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

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I TITOLI DEI GIORNALI:

The takeover of the Athens University's Law School building by illegal migrants seeking legalisation and the new tax bill clamping down on tax dodging were the main front-page items in Athens' dailies on Wednesday.


ADESMEFTOS TYPOS: "War between government, university officials over the Law School building takeover by illegal migrants".

AVGHI: "Persecution of university asylum, migrants".

AVRIANI: "Hundreds of small-scale debtors to the state will be sent to prison".

ELEFTHERI ORA: "The 'child of the Diaspora' (premier George Papandreou) protecting the takeover - Government states on the one hand that the incident is 'unacceptable', but on the other hand protects the illegal migrants staging the takeover".

ELEFTHEROS: "Shock - 152 MPs in Siemens' books".

ELEFTHEROS TYPOS: "Minister/traffic cop, 'operetta' state".

ELEFTHEROTYPIA: "Prison for debt of 5,001 euros".

ESTIA: "The 'kids' are playing with the taxation".

ETHNOS: "Taxation with minimum income declared for 11 professions".

IMERISSIA: "Shock measures against tax evaders - Spot court proceedings for VAT, overdue debts".

KATHIMERINI: "Inertia in the face of the takeover".

LOGOS: "Abolition of the university asylum?"

NAFTEMPORIKI: "The changes to be introduced to the taxation system".

NIKI: "The road opens for the 'trimming' of the debt".

RIZOSPASTIS: "They're playing games on the backs of the migrants".

TA NEA: "Suspects of tax evasion, by virtue of law".

VRADYNI: "Dramatic reduction of pensions".

(ana.gr)
 
Fotovoltaico. Sarà greco il più grande impianto del mondo

200 megawatt, il doppio della centrale canadese record di oggi

Roma, 25 gen. (TMNews) - Progettato in Grecia, nei pressi di Kozani, città situata nella parte nord-occidentale del Paese, il più grande impianto fotovoltaico del mondo. Lo ha annunciato il primo ministro George Papandreu indicando in 200 MW la capacità dell'impianto e in 600 milioni di euro l'investimento necessario per realizzarlo. Attualmente l'impianto di maggiore potenza al mondo è quello canadese di Sarnia, da 97 MW. La compagnia statale PPC (Public Power Corporation) ha annunciato il prossimo bando internazionale per trovare un partner strategico per i propri investimenti in fonti rinnovabili, tra cui anche il grande impianto di Kozani. La speranza è di iniziare i lavori di costruzione sul sito entro il 2011, e di completarli in 18 mesi. La superficie occupata dalla nuova centrale sarà di circa 520 ettari, reperiti sull'area delle locali miniere di carbone esaurite. Il progetto - ha dichiarato Papandreu - servirà da modello per dare impulso al settore delle energie rinnovabili in Grecia e per rilanciare l'occupazione in un momento di profonda crisi economica. Proprio a questo settore, infatti, guarda con particolare interesse il governo greco allo scopo di farne uno dei punti di forza del rilancio economico del Paese. La Grecia - ha osservato il primo ministro - ha oggi la necessità di attrarre investimenti stranieri su progetti capaci di compensare i posti di lavoro perduti con la recessione economica e con le misure adottate per far fronte al debito pubblico.
 
Ak ok avevo visto il tuo posto con la chiusura a 817

Anche questa mattina, poco prima delle ore 9,00 era intorno a 848, poi si è riportato intorno a 832 pb.
Diciamo che, a parte le chiusure che ci ritroviamo normalmente più basse in questi giorni, il movimento di oscillazione è sempre tra gli 820/830 pb.
 
Poll: At Least One Nation Will Leave Euro By 2016



Most global investors predict that at least one nation will abandon the euro zone within five years and that Greece and Ireland will default, according to a Bloomberg’s poll.

The sentiment that is intensifying pressure on policy makers to strengthen their response to the debt crisis, says the news agency.

Moreover, 59% of respondents in a global poll said one or more of the 17 euro member nations will quit by 2016, while 11% foresee an exit within 12 months.

Respondents were divided over whether Portugal would default, while a majority expressed confidence in Spain, according to Bloomberg.

Such pessimism underlines the urgency German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy face to find new ways to ease investors after almost $1 trillion in emergency financial support failed to calm markets.

“The problems in Europe have been addressed, but only with a band aid,” said Ted Jarvis, senior vice president at the Indiana Trust Company. “Several euro members have not followed the correct policies and dug themselves a deep hole.”

Respondents in the poll completed this week of 1,000 investors, analysts or traders who are Bloomberg customers were almost evenly divided about whether the euro area will eventually collapse, according to the news agency.

Most of the 45% who anticipated a breakdown said it wouldn’t occur in the next five years; 48% said it would never happen.

“It’s very difficult to imagine a scenario in which the euro would break up,” said Kenneth Broux, a senior market economist at Lloyds TSB Corporate Markets. “The political investment in the project is way too high and Europe’s debt market is now the biggest in the world.”

“Nobody mentions that all these debt bailouts are funded with additional debt,” said Kevin Baldauf, a portfolio manager at Wafra Investment Advisory Group Inc., who views Greece as likely to default. “You can’t solve a debt problem with additional debt. It buys you time, but hurts you in the medium to long run.”

According other investors, more likely than a breakup and more urgent is the need for some countries to restructure their debts as it is going to happen sooner rather than later, says Bloomberg.

(capital.gr)
 
Merkel and Barroso talk euro but no word on fund


BERLIN | Tue Jan 25, 2011 7:33pm EST



BERLIN Jan 25 (Reuters) - Germany's Angela Merkel and European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso stressed in talks on Tuesday the need for tighter coordination in the euro zone and made no mention of disagreement about the bailout fund.

The chancellor and Barroso met for dinner beyond the reach of the media at a government guesthouse near Berlin and issued only a brief statement about their meeting, which came after a successful debut bond auction by the euro zone rescue fund.

Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert said in a statement that the two had "exchanged views about the situation of the euro".

"At the centre of it were the need to reduce debt, the future stability and growth pact and measures to improve the competitiveness of the European Union," said the statement.

The chancellor and commission chief agreed that "stronger coordination of economic policy in the euro zone is of the utmost importance".

Barroso had warned ahead of the dinner with Merkel that the currency bloc needed to avoid "procrastination", which was seen as a reference to Berlin's outspoken rejection of his proposals to increase the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF).

He wants the 440 billion euro fund, which was set up last year after the Greek debt crisis and already tapped by Ireland, to be beefed up to provide stronger defences for the euro.

But Merkel and Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble rule out increasing the headline sum, wary in a year with seven regional elections in Germany of exacerbating German taxpayers' annoyance at having to fund bailouts for overspending euro zone partners.

They are focusing instead on finding ways to maximise the full capacity of the EFSF, whose lending clout is really only about 250 billion euros because of the guarantee system required to maintain its triple-A credit rating.

The EU's top economic official, Olli Rehn, was also in Germany on Tuesday, attempting to persuade Merkel's junior coalition allies, the Free Democrats (FDP), to soften their opposition to increasing the fund.

FDP leader Guido Westerwelle, the foreign minister and deputy chancellor suffering a slump in popularity, said after meeting Rehn that he was still not convinced the euro zone bailout fund should be expanded.

"To discuss expanding the rescue fund today, when only 10 percent has been used, is not convincing," said Westerwelle.
 
L'EFSF colloca con successo il primo bond salva-Irlanda

2011-01-26 11:28:26 cri

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Il 25 gennaio si è conclusa con successo l'amissione del primo bond da cinque miliardi di euro lanciato dall' European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) come parte del sussidio per l'Irlanda. Questi titoli pubblici hanno la garanzia dei paesi membri dell'Eurozona e sono definiti di livello AAA dagli organismi di classificazione, l'interesse degli investitori è stato eccezionalmente alto, la domanda ha superato di quasi dieci volte l'offerta.



(Radio Cina Internazionale)
 
Bloomberg: Greek Debt Repayment Depends on Real Estate Sales

http://greece.greekreporter.com/files/greece-debt.jpegGreece’s debt repayment depends on state-owned real estate sales, according to a Bloomberg report.
“When the Greek government swapped land with a Byzantine monastery on a mountainous northern peninsula, the furor in 2008 over the price contributed to the defeat of Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis a year later”, says the news agency.
However, Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou aims to do a better job raising funds from property sales, estimated at about EUR300bn, equivalent to the national debt.
“First, he’ll need to figure out what assets are in government hands, before competing with other debt-laden European countries for investors”, says Bloomberg.
Frances Hudson, an equity strategist at Standard Life Investments said that the supply and demand dynamic for Greece isn’t good right now. He would rather buy commercial real estate in Paris or Stockholm that would offer more predictable returns, he added.
The European Union and International Monetary Fund, as well as some German and Greek politicians insist that Greece has to sell or lease casinos, golf courses, airports and even islands to repay the sovereign debt and avoid default. The European Union said in a December report that “sizable proceeds could be generated this way”, according to Bloomberg.
The total value of Greece’s real estate holdings is estimated at EUR200bn to EUR300bn by analysts at banks, including Alpha SA and EFG Eurobank SA.
“I wish it was EUR300bn, or 280, 250, or EUE200bn,” Papaconstantinou, told parliament on Jan. 14. “The fact is we just don’t know.”
“The Greek government really needs to employ a professional private-sector adviser to help them with the inventory and ensure the valuations and sales are carried out with the greatest transparency,” said Grant Fitzner, head of research at Jones Lang LaSalle Inc., the world’s second-largest commercial property broker, according to Bloomberg.
Greece will face competition from debt-burdened governments across Europe, particularly in the south, to find investors for its real estate, says Bloomberg.
“Before it was impossible for Greece to sell state land or property as the public perceived it as evil and politicians didn’t have the courage to do it,” said Yannis Perrotis, managing director of CB Richard Ellis in Athens. “Now things are very different. People accept there have to be sacrifices.”
 
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