Titoli di Stato area Euro GRECIA Operativo titoli di stato - Cap. 1 (8 lettori)

Stato
Chiusa ad ulteriori risposte.

tommy271

Forumer storico
Grecia, ricorso banche a fondi Bce sale a 103 mld a fine giugno

lunedì 25 luglio 2011 17:05



ATENE, 25 luglio (Reuters) - Il ricorso alla liquidità Bce da parte delle banche commerciali greche mostra a giugno un incremento rispetto al mese precedente.
Lo dicono i dati a cura dell'istituto centrale ellenico, che indicano per fine giugno un aumento a 103 miliardi di euro, dai 97,5 miliardi di fine maggio.
Gli istituti di credito greci hanno perduto la facoltà di reperire fondi sul mercato con il progredire della crisi del debito sovrano, che li ha resi sempre più dipendenti dai fondi Bce.
Rispetto ai 49,7 miliardi all'inizio del 2010, i finanziamenti Bce al sistema ellenico sono quasi raddoppiati lo scorso anno, per raggiungere i 97,67 miliardi a fine dicembre.
 

PASTELLETTO

Guest
Oggi altra giornata demmerda.
Meno male che almeno due delle small cap che ho in pt hanno fatto meglio del mondo.
USA, Grecia, PIGS, non ci si capisce più una beneamata.
Secondo me andiamo verso una dittatura finanziaria dei fondi di investimento, ma qui lo dico e qui lo nego.
Fermo con GGB, BTP e CCT (reparto obbligazionario) + un po' di liquidità, non vendo, non compro, quando piove e tira vento sto a casetta.
In perdita su tutto il comparto europeo.
Vadavia....
 
Ultima modifica di un moderatore:

tommy271

Forumer storico
Grecia, Moody's mette sotto osservazione otto banche

lunedì 25 luglio 2011 17:37






25 luglio 2011 (Reuters) - L'agenzia di rating Moody's Investors Service ha posto sotto osservazione l'affidabilità creditizia di otto banche greche dopo aver abbassato il proprio giudizio sull'intero paese.
Il provvedimento - si legge in una nota dell'agenzia - segue l'annuncio la scorsa settimana del secondo pacchetto di aiuti alla Grecia che comporterà perdite sostanziali per quegli istituti di credito che detengono titoli del tesoro.
Si tratta di National Bank of Greece (NBGr.AT: Quotazione), EFG Eurobank Ergasias (EFGr.AT: Quotazione), Alpha Bank ALBKF.AT Piraeus Bank (BOPr.AT: Quotazione), Agricultural Bank of Greece (AGBr.AT: Quotazione), Attica Bank (BOAr.AT: Quotazione), Emporiki Bank of Greece (CBGr.AT: Quotazione) e General Bank of Greece (GHBr.AT: Quotazione).
In base alla modalità del prossimo round di aiuti gli istituti di credito saranno direttamente coinvolti in quanto detentori di titoli del Tesoro.
L'agenzia di rating Moody's ha tagliato a Ca, abbassandolo di tre notch, il giudizio sul debito greco, lasciandolo appena di un notch sopra il livello che indica il default, eventualità che Moody's considera certa "virtualmente al 100%".
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Borsa Atene: Ase chiude in calo dell'1,3%, timori per debito Usa


MILANO (MF-DJ)--L'indice Ase di Atene chiude in calo dell'1,3% a 1269,04 punti.
I timori per le trattative sul debito statunitense pesano sul sentiment e spingono gli investitori a prendere profitti nel comparto bancario greco dopo il rally della scorsa settimana. "Venerdi' si e' verificato un rally dei mercati dopo il vertice dell'Ue ma lo stallo delle trattative Usa rappresenta una fonte di preoccupazioni", afferma un trader.
Guidano i ribassi i titoli bancari con National Bank in calo del 4,5%, Alpha Bank del 6,1% ed Eurobank del 2,9%. Ote guadagna l'1,7%.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Confusion follows relief as Greek bond swap looms






By Sinead Cruise
LONDON, July 25 | Mon Jul 25, 2011 12:17pm EDT

LONDON, July 25 (Reuters) - Just days after European policymakers toasted a 109 billion euro ($156 billion) bailout aimed at hauling Greece back from the brink of insolvency, speculation some of its hapless bondholders might opt out of a crucial distressed debt exchange is gathering pace.
Greek creditors in banking, insurance and fund management are baying for more clarity on a proposed 'voluntary' scheme in which debt can be swapped for 15-year or 30-year bonds paying interest Greece can more easily afford, and slashing its debt.
Bank lobby group the Institute of International Finance reckons 90 percent of Greek government bondholders will take a 21 percent haircut on their holdings to take part in the offer.
But some investors are debating the value of boycotting, particularly as heavily exposed lenders and insurers rush to endorse the plan in moves that may improve non-participating smaller bondholders' chances of being paid on time and in full.
"If you do a selective default -- allowing investors across the board to opt in but you only actually get a few holders carrying 40 or 50 percent of the total exposure to do it --that ... means you can afford to pay out more of the smaller holders," Colin Harte, a director of fixed income and currency at Baring Asset Management, told Reuters.
Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE), HSBC , BNP Paribas , Societe Generale , Allianz , AXA and Generali hastily signed up to the scheme on Friday but a slew of others including Royal Bank of Scotland have yet to confirm their participation.
"We doubt the banks and insurers which have declared their intention to participate have done so because the options at hand offer attractive economic value to them," said Georg Grodzki, head of credit research at Legal & General Investment Management .
"...There is material risk that continued failure by Greece to deliver on the agreed (deficit reduction) targets will force the EU/IMF to demand further sacrifices from private investors to reduce the burden for European taxpayers."
Besides fears of further haircuts to come, some less risk-averse bondholders with shorter investment horizons have recognised potentially lucrative secondary market trading opportunities while they wait for more details to emerge.
Yields on 10-year Greek government bonds have tightened more than 250 bps to around 15 percent since Wednesday when details of the second bailout leaked, handing sizable gains to 'vulture' investors who managed to sell on debt bought earlier at higher yields.

THE OPTIONS
Investors can choose a bond exchange at par into a 30-year instrument, a bond offer at par involving rolling over debt at maturity into 30-year bonds, a discounted swap at 80 percent of par into a 30-year bond and a discounted swap at 80 percent of par into a 15-year bond.
The interest on the first two instruments is equivalent to a fixed rate of 4.5 percent, on the third 6.42 percent and 5.9 percent on the fourth.
Steven Mitra, partner and fund manager at hedge fund firm LNG Capital, said he had reservations about the offer and he suspected many other investors did too.
"On the short-dated it doesn't make sense, given your option is to change short-dated paper to the 30-year or get paid out at par. You'd just take par and go home in an ideal world but something somewhere tells me that's not going to be the case," he said.
Darren Williams, European economist at AllianceBernstein, estimates the net contribution from private Greek bondholders by mid-2014 will amount to 50 billion euros, comprising 37 billion from rollovers and 13 billion from buybacks.
Williams sees this contribution rising to 106 billion euros by 2019, depending on participation rates achieved, but the involvement is likely only to soothe, rather than remedy Greece's debt problems, he said.
Ratings agency Moody's Investor Services said the package set a negative precedent for creditors of other debt-burdened countries after cutting Greece's sovereign debt to one notch above default.
Like rival Fitch Ratings, Moody's said it would offer a new rating after the debt swap completes.
David Tan, global head of rates for fixed-income at JP Morgan Asset Management , said the extent of private sector involvement in the scheme wouldn't be known until the exchanges took place, but others already doubt its capacity to shore up Greece's finances.
"The European crisis is best seen as the middle of a complicated chess match, where the endgame is necessarily very uncertain," Standard Life Investments head of global strategy Andrew Milligan told Reuters.
"Governments have impressed investors in the short term with a range of options and some useful tools but ... ultimately a country's nominal GDP must grow above its cost of capital; 3.5 percent interest rates are still too onerous for some countries such as Greece," he said.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Greece mulls retroactive levy for tax evaders - source






Mon Jul 25, 2011 11:55am EDT

* Considers tax on undeclared funds deposited abroad
* Mulls 10-15 pct tax for deposits over 150,000 euros-source




ATHENS, July 25 (Reuters) - Greece is considering imposing a 10-15 percent tax on bank deposits abroad when the interest earned is not declared back home, a finance ministry official said on Monday.
"It is an idea that is being considered but no decision has been taken yet," said the finance ministry official who declined to be named. "It will affect those for whom we can prove that they have not declared the income (earned on the deposits)."
The debt-choked country has pledged to crack down on endemic tax evasion as part of reforms agreed in return for EU/IMF aid. It is also struggling with shrinking bank deposits, partly caused by capital flight in the wake of the country's crisis.
Conservative daily Kathimerini said in a report published on its website earlier on Monday that the country was looking at taxing undeclared foreign bank deposits of over 150,000 euros with a 10-15 percent tax, starting retroactively from 2009. Asked about the report, the official said: "These ideas are on the table."
A shrinking deposit base has added to the strains of Greek banks, which have become reliant on ECB funding for their liquidity needs as access to wholesale funding remains mostly shut on sovereign debt concerns.
Greek business and household bank deposits have shrunk by 17.7 billion euros or 8.5 percent in the first five months of the year. In 2010, they had contracted by 29.1 billion euros or 12.2 percent.



***
La news di questa mattina ...
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Greek Finance Minister Talks With US Treasury, IMF




By Ian Talley and Alkman Granitsas, Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos is seeking Monday to assure top U.S. Treasury and International Monetary Fund officials that his country can carry out the economic programs necessary for an expanded bailout package.
Venizelos is scheduled to meet with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, IMF chief Christine Lagarde and a raft of fund executive board members to discuss the larger financing package Europe agreed to late last week.
Lagarde last week welcomed the new EUR109 billion program, which includes private sector participation. She indicated the hard-wrought deal would be enough for the fund to approve its share of new financing, on top of the existing EUR110 package the IMF and European Union are jointing funding.
"Based on strong implementation of the program by the Greek authorities, and the determination by member states to support Greece, the IMF will continue to play its part in line with Fund policies and, of course, subject to the approval by our Executive Board," the IMF chief said last week.
Several IMF board members have expressed skepticism the Greek program is sustainable without a package that significantly reduces Athens' mountain of debt. While it's still an open question whether the new financing package will slash Greece's debt enough to allow it to reach levels that the IMF board believes is sustainable, given the high risk of contagion spreading and systemic nature of the crisis, the fund is widely expected to approve new cash for Greece.
According to a Greek government official, Venizelos will affirm Greece's commitment to implement economic reforms. There IMF and U.S. are concerned that the Greek government may fail to fully push all the promised economic measures through given the political stress the program is putting on the country, or that opposition parties may take control and renege on vowed structural changes and privatization plans.
The Greek finance minister also expects assurances from Geithner that the U.S. is commitment to Greece's loan program. The U.S. is the fund's largest shareholder and contributor to the IMF. Washington's participation in a second Greek loan has met some resistance in the U.S. Congress, but Treasury has supported the Greek bailout because of the contagion risks.
Venizelos is also meeting with the Italian, Chinese, French and U.S. executive directors at the IMF and is scheduled to speak at the Peterson Institute for International Economics on "The Greek Debt Crisis: Prospects and Opportunities."
 

giub

New Membro
spread 1220,4...calato di 10 rispetto mezz'ora fa....Tommy, tu che lo segui sempre, è normale che succeda a mercati chiusi?
 
Stato
Chiusa ad ulteriori risposte.

Users who are viewing this thread

Alto