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

Stato
Chiusa ad ulteriori risposte.
LAOS criticises Merkel




Popular Orthodox Rally (LAOS) leader George Karatzaferis launched a harsh attack on German chancellor Angela Merkel over her stance at the recent EU summit in Brussels towards the EU's economically weaker member countries, while he also criticised ruling PASOK and main opposition New Democracy on their stance "at this hour of crisis".

Speaking in Salamina during a tour ahead of the November 7 local government elections, Karatzaferis said that LAOS was the only political power that is not controlled by anyone nor anyone's marionette.

Patriotism, he said, is his party's philosophy, and it puts the homeland, not party clientelism, above everything else.

Noting that the situation in Greece is extremely serious and critical, with the country facing its worst crisis since the 1940s and heading towards disaster, he criticised the two mainstream parties of bickering and blaming each other while remaining indifferent to the critical nature and severity of the situation in the country.

He is due to speak at a rally in Glyka Nera in the evening.

(ana.gr)
 
'Tolerance or condemnation'



Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA parliamentary alliance) parliamentary group leader Alexis Tsipras said that the true dilemma of the November 7 local government elections is "tolerance or condemnation" of the government's policy and the Memorandum, speaking during a press conference in central Athens on Sunday.

Presenting the SYRIZA positions ahead of next Sunday's polls, Tsipras called on the Greek people to send a "message of reversal" of the "catastrophic course" being followed by the government, stressing that a vote against the government-backed candidates could act as a catalyst and open up the road of hope for progressive developments after the election.

Tsipras further charged that prime minister George Papandreou, "panic-stricken by the extent of the people's outcry", was resorting to an "empty blackmail of early general elections".

"The country is in danger from the Memorandum, the lenders and the Troika, and not from the free will of the people," Tsipras said, adding that the salvation of the country will be its disengagement from the Memorandum.

In an interview appearing in the Sunday edition of ETHNOS newspaper, Tsipras called the "dilemma" put forward by the prime minister "a joke", adding that Papandreou was openly seeking a vote of support to his policy of poverty, unemployment and social isolation "and also of increase of the debt".

(ana.gr)

***
Con questo concludiamo la panoramica delle forze di opposizione.
 
Greek Deputy PM: Debt Restructuring Should Not Be Demonized


By Nick Skrekas
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES


ATHENS (Dow Jones)--Greek deputy Prime Minster Theodoros Pangalos said on Sunday that in theory debt restructuring should not be completely disregarded for the heavily indebted nation but that deficits need to be dealt with first.

In an interview with local newspaper To Vima, later confirmed by the government, Pangalos said: "Before we reach the stage of a debt restructuring we have to finish with the deficit. But demonizing debt restructuring is wrong. Debt exists to be restructured. We may pursue it ourselves or it may be proposed to us and it may too advantageous to turn it down."

Greece's mounting fiscal problems this year spooked investors, who started demanding higher interest rates to fund Greek debt, eventually making it prohibitive for the country to access private capital markets.

In May the cash strapped Mediterranean country inked a EUR110 billion bailout in exchange for fiscal consolidation and imposition of unprecedented austerity at the request of its lenders, the International Monetary Fund and the European Union, to stave off certain bankruptcy.

While Prime Minister George Papandreou and Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou have consistently and repeatedly denounced any suggestion of debt restructuring, Pangalos is the first high level socialist government member to imply that a debt restructuring is not completely off the table.

Greece currently has a national debt that tops more than EUR300 million and its 2009 budget deficit is likely to be revised upward of 15% of gross domestic product by Eurostat, the European Unions statistics agency.

The draft 2011 budget was tailored to please markets because the Finance Ministry aims to cut the budget deficit to 7% of GDP by the end of 2011, ahead of the promised 7.6% target requested by its international lenders.

But while the primary budget deficit will come close to being erased next year, should revenues hold up as planned, there are valid market concerns that the ratio of Greece's general government debt to GDP will increase to 145% in 2011.

That is quite a staggering pile of debt and international bond markets are still pricing in that the debt laden nation will not avoid a debt restructuring. Its bond borrowing spreads have once again spiked this week on talk of a potential early national election that could destabilize and derail reforms should the ruling socialist government fare badly in the Nov 7 local elections.

Finance Minister Papaconstantinou has previously acknowledged that Greece will face a major refinancing hump once repayments to the IMF and the EU kick in around 2014 or 2015, when annual debt-servicing obligations will nearly double from about EUR40 billion to EUR70 billion.

Papaconstantinou has also previously confirmed that talks exist, even if not at the initiation or request of Greece, that payment of the EUR110 billion may be extended because the current repayment schedule may not be viable.

***
Difficile da interpretare, potrebbe essere un primo smarcamento all'interno del Pasok oppure pura tattica pre-elettorale.
 
ND calls for Pangalos' resignation



ANA-MPa/A main opposition New Democracy (ND) spokesman on Sunday evening issued a scathing attack against government vice-president Theodoros Pangalos, calling for the latter's resignation following eyebrow-raising comments earlier in the day referring to a restructuring of Greece's foreign debt.

In published statements appearing in an Athens daily on Sunday as well as comments on a state-run television station, Pangalos left open the possibility of a restructuring of the debt load.

"Either the vice-president of the Papandreou government is investing in the country's bankruptcy, as the prime minister says of those that refer to a debt restructuring, or without knowing it, Mr. Pangalos exposed to the Greek people the true substance and purpose of Mr. Papandreou's recent election blackmail," ND spokesman Panos Panagiotopoulos said.

The main opposition party demanded Pangalos ouster from the government.


(ana.gr)


***
Pangalos sotto tiro.
I motivi sono quelli postati sopra.
In effetti si gioca con il fuoco....
 
PM defends poll talk, Pangalos

dot_clear.gif
ND calls for deputy premier to be sacked over comments about possible restructuring of Greece’s debt



No sooner had Prime Minister George Papandreou finished defending his suggestion that a snap general election might be needed if PASOK does not get a mandate in Sunday’s local polls, than he was forced to come to the defense of Deputy Prime Minister Theodoros Pangalos over claims that the government might seek to restructure Greece’s debt.

Papandreou, who ran a 10-kilometer race as part of the Athens Classic Marathon yesterday, had every reason to feel exhausted at the end of the week when he was criticized for raising the issue of early elections as the fate of the Greek economy still hangs in the balance.

However, speaking Saturday at a local election campaign rally in the capital, Papandreou insisted he was correct in responding to New Democracy’s tactic of making the November 7 vote about national rather than local issues by throwing down the gauntlet. “We will be voting on and deciding whether our country will complete the great effort we have undertaken to save it or whether we abandon it in the middle and let our hard work and sacrifices go to waste,” he said.

In an interview with the Real News weekly, Papandreou insisted he was not “bluffing or trying to escape problems” by challenging voters with the possibility that national elections could be held. By yesterday afternoon, the election talk took on an added dimension as ND called on Papandreou to sack Pangalos over comments that the government might consider restructuring its debt, which is an option that Papandreou insists is not on PASOK’s agenda.

“Debts exist to be restructured,” Pangalos told Sunday’s To Vima newspaper. “We may pursue it ourselves or the option may be offered to us and it could be in our interest to turn it down.”

ND spokesman Panos Panagiotopoulos said Pangalos’s comments suggested that the real reason Papandreou hinted at snap elections was because he is considering a restructuring of Greek debt.

Although Papandreou did not respond personally, government spokesman Giorgos Petalotis accused ND of developing “conspiracy theories” and insisted that the government is committed to sticking to the program to lead Greece out of its economic crisis.

(Kathimerini.gr)

***
Campagna elettorale.

dot_clear.gif
 
...in considerazione di un fututo prossimo europeo e non solo di stagnazione economica, mi viene da pensare che le probabilita' di considerare il debito di uno stato come quello di una corporate sia sempre piu' possibile.

L'emissione di nuovo debito in sostituzione del precedente con taglio del nominale non e' da scartare a questo punto, dal momento che dopo tutti gli sforzi fatti ed i traguardi raggiunti si continua a discutere sul default.
 
Push to increase bank capital ratios reflects possibility of modest haircut
dot_clear.gif
Rights issues from leading lenders may be in preparation for a drop in the value of Greek gov’t debt

By Dimitris Kontogiannis - Kathimerini English Edition


The prospect of early general elections spooked the market in Greek government bonds and stocks, reversing recent gains but did not scare another large local lender, Piraeus Bank, from going ahead with a sizable rights issue to the tune of 800 million euros.

This was yet another sign that Greek banks are bracing for the tougher economic times ahead and preparing for a possible restructuring of public debt as the European Union prepares a new permanent system to handle sovereign debt crises after 2013 where private bondholders will share part of the pain in the form of a bond haircut in a debt restructuring.

Following the example of National Bank of Greece, the country’s largest commercial bank, Piraeus Bank announced its intention last Friday to seek shareholder approval for a 800-million-euro rights issue, underwritten by four large international banks, namely Barclays Capital, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.

There is little doubt that the surging yield spreads of Greek bonds over the German equivalent on the prospect of early general elections raised by Prime Minister George Papandreou last Monday night made it tougher for the Greek bank. It should be noted that the 10-year Greek bond yields 10.6 percent at present, that is, 814 basis points over the similar German bund, compared to some 9.3 percent about 10 days ago.

Nevertheless, it is a positive sign that Piraeus Bank has decided to go ahead with a rights issue and also to seek approval for up to 250 million euros for a convertible bond issue that is not expected to be tapped for at least six months, following the completion of the rights issue.

The country’s fourth largest lender wants to boost its capital adequacy ratios in anticipation of a challenging economic environment marked by a further rise of loans in arrears. Analysts expect nonperforming loans as a percentage of total loans to reach 12 percent and a peak of even higher next year in Greece from an estimated 9.0 percent at the end of June and 7.7 percent at the end of 2009.

National Bank recently completed a share capital increase of 1.8 billion euros and aims to sell a 20 percent stake in its Turkish subsidiary Finansbank in the first quarter of 2011 to further boost its equity capital.

Executives from both Greek banks have communicated to the market that their capital-enhancing exercise is not related to M&A deals but aims at strengthening their capital adequacy ratios and help them obtain greater access on the interbank market.

It is well-known that local banks depend a lot on cheap European Central Bank (ECB) liquidity to fund their assets and would like to gradually disengage and reduce their dependency by tapping the interbank market, where one banks lends to the other for larger sums, even though this is a much more expensive exercise at this point.

Although no Greek banker that we know of would like to admit it in public, boosting a bank’s equity capital is also a precautionary move aimed at shielding it from a haircut on the value of Greek government bonds in the future.

It is estimated that Greek banks own more than 50 billion euros’ worth of Greek government bonds and most have been placed in the held-to-maturity portfolio. This means they do not have to mark to market their bonds on a daily basis, which would have had an impact on their profit-and-loss statement or their equity capital.

Moreover, Greek banks appear to have become more leveraged to local securities at the same time that other European Union banks and institutions are able to unload them onto the ECB, the International Monetary Fund and the other eurozone countries.

If this trend persists, local banks will be more sensitive to developments in the Greek bond market in 2012-2013 than other EU and foreign banks.

This is not good news at a time when Germany is pushing hard for the creation of a permanent mechanism to deal with future sovereign crises where private bondholders will also share the pain in the form of a haircut.

Of course, all bankers hope that Greece will be able to fund its borrowing needs on the markets by that time and there will be no need for the country to enter the permanent mechanism.

However, no one can be sure, especially when the existence of this mechanism itself may scare banks and others away from lending to weak countries, such as Greece, forcing them to sign on to continuing to fund their needs.

In this regard, local banks’ push to strengthen their capital adequacy ratios is a prudent move because it also takes into account the possibility of having to take a modest haircut in Greek government bonds in the next couple of years if German Chancellor Angela Merkel has her way with the new permanent mechanism.

(Kathimerini.gr)

***
Una buona analisi, da leggere.
Sulle considerazioni del post di Jessica.

dot_clear.gif
 
Stocks may head southward ahead of local elections


Greek stocks may come under further pressure today after giving up 3.6 percent last week.
With the ruling Socialists tossing about the idea of calling the country to national elections should there be low support for ruling PASOK in Sunday's local elections, Greek bonds spreads widened on concerns as to whether the government can push ahead with austerity measures needed to tame the country's budget deficit.
Greek bonds led weekly declines by peripheral European securities on Friday, touching 814 basis points, the widest level since the end of September. The yield on Greece's 10-year bond rose 29 basis points, or 0.29 percentage points, to 10.69 percent.
News of Piraeus Bank's move to boost capital by just over a billion euros via a rights issues and convertible bond sale may boost selling pressure on the stock, which dipped 4.35 percent on Friday. «Uncertainty about the terms of the upcoming capital increase may fuel short-term pressure on Piraeus Bank's shares,» brokerage firm National Securities said in a note on Friday. «Following National Bank's capital increase, the move may also add pressure on domestic peers to raise capital.» Piraeus Bank is scheduled to seek investor approval for the plan on November 23.


(Kathimerini.gr)

dot_clear.gif
 
No time to rock the boat


It is ludicrous to be talking about the possibility of early general elections now. Prime Minister George Papandreou has a comfortable majority in Parliament, the support of the international community and a popular mandate. He has, therefore, no reason to go to the polls nor to risk delaying the painful, yet necessary, austerity program.


The head of opposition New Democracy, Antonis Samaras, has obviously chosen the more responsible path by voting in favor of the important draft laws outlined in the memorandum and in toning down his anti-reform rhetoric.


This is what the country needs: a premier who will disregard the political cost and the polls and an opposition leader who will not follow the usual policy of saying “no” to every government proposal. We have seen signs of political maturity from both Papandreou and Samaras, at least until Papandreou decided to rock the boat with his dangerous talk about early elections.


***
Un commento politico del quotidiano Kathimerini.

dot_clear.gif
 
Stato
Chiusa ad ulteriori risposte.

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Alto