high exposure to the debt-ridden Greek economy has hit its shares, and the bank has said it will book a 400 million euro ($512 million) writedown on Emporiki in the quarter as it fights to turn it around.
The bank is, however, seen benefiting from strong retail operations at home and a lighter impact from corporate and investment banking loan provisions as part of a more benign market environment since the financial crisis.
"Obviously Emporiki and Greece is an issue, but I don't think it will get much worse," MF Global analyst Shailesh Raikundlia said. "We have already factored in quite heavy provisions for Greece."

Credit Agricole was expected to post attributable net profit of 280 million euros next Thursday, a Reuters poll found. Second-quarter revenue was seen up 9.6 percent, with loan provisions seen down slightly at 1.1 billion euros.
Its shares are down close to a fifth in value so far this year, compared with a fall of 5 percent on the STOXX Europe 600 banks index .SX7P.
The bank has cut down on risky market activities and sold assets since the crisis, and the recent appointment of Credit Agricole veteran Jean-Paul Chifflet as chief executive and rural mayor Jean-Marie Sander as chairman was seen by some as a symbolic return to roots in agriculture and cooperative lending.
The impact of volatile financial markets in the second quarter was therefore likely to be softer than for larger rivals BNP Paribas (BNPP.PA) and Societe Generale (SOGN.PA), which are more focused on investment banking.
Credit Agricole will not, however, be sheltered from the potential future impact of austerity measures in France on retail banking. Low household debt levels have helped drive retail growth in the wake of the 2009 recession, but government spending cuts could put on the brakes.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Una settimana iniziata male non poteva che finire male.
Spread in costante allargamento sulla nostra Grecia segue l'Irlanda, nonostante l'asta andata bene e il completamento del programma di rinnovo dei bond per il 2010.
L'offensiva degli hedge fund prosegue sull'euro.

Grecia 865 pb. (848)
Irlanda 314 pb. (303)
Portogallo 302 pb. (297)
Spagna 180 pb. (176)
Italia 152 pb. (148)
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Reforms bring on painful job cuts
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Troika outlines Greece’s action plan; steep personnel cuts in OSE, local and central government

OSE will be one of the first loss-making state companies to be tackled by the government as part of efforts to cut spending. By the end of 2010, a three-year business plan is expected on OSE, which owes 10 billion euros.

By Stelios Bouras - Kathimerini English Edition / [email protected]




Greece will be moving ahead with steep cuts to staff levels at state companies and local and central government in reforms aimed at boosting its competitiveness in changes that will initially send thick black clouds over the labor market.
A quarterly report prepared by the European Commission, European Central Bank (ECB) and International Monetary Fund (IMF) detailed the Greek government's action plan over the next few months, in accordance with committments it made in exchange for May's 110-billion-euro rescue plan.
Heavy on painful spending cuts in an economy that is expected to shrink by an annual pace of 4 percent this year, the plan is light on ways to kick-start the economy with short-term growth initiatives. Among the items topping the government's list are cuts in state-sector labor levels aimed at helping slash 3 billion euros in its wage bill from 2009 to 2014.
Changes to state railway organization OSE, which has debts of more than 10 billion euros, will involve staff cuts of 35 percent with another 58 percent being cut from OSE subsidiary TRAINOSE.
«The restructuring plan aims to close down the group's loss-making lines, streamline its management and downsize the staff accordingly,» the report said.
Government officials have said that OSE staff will not be sacked but transferred to other state departments. However, it is unclear how this will happen, given employment positions in the state sector will be harder to come by. The government will implement a rule next year of replacing only 20 percent of retiring employees in the public sector, the report added.
Changes to the heavily overstaffed public sector come at a time when jobless numbers in Greece are rising quickly, hitting the country's young population hardest. The number of unemployed in Greece rose in June to 12 percent, from 8.5 percent in the same period a year earlier, which means that 181,784 people lost their jobs in the 12-month period. One in three people aged between 15 to 24 were out of work in May, while the jobless rate for those aged between 25-34 stands at 15.8 percent.
The ECB, IMF and EU, known as the troika, estimate that Greece's jobless figures will rise to 14.6 percent next year from an estimated 11.8 percent in 2009.
The General Confederation of Greek Labor (GSEE), however, has forecast the number could rise to as high as 20 percent by the end of the year. Further government staff cuts will be implemented via a reorganization of local government aimed at reducing employees by 50 percent, to 25,000 people.
«The reform aims to acheive considerable savings from the reduction in operational costs and through the realization of economies of scale in economic and human terms,» the report added.
Almost one in five Greeks works as a civil servant, with the central government employing 768,000 people.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Electricity market forced into opening up


Reuters


Greece is to gradually raise electricity prices and allow investors access to its coal deposits, as part of measures to open up a power market dominated by state-controlled utility Public Power Corporation (PPC).
Greece said that, by the end of the year, it would adopt «a mechanism to ensure that the energy component of regulated tariffs reflects, gradually - and at the latest by June 2013 - wholesale market prices,» in a report submitted yesterday to the European Union, International Monetary Fund (IMF) and European Central Bank (ECB).
Power-market liberalization is one of several conditions the EU and IMF imposed on cash-strapped Greece to continue funding a three-year, 110-billion-euro ($141 billion) bailout package granted in May.
Greece is an energy liberalization laggard: PPC still controls 97 percent of the retail market for electricity.
Yesterday's move will increase Greek electricity prices, currently among the lowest in the EU because they are regulated by the state and do not fully include PPC's carbon-emission costs. Greece also pledged to offer PPC's rivals gradual access to its lignite deposits and plants.
 
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