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Titoli di Stato area EuroGRECIA Operativo titoli di stato - Cap. 1
Stress test, Eba segue sviluppi Grecia, terrà conto impatto
giovedì 23 giugno 2011 15:23
LONDRA, 23 giugno (Reuters) - L'autorità di supervisione del sistema bancario europeo monitora con attenzione le evoluzioni della crisi greca e ha dato agli istituti di credito nuove indicazioni su come valutare i titoli del Tesoro ellenici in portafoglio in vista degli stress test.
Lo si legge in una nota della European Banking Authority, precisando che l'obiettivo è quello di "far fronte alle incoerenze e all'eccesso di ottimismo".
Gli stress test su circa novanta banche Ue, aggiunge Eba, consentiranno una valutazione dei potenziali rischi sistemici legati ad Atene.
In alcuni casi, conclude la nota, gli 'haircut' da appricare alle posizioni in bilancio sono stati aggiustati per tener conto degli attuali livelli del mercato.
I risultati degli stress test, secondo quanto hanno detto a Reuters fonti vicine al dossier, dovrebbero essere pubblicati il prossimo 13 luglio.
New Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos on Thursday met with visiting inspectors representing Greece's international lenders to discuss the details of a fresh round of budget cuts aimed at tackling the eurozone country’s mammoth debt crisis. Early reports said Venizelos asked officials representing the so-called troika - the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund - to relax some of the requested budget measures.
The debt-ridden country’s international creditors have said that releasing the next chunk of aid to Athens depends on the Greek Parliament passing a new package of austerity measures. Venizelos reportedly asked for a reduction of the imposed budget measures amounting to 28.4 billion euros, excluding privatizations, so that lower-income citizens could be exempted from an extraordinary «social tax."
Meanwhile, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou was meeting with eurozone leaders in Brussels, in a two-day summit that was expected to be overshadowed by Greece's debt crisis and the protection of the eurozone.
Greek unions on Thursday called a two-day general strike next week to coincide with debate in Parliament on a fresh package of belt-tightening measures.
”In view of the vote on the mid-term budget plan... agreed between the government and its greedy creditors, we have decided to call a 48-hour general strike June 28-29,” GSEE, Greece’s largest umbrella union group, said in a statement. ADEDY, which represents workers in the state sector, has said it will join the protest.
Demonstrators on Syntagma Square, who have occupied the space in front of the Greek Parliament building for about a month, are also planning a strong showing.
Approval of the new austerity measures, which have met with scathing criticism from most opposition lawmakers, is seen as crucial to staving off a Greek default.
Greece’s international creditors have said that deputies must back more budget cuts and tax hikes so that the debt-laden country can get the next slice of loans, worth 12 billion euros, from its 110 billion euro bailout loans.