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

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tommy271

Forumer storico
NATO chief on 'name issue'


SKOPJE (ANA-MPA) -- NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen on Tuesday ruled out any prospect of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (fYRoM) joining the NATO alliance without prior solution of the "name issue".


"The decision of Bucharest (2008 NATO summit) is clear: A mutually acceptable solution must be found," Rasmussen told a local television station, noting that all NATO decisions are taken by unanimous vote.

Asked on the prospect of "NATO pressure" on Greece to achieve "more flexibility", the Alliance chief stressed that he will not involve himself in talks between Athens and Skopje, and called on "all the sides to display flexibility for finding a solution".
 

Brisico

Forumer attivo
Ma questa notizia se non la leggevo qui passava inosservata! E non è da poco... oltre alla Cina, cominiciano a muoversi tante cose positive, devo dire che non siamo ancora abituati.


Aggiungo una domanda, che rating bisogna avere perché i Fondi comincino ad acquistare questi titoli?
Questa notizia era nel pomeriggio in prima pagina sull'economia greca, ci credo anche io, per cui dritti fino in fondo, sotto ai 100 non si vende, nel frattempo ci godiamo le belle cedolone che ci arrivano da Atene, per quanto mi riguarda il 22 Ottobre me ne arriva una del 5,9%.
 

g.ln

Triplo Panico: comprare
quante buone notizie!

Questa notizia era nel pomeriggio in prima pagina sull'economia greca, ci credo anche io, per cui dritti fino in fondo, sotto ai 100 non si vende, nel frattempo ci godiamo le belle cedolone che ci arrivano da Atene, per quanto mi riguarda il 22 Ottobre me ne arriva una del 5,9%.

Evviva per le cedolone greche, ma direi che anche sotto i 100, chi si trovi con qualche figura di gain, qualche alleggerimento lo potrà fare :D. Del doman non v'è certezza!
Ciao, Giuseppe
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
E' proseguita anche ieri la fase positiva per i nostri ateniesi seppur in presenza di un affievolirsi della spinta.
Come osservato in diverse altre occasioni, le aperture e le chiusure tendono ad allargare con restringimenti più sensibili nel corso della giornata.
Ieri abbiamo notato volumi di scambio molto alti anche alla Borsa di Atene con l'indice Ase superare di nuovo i 1500 punti e con 173 milioni intermediati, cifre che non si vedevano da tempo.
Da registrare il giudizio positivo di Moody's sullo sforzo di risanamento dei conti pubblici.
Su Irlanda e Portogallo, nonostante i recuperi dei scorsi giorni, tendono nuovamente ad allargare complice una compagine governativa debole e una crescente manovra speculativa all'ombra delle agenzie di rating
Sempre in buona posizione di resistenza Spagna e Italia.

Dati Thomson-Reuters, Spread/Bund sul decennale.

Grecia 792 pb. (797)
Irlanda 423 pb. (411)
Portogallo 405 pb. (390)
Spagna 179 pb. (180)
Italia 154 pb. (154)
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
MONETARIO/REUTERS

* Nell'ambito del vertice euro-asiatico dell'Asem a Bruxelles il premier cinese Wen Jiabao incontra il presidente della Bce Trichet, il presidente dell'Eurogruppo Juncker e il Commissario Ue Rehn. I colloqui si focalizzeranno probabilmente sui tassi di cambio e potrebbero riguardare i problemi del debito dell'area euro, entrambi temi cruciali per i mercati.
Nel fine settimana, in vista del summit, Wen aveva espresso l'impegno della Cina a sostenere un euro stabile, a non ridurre le posizioni sui titoli di Stato europei e ad acquistare debito greco una volta che questo tornerà sul mercato.


* A Washington il Fondo monetario pubblica il suo rapporto sulla stabilità finanziaria. Nei capitoli diffusi la scorsa settimana, il rapporto sottlinea la necessità di maggiore vigilanza delle autorità sull'attività delle agenzie di rating. Attesa anche per eventuali considerazioni dell'Fmi sullo stato dei conti pubblici e sulle politiche di risanamento in diversi paesi, come la Grecia, a sostegno dei quali il Fondo è direttamente impegnato.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Cash-strapped Greece looks to China and other rich nations

The foreign governments, including those of Qatar and Libya, are willing to risk their investments to gain a foothold in the European Union market.


By Anthee Carassava, Los Angeles Times October 6, 2010


Reporting from Athens —


The financially strapped Greek government, after narrowly dodging a humiliating bankruptcy, in recent months has seen its efforts to sell state-owned assets draw big-money interest from China and other countries looking for bargains.

Plans by China, which has huge commitments at the port of Piraeus, include greater investments in the Greek shipping industry. Libyan officials have pledged cooperation in areas as diverse as pharmaceuticals and renewable energy, and Qatar officials late last month signed a memorandum showing interest in investing as much as $5 billion in real estate and other sectors.


When Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao visited Greece last weekend, he spoke reassuringly of helping restore economic stability to the country, a message appreciated by Greek officials.



"These are important global players and they are willing to bet against the risk of Greece going into default by spotting emerging opportunities here," said Charalambos Pamboukis, Greece's minister of state responsible for attracting overseas funds. "Their vote of confidence [in Greece] is bound to instill confidence in other traditional investors."

Well into the throes of its worst recession in 16 years, the government in Athens was forced to secure a $146-billion bailout package from the European Union and International Monetary Fund this year, promising a rash of reforms in return, plus a string of cost-cutting measures intended to slash the country's budget deficit from 13.6% of its gross domestic product to under 3% by the end of 2012. The austerity measures, which include cuts in pay for certain workers and reduced services, have been met with some protests.

Ten months into the year, however, net revenue is growing at a rate of only 3.3% compared with a targeted 13.7%, leaving state coffers cash-starved, the recession swelling and officials aggressively wooing foreign money to spur growth.

The government overtures included Prime Minister George Papandreou meeting with Libyan leader Moammar Kadafi in a Bedouin tent to persuade him to invest in Greece's broken economy.

Sheik Hamad ibn Khalifa al Thani, the emir of Qatar, after being courted for months and enticed by generous government incentives, agreed in late September to consider sinking billions of dollars into projects in Greece.

The commitment, officials acknowledge, is vague and unbinding, covering six fields of interest as diverse as tourism, infrastructure and energy. Still, if realized, the deal will yield one of the biggest inflows of foreign capital to Greece, a debt-laden country where direct foreign investment has dropped drastically in the last two years, from $4.8 billion in 2008 to $3.4 billion in 2009.

Already, in the seaside suburb of Hellenikon, residents are protesting over purported plans by the Qataris to develop the 1,413-acre site of the capital's former international airport and a nearby marina into a glitzy resort-and-casino complex.

"Money is money," Development Minister Michalis Chrysohoidis said. "While an investment [such as the one considered by Qatar] will not save Greece from its economic crisis, it will definitely encourage other foreign investors to come forward and help stimulate growth."

Although many Western investors remain skittish, the Chinese and sovereign wealth funds such as the $60-billion Qatari Investment Authority are bucking the trend, eyeing Greece as a further inroad to one of the world's largest markets: the European Union.

Over the weekend, in the first visit by a Chinese premier to Athens in 24 years, Wen took to the podium of Greece's sprawling Parliament chamber to speak effusively about his bid to invest further in this nation's shipping expertise, reassuring the debt-strained European Union also that China's holdings of European bonds would not be shed.

Libya's $65-billion sovereign wealth fund also has been seeking to pick up cheap assets across Europe, adding Greece and its untapped energy resources to its wish list, as traditional investors continue retrenching in the global recession.

Pamboukis and Ahmad Al Sayyed, a Qatar Investment Authority executive, will meet this month at an undisclosed location to privately lay down the ground rules and agenda for their investment talks. At least six bilateral committees have been formed in recent months to identify individual investment opportunities for rich investor nations, including China, Libya, the United Arab Emirates, Russia and India.

"We are not traveling around the globe with our suitcases, looking for money. We're not putting up this boutique country for sale," Pamboukis said in an interview. "We want strategic investors."

The size and scope of potential foreign inflows remain unclear. But in snagging the investments, officials in Athens have promised lucrative incentives, including tax holidays, extended leasing rights to prime real estate and binding decisions that secure the fate of their projects.

A fast-track procedure is also being completed, allowing mega-investors to clear the hurdles of Greek bureaucracy and set up businesses within 30 days, a scheme initially set up before the 2004 Athens Olympics when the International Olympics Committee threatened to call off the Games if Greece failed to deliver key projects and venues.

"It's good to have huge investments like these," said Gikas Hardouvelis, chief economist at Athens-based financial firm Eurobank. "But the real test will be whether Greece can win back more of the smaller investors from abroad."

***
Era da tempo che non leggevo sulla stampa statunitense un buon servizio sulla Grecia, con dati e commenti che non arrivano dai soliti ordini di scuderia ..
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Greece reiterates its commitment to deficit reduction

Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas emphasizes the spending cuts and other reforms Greece has implemented, as well as the foreign investment that he says points to other nations' confidence in Greece.


Los Angeles Times October 5, 2010|6:04 p.m.


The financial woes of Portugal and Ireland have pushed Greece's troubles into the background in recent weeks, a reprieve from this summer when a Eurozone bailout pulled the Balkan country from the brink of bankruptcy. Since then, public spending cuts to wages and pensions have reduced the Greek deficit by nearly half, and the government is looking for increased tax revenue and foreign investment to bring it down further.

Last week, Greek Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas met with Times Foreign Editor Bruce Wallace in Los Angeles, part of a government campaign to improve Greece's battered image abroad and to counter money market worries that the country may yet default on at least part of its debt.

Q: Your truck drivers have been on strike for three weeks. Your railways are stopped. Even pharmacists are considering a strike. Are you going to be able to continue with reforms in this political environment?

A: Important reforms have already been decided and are being implemented, especially pension reform, which by definition is politically difficult. Certainly we see voices in Greece that express frustration. But the demonstrations are peaceful. That is the most important thing.

Q: You have explored new revenue paths by soliciting foreign investment from China, Libya and Qatar. What do you give up with these deals?

A: Greece is not giving up anything. This is one more sign that the international economic players are again putting their confidence in the Greek economy. One of the major projects is the Port of Piraeus, which China has decided to use as the main hub for [exports] to the European market. This shows very clearly that Greece has a valuable strategic position as an entry point to Europe but also the Balkans, Middle East and Caucasus.

Q: There have been harsh words about the way Greece fudged its accounting to be eligible to join the euro currency union. Are you resentful of the way Greece is seen abroad?

A: Certainly Greece and the Greek people went through difficult times with comments by the international media. Sometimes unfairly. It is not easy to take this, especially at a moment when the Greek people showed their readiness to make very difficult reforms and accept difficult measures.

But this period belongs to the past. There is a clear recognition of what the Greek people have done in the past months.

Q: Some market observers say that despite the steps it has taken, Greece will still have to default on some of its debt.

A: Such rumors are out of the question. We are on a good track.

Q: But you are not out of the woods yet.

A: We are realistic and serious. But our determination and commitment to reform is stable and sincere.

[email protected]
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Questa notizia era nel pomeriggio in prima pagina sull'economia greca, ci credo anche io, per cui dritti fino in fondo, sotto ai 100 non si vende, nel frattempo ci godiamo le belle cedolone che ci arrivano da Atene, per quanto mi riguarda il 22 Ottobre me ne arriva una del 5,9%.

Brisico, con calma e pazienza portiamo tutti i GGB a 100 ... alla faccia di Roubini e degli altri "guru" :lol::lol::lol:.
 
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