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

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E' vero, a volte le tante smentite, diventano poi una conferma.
Però, come più volte detto, una ristrutturazione del debito greco non sarebbe vantaggioso per gli stessi greci: Papaconstantinou l'ha capito da tempo ...
Le dinamiche su cui ci muoviamo sono spesso irrazionali, quindi tutto è possibile.

Le ristrutturazioni sono vantaggiose solo se il debitore dopo il default ha altre fonti future di finanziamento e il business è sano, se invece deve tornare al mercato allora il default gli chiude per un pò le porte e lo mette in difficoltà per cui farà di tutto per evitarlo.

Gurdati parmalat, il business era sano per cui tolti i debit sta in piedi.
 
Le ristrutturazioni sono vantaggiose solo se il debitore dopo il default ha altre fonti future di finanziamento e il business è sano, se invece deve tornare al mercato allora il default gli chiude per un pò le porte e lo mette in difficoltà per cui farà di tutto per evitarlo.

Gurdati parmalat, il business era sano per cui tolti i debit sta in piedi.

Infatti, il problema - al limite - si potrà porre, paradossalmente, quando l'economia greca uscirà dalla recessione e inizierà a formarsi un avanzo primario.
A quel punto, se vogliamo proprio fare i maligni, potranno esserci le condizioni (da parte greca) per ristrutturare il debito non avendo necessità di richiedere sul mercato i capitali per rifinanziare il debito.
 
Greek Piraeus Bank shareholders clear cash call


ATHENS | Mon Dec 20, 2010 3:53am EST



ATHENS Dec 20 (Reuters) - Piraeus Bank (BOPr.AT), Greece's fourth-largest lender, on Monday got shareholder approval for an 800 million euro ($1.06 billion) rights issue to strengthen its balance sheet.
Shareholders at the bank's second repeat meeting also cleared plans for a 250 million-euro convertible bond issue.
The terms of the rights issue will be announced on Jan. 3, Chairman Michael Sallas told the meeting.
Piraeus has underwriting commitments for the full amount of the rights issue from Barclays Capital, Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.


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Corporate.
 
Budget debate heats up


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MPs spar in Parl’t ahead of Wednesday’s vote; PM heralds Eurobond venture


As a debate on the state budget for next year heated up in Parliament yesterday, the Finance Ministry welcomed a decision by the International Monetary Fund to release its share of a third tranche of support funding for the debt-ridden government and said it would push through structural reforms to secure a fourth tranche of aid expected in March.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister George Papandreou heralded a five-point political plan aimed at getting the country on the road to recovery by 2013. The plan aims to radically overhaul public administration, boost growth and strengthen the country’s profile in the region.

Addressing ruling PASOK’s parliamentary group yesterday, Papandreou defended his government’s tactic of accelerating the approval of key reforms through Parliament. “No one loves the emergency vote procedure but we are in a state of war,” the premier told ruling lawmakers. Papandreou also revealed that he was planning to gather one million signatures from across Europe to support the introduction of Eurobonds, a eurozone-wide debt issue, to spread risk. “This is an initiative for people, citizens, unions... in a conservative Europe where there are still people and citizens who truly want a Europe that goes forward,” the premier said.

In Parliament meanwhile, Papandreou’s cabinet came under fire for its budget, which is to be voted on this Wednesday. Finance Minister Giorgos Papaconstantinou described the budget as “consistent and coherent,” and stressed that consensus would be necessary for it to be implemented. “It will take courage and a minimum level of cooperation,” said Papaconstantinou. But the minister did not find the consensus he sought in Parliament. Prokopis Pavlopoulos, a former minister of the main conservative opposition New Democracy, claimed that it was “completely impossible to execute.”

Earlier in the day, the ministry issued a statement hailing the decision of the IMF to approve the release of 2.5 billion euros in loans to Greece as part of a third instalment of aid. A larger chunk of aid completing this third instalment is due for approval by Greece’s eurozone partners in January. According to the ministry’s statement, the IMF’s latest cash injection “is a recognition of the major progress made by our country.”


(Kathimerini.gr)

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Greece may succeed in restructuring public debt by adopting Uruguay model


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Efforts could be met by high rate of acceptance since many bonds are held by local banks, pension funds

By Dimitris Kontogiannis - Kathimerini English Edition



The policy of buying time for the weaker members of the eurozone and banks from core countries holding their bonds as a means of easing off pressure from the area as a whole may be challenged in the months ahead. Even if this is not the case, Greece may have to rethink its plans and exhaust its chances of accessing world markets as soon as possible. This means that the country may have to draw lessons from Uruguay’s successful restructuring of public debt in 2003.

Whether or not Greece or other highly indebted EMU countries such as Ireland will be able to get out of this nightmare depends as much on themselves as on the prevailing market conditions and global investors’ perception of the sovereign debt crisis in the periphery of the eurozone.

The two-day European Summit in Brussels last week produced, as usual, the expected minimum, with the decision to adopt the permanent mechanism for dealing with sovereign crises in the eurozone after mid-2013 and the shoring up of the ECB’s equity capital. But the economic policy of providing liquidity to peripheral countries appears to be running into trouble as markets put more upward pressure on the borrowing costs of Portugal and Spain by widening their yield spreads over Germany and even pushing German yields higher.

It is known that this policy aims at giving more time to the weak to put their public finances in order and also to their creditors, namely banks, insurance companies and pension funds from Germany and France, to deal with potential losses on their bond holdings.

However, the provision of liquidity has done little to attract fresh money to the embattled countries, while at the same time scaring off some bondholders and depositors in the weak countries such as Greece. A number of bondholders have taken advantage of purchases by the ECB and the rescue funds to lighten their bond holdings.

One does not need to have a PhD to understand why this situation is not sustainable, since the lack of fresh money along with the capital flight will bring about a deeper and more protracted recession, raising the possibility of social unrest.

So, Greece may find itself in a more difficult situation in the next few months. This is not just because the recession will hurt more and various special interest groups will resist the reforms required by the troika but also because the global investors’ perception on the success of the current liquidity approach adopted by the eurozone may be changing for the worse.

In addition to sticking to the fiscal consolidation course, at least to the extent possible, taking measures to control the debt-to-GDP ratio and pushing forward with the structural reforms in the public sector and sectors of the economy shielded from competition, the government may also have to review its stance on the restructuring of public debt.

This means the country may have to think about bringing forward in 2011 any decision to restructure its public debt rather than follow the orthodox route of waiting until the primary budget produces a surplus.

Uruguay may be a useful example of debt restructuring for Greece, although the Latin American country had the luxury of devaluing its currency along with restructuring at the time, in 2003.

It should be noted that restructuring refers to any action between creditor and debtor that changes the terms previously established for repayment. This includes rescheduling in addition to debt forgiveness. In the case of Uruguay, debt restructuring took the form of rescheduling in the context of the formal deferment of debt-service.

In reality, investors were given two choices: First, exchange existing bonds with new bonds with similar coupons and extended maturity for five years in general. Second, receive a smaller number of benchmark bonds that were longer-dated but more liquid than the new bonds under the first option.

A big majority of investors, above 80 percent of those affected, accepted the terms, resulting in a loss in the net present value of future flows on new bonds of about 20 percent. One may ask whether Greece could have seen such a high rate of acceptance if it had attempted to reschedule its public debt expiring. i.e. from 2013 through 2016. The answer is probably yes since a great deal of this debt is in the hands of Greek banks, pensions and others, the ECB and European banks which may be “convinced” to accept the terms by their own governments. Some 70 percent of these bonds is estimated to be in their hands by summer 2011.

After all, the loss of accepting to increase the maturity of the above Greek bonds by five years or more is estimated to be much smaller than the loss they would have incurred if they marked-to-market these bonds at the current low market prices.

So, it is not unimaginable to think that Greece may be able to succeed in restructuring part of its public debt by adopting the approach of Uruguay in 2003. It should be stressed that this form of restructuring has nothing to do with the proposed lengthening of the maturity of the 110-billion-euro loan from the EU and the IMF.

Greece may have to look closer at the case of Uruguay to reduce its debt repayments to levels that do not scare off foreign investors in the next few years and exhaust its chances of accessing the bond markets in 2012.


(Kathimerini.gr)


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Questo giornalista è capace: da un paio di mesi disegna scenari futuribili in caso di haircut.
 
FinMin: We have not sold our soul

Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou, speaking in Parliament on Sunday evening during the debate on the 2011 budget, stressed that "we have not sold our soul", adding that the policy being followed is the only one that can save the Greek economy from bankruptcy.

Papaconstantinou further said that despite the efforts that Greece will make, its ultimate success will depend on the recovery and protection of the eurozone and for this reason the upgrading of Greece's image and prestige is of great importance to enable it to participate with its own say in crucial European decisions.

"We are proving on a daily basis that all the sacrifices we called for, we are not squandering them on personal strategies, but on a stronger voice for the country and its prime minister, for a reliability and prestige that Greece thought it had achieved, but that that it lost over the past 5-6 years," the Finance Minister said.


(ana.gr)
 
I TITOLI DEI GIORNALI:

The scheduled opening of a series of closed professions, the continuing mobilisations in public transport, the possibility of new additional austerity measures and new cutbacks in civil servants' salaries, dominated the headlines on Monday in Athens' newspapers.

ADESMEFTOS TYPOS: "Another week of hell".
AVRIANI: "Back to the drachma or else we collapse".
ELEFTHEROS: "Former prime minister and New Democracy (ND) leader Costas Karamanlis "bombs" upset ND leader Antonis Samaras".
ELEFTHEROTYPIA: " New cuts in benefits".
ELEFTHEROS TYPOS: "New income cuts - 25 percent cutbacks in public sector and Public Utilities and Organisations".
ESTIA: "Society unready for radical changes".
ETHNOS: "Six burning fronts for the closed professions".
IMERISSIA: "Final stroke to the market ".
NAFTEMPORIKI: "Closed professions on target".
TA NEA: "Chaos in closed professions".
VRADYNI: "Government and IMF strangling households and market".


(ana.gr)
 
In mattinata gli spread/bund sono sempre in oscillazione entro il solito range: nulla da segnalare.
Mentre invece la Borsa di Atene è pesantemente negativa con un - 3,00 circa. Volumi bassi a 30 MLN.
 
Flessioni contenutissime venerdì sui TdS greci OTC, comprese fra 0,1% e 0,5%, con qualche arbitraggio dettato da esigenze di uniformità della curva dei rendimenti che ha generato su 2-3 titoli rimbalzi altrettanto modesti (nell'ordine dello 0,1 - 0,2%)).

Anche la curva dei rendimenti resta più o meno ferma dove l'abbiamo lasciata una decina di giorni fa: fa picco a quota 13,3% lordo sul Grecia 2013, declina leggermente sulle durate medio lunghe, fino al decennale o giù di lì, di un punto pct al 12,3% lordo sui bond 2019 a monitor, poi scende più sensibilmente fino ad attestarsi poco sopra il 9% lordo sul 2037 e sul 2040, sui quali, come più volte detto, pesano semmai le aspettative del mercato in ordine a fattori quali eventuale haircut e recovery.
 
Pimco: Greece, Ireland and Portugal Should Leave Euro



Greece, Ireland and Portugal should leave Europe’s single currency area if they cannot cope with the burden of their debts, the German daily Die Welt quotes Pimco’s head of portfolio management, Andrew Bosonworth as saying Monday, according to Dow Jones Newswires.

"Greece, Ireland and Portugal won’t get back on their feet without either their own currency or high transfer payments," Bosomworth said in an interview in Munich.

He stated that there is no evidence of a resumption of economic growth. "I’m not assuming that growth will return, the way that the International Monetary Fund and EU expect," he added.

The decisions taken at last week’s European Union summit meeting hadn’t fixed the solvency problems facing some euro-zone states, Bosomworth told the German newspaper.

"Politicians can’t just close their eyes any more to the possibility of a default inside the EU," Bosomworth concluded.

(capital.gr)
 
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