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EU SUMMIT:Leaders To Ask Eurogroup For Ways To Strengthen EFSF -Draft



BRUSSELS (Dow Jones)--European Union leaders will agree to ask the group of countries using the euro to come up with concrete proposals on how to strengthen the European Financial Stability Facility, while at the same time asking the group's president to work out the details of a permanent bailout mechanism by March, draft conclusions from a meeting of EU heads of state and government showed Friday.
The leaders agreed, as part of a comprehensive package to strengthen the EU's economic governance and financial stability, on taking steps for "concrete proposals by the Eurogroup on strengthening on the EFSF so as to ensure the necessary flexibility and financial capacity to provide adequate support," the draft conclusions, obtained by Dow Jones Newswires, read.
Eurogroup President Jean-Claude Juncker will be asked to finalize the "operational features" of the permanent mechanism, called European Stability Mechanism, due to come into operation in 2013, the draft conclusions showed.
The leaders will also agree to implement the financial assistance programs for Ireland and Greece as they are now.
 
Barroso Confident About EU Summit



The President of European Commission said on Friday that he was confident a European Summit will make progress towards a comprehensive package of the area’s economic management, according to Dow Jones Newswires.

"I expect a good discussion on an economic comprehensive plan for the euro area and for the EU as a whole," Jose Manuel Barroso said.

According to officials, Germany and France will promote a series of proposals to boost coordination in return for an increase of stability mechanism’s capacity.

But they will have to convince other members of the Union that they don΄t involve an unacceptable loss of sovereignty, particularly in areas like corporate taxation.

"We now have new mechanisms of governance," Barroso said. "Some ideas presented by some member states fit very well with this overall approach for reinforcing our governance in the euro area and in the EU. So I΄m very confident about this summit."

Leaders will also discuss proposals to tighten cooperation in tax policy, labor market regulation and other areas that are key to the fiscal and growth performance of member nations.

(capital.gr)
 
EU should follow Germany's lead on reforms - Rehn


BERLIN | Fri Feb 4, 2011 7:27am EST



BERLIN Feb 4 (Reuters) - European countries must implement the structural reforms that Germany has already carried out over the last couple of decades to ramp up competitiveness, the European Union's top economic official said on Friday.
Economics and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said Germany's economy entered the crisis on a stronger footing than others within the EU because it had adjusted to the new world order by carrying out broad structural reforms since the 1990s.
"It is important for everyone that other countries now manage to do what Germany and a few other member states have already managed in past years," Rehn wrote in a guest column in German daily Handelsblatt.
"Several member states, for example Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain, have already entered on an ambitious course of reform and are making progress," he added.
Germany sees its economy recovering fast from the worst crisis in decades, while peripheral European economies, such as Greece or Spain, continue to be dogged by the debt crisis, financial woes or growing unemployment.
Economists and policymakers have mostly come to the consensus that other EU states should also boost their competitiveness by wage restraint, an overhaul of their labour markets and more structural reforms.
To the dismay of some, German reforms look set to become the boilerplate for the rest of the EU under a new regime of closer economic coordination.
"There is indeed no doubt that the EU's entire economy benefits from the strength and resilience of the Germany economy," Rehn said. "Therefore the continuation of structural reforms in Germany that promote growth is important for the whole of Europe."
Last year, however, Berlin was often criticised for exacerbating economic imbalances within the EU and urged to do more to reduce its big trade surplus with other member states, for example, by spending more. (Reporting by Sarah Marsh; Editing by Ron Askew)
 
EU summit to debate stronger euro zone bailout fund

By Luke Baker
BRUSSELS | Fri Feb 4, 2011 4:31am EST



BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European Union leaders will discuss strengthening the euro zone's 440 billion euro bailout fund at a summit on Friday and try to agree how best to insulate the region from the year-long debt crisis.

Germany and France will set out proposals for tighter economic and fiscal coordination, measures they hope will be included in a "comprehensive package" that leaders will agree in March, along with changes to the European Financial Stability Facility, the bailout fund agreed last May.

In draft conclusions prepared ahead of the summit, the 27 heads of state and government said they would consider "concrete proposals" for strengthening the EFSF "to ensure the necessary flexibility and financial capacity to provide adequate support", with those discussions being finalized next month.

With no major decisions therefore expected at Friday's meeting, diplomats are describing it as a stock-taking exercise to assess progress since the last meeting in December, since when concerns about the debt crisis spreading from Greece and Ireland to Portugal, Spain or beyond appear to have diminished.

"We are at a key moment -- markets are turning, doubts about the solidity of the euro and the euro zone are dissipating," a source in the French presidency said on Thursday, briefing reporters ahead of the summit.
"This is the moment to take a great step forward."

After a year of trying to extinguish sovereign debt flames, officials have been heartened by relative calm in financial markets in recent weeks, but recognise that failure to agree on concrete measures before the next scheduled summit on March 24-25 could reignite the conflagration.

In a sign of the increased confidence markets are showing in how the euro zone is confronting the crisis, Spain saw borrowing costs fall sharply at an auction of two- and five-year bonds on Thursday. Portugal has also had encouraging recent auctions.

Strengthening the EFSF has been the focus of discussion for months, since it became clear its effective lending capacity was only about 250 billion euros, not 440 billion, due to guarantees built into the fund to maintain its triple-A credit rating.
Given its lending limitations, there are concerns that if Portugal and Spain were both to end up needing a bailout, the EFSF would not have sufficient funds.

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet, who will hold talks with EU leaders over lunch, is among those calling for the EFSF to be enlarged and made more flexible, so that it is not just a bailout lender of last resort.

One proposal for increasing the capacity involves the six euro zone member states with triple-A credit ratings increasing their own guarantees, while the remaining 11 would have to make cash deposits to bolster the fund.

Another is to allow the fund to buy the bonds of distressed euro zone states, either directly in the primary market or by lending money to states to buy back bonds, euro zone officials have said.

There is also likely to be discussion on Friday on the bailouts that have already been provided to Greece and Ireland, and on whether the interest rate being charged on their loans should be lowered, or the term of the loans lengthened.


GERMANY RESISTANCE


The EFSF is the chief weapon in the EU's debt-fighting arsenal, but deep disagreement remains over how it should be strengthened, with Germany determined to secure stricter budgetary commitments from other euro zone member states in exchange for agreeing amendments to the EFSF.

A German government official, briefing in Berlin ahead of the summit on Wednesday, appeared to close the door on one proposal, saying bond-buying wasn't an option.

"It is not in our interest that the EFSF can buy bonds," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. "This is not practical."

In their proposals for economic coordination, France and Germany will lay out plans for stricter fiscal discipline, including the idea of a "debt brake" that would establish a constitutional limit on deficits, and calls for more regular euro zone summits to better coordinate economic management.

Germany's ideas also include raising the pensionable age depending on a country's demographics, limiting wage increases, and agreeing a common tax base for corporations.

There remains the risk that Friday's summit will underline just how far apart states remain, with Germany largely backed by the likes of France, Finland and the Netherlands, while Greece, Italy, Spain and others pull in different directions.

Euro zone officials privately express concerns about how slowly work is progressing and say they doubt whether a complete package can be agreed by late March. Leaders will consider holding an extra summit in early March to maintain momentum.

Friday's summit was originally set up to discuss energy issues. While they remain on the agenda, the debt crisis and the situation in Egypt are likely to dominate the discussion. A statement from the leaders on Egypt is expected.
 
PM in Brussels for EU energy summit


Greek prime minister George Papandreou is currently in Brussels for a one-day Special Summit of EU leaders on Energy, Innovation and Economy chaired by the Hungarian EU presidency on Friday.

The EU heads of state and government will discuss ways to link European energy networks, increase energy efficiency and reduce import dependence.

A key objective of the negotiations will be the establishment of a single energy market.

The summit will deal with stimulating innovation and European economic reform issues, as well as the situation in Egypt and Tunisia.

(ana.gr)
 
Papandreou sets goals for EU summit

European leaders to discuss details of crisis mechanism

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Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou will be among the European Union leaders calling for closer coordination of economic policies and greater support for the eurozone’s weaker members at a summit in Brussels on Friday.

Papandreou will also be hoping that his counterparts approve the extension of Greece’s repayment period for the 110 billion euros it is receiving in emergency loans.

The interest rate at which Greece is borrowing this money will also be up for discussion, as will the guarantees that Germany may want to give the green light to a longer repayment period at a lower interest rate. It had been suggested earlier this week that Chancellor Angela Merkel would demand a rise in retirement ages for Greeks.

However, this summit, which is meant to focus on energy issues, is also expected to be the final, significant step before EU leaders agree in their next summit on March 4 the details of a European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF).

"We will talk about how to prepare decisions that are still necessary, in particular with regard to the permanent crisis mechanism which is to be agreed by March, and also to bring in the proposals of France and Germany for a stronger coordination of economic policy in the Eurogroup,» Merkel told reporters ahead of the meeting.

"We want to increase our competitiveness and grow closer together within the Eurogroup and also invite other countries to take part.»

Among the proposal to be discussed in Brussels are letting the EFSF buy the bonds of vulnerable governments on the open market, providing countries with a short-term liquidity line or lending them the money to buy back their own bonds.

EU leaders will also discuss the situation in Egypt. Speaking to the BBC on Wednesday, Papandreou said: “I think what we need in Egypt is a transition to democracy without violence.”

ekathimerini.com , Friday February 4, 2011 (12:59)
 
Borsa Atene: Ase +0,5% in attesa mossa Ue su crisi debito


MILANO (MF-DJ)--L'indice Ase di Atene segna un rialzo dello 0,5% a 1684,2 punti in attesa dell'annuncio da parte dei rappresentanti dell'Unione europea su come risolvere la crisi del debito nel vecchio continente.
Il comparto bancario traina il listino con Postbank e Opap rispettivamente a +2,9% e +1,7%. Altrove Coca Cola Hellenic avanza dell'1,1%


***
Sempre in oscillazione stabile i nostri spread/bund, ora intorno a 776 pb.





 
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