Titoli di Stato area Euro GRECIA Operativo titoli di stato - Cap. 1 (5 lettori)

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ilfolignate

Forumer storico
CDS Portogallo e Spagna, che fanno?


Buongiorno ragazzi, questa la situazione CDS:

Entity Name 5 Yr Mid Change From Close bps bps % HSBC Bank PLC 74.69 -10.43 -12.26 Portugal 302.75 -30.18 -9.07 Foster's Group Limited 52.55 -4.50 -7.88 Telstra Corporation Limited 52.69 -4.42 -7.74 Coca-Cola Amatil Limited 51.37 -4.30 -7.73Highest Default Probabilities Entity Name Mid Spread CPD (%) Venezuela 854.20 44.75 Argentina 853.60 43.78 Greece 720.28 43.44 Pakistan 701.30 37.89 Ukraine 584.45 33.44 Iraq 448.10 27.42 Dubai/Emirate of 434.69 26.08 Iceland 402.30 24.11 Portugal 302.75 23.07 Latvia, Republic of 349.18 21.61
Sovereign Tighteners Entity Name 5 Yr Mid Change (%) Change (bps) CPD (%) Portugal 302.75 -9.07 -30.18 23.07 Korea, Republic of 88.07 -5.66 -5.28 7.52 Malaysia 85.37 -5.62 -5.08 7.34 Ireland 207.18 -5.52 -12.10 16.66 Spain 177.58 -5.15 -9.65 14.49 Finland 27.66 -5.01 -1.46 2.43 Greece 720.28 -4.53 -34.17 43.44 Thailand 133.10 -4.01 -5.56 11.17 Sovereign Wideners Entity Name 5 Yr Mid Change (%) Change (bps) CPD (%) Netherlands 43.25 +1.95 +0.83 3.77 Peru 122.06 +0.77 +0.93 8.32 Panama 113.57 +0.69 +0.78 7.75 Hungary 211.03 +0.49 +1.04 14.01 United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland 77.64 +0.42 +0.32 6.67 Slovakia 72.67 +0.41 +0.30 6.25 Brazil 124.52 +0.40 +0.50 8.46 Colombia 144.54 +0.31 +0.44 9.75
Global Financial Risk Monitor

USA

Entity Name 5 Yr Mid Change bps Change % Bank of America Corp. 143.73 0.35 0.24 Wells Fargo & Company 82.60 -0.37 -0.45 JP Morgan Chase & Co. 82.52 -0.05 -0.06 Morgan Stanley 171.55 0.78 0.46 Goldman Sachs Group Inc 154.00 -0.25 -0.16 UK

Entity Name 5 Yr Mid Change bps Change % Bank of Scotland plc 151.98 -4.09 -2.62 Barclays Bank Plc 111.07 -5.45 -4.68 Lloyds TSB Bank Plc 147.06 -6.01 -3.93 Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc 162.31 -5.82 -3.46 Europe

Entity Name 5 Yr Mid Change bps Change % Banco Santander, S.A. 169.77 -6.64 -3.77 Credit Agricole SA 143.83 -4.69 -3.16 Deutsche Bank AG 133.08 -1.85 -1.37 ING Bank NV 92.55 -2.98 -3.12 UniCredit SpA 127.67 -5.92 -4.43 Asia

Entity Name 5 Yr Mid Change bps Change % Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Limited 76.60 -5.04 -6.17 Standard Chartered Bank 79.96 0.08 0.10
 

troppidebiti

Forumer storico
$60 bln Greek debt vanish and it's not what you think

* Swiss Greece exposure drops to $3.6 bln from $64 bln
* Greece's EFG Eurobank was recorded as Swiss bank in past
* Change highlights pitfalls in BIS banking statistics

By Boris Groendahl and Albert Schmieder
VIENNA/ZURICH,April 29 (Reuters) - Swiss banks' exposure to
Greece dropped to $3.6 billion from $64 billion in the three
months to December, and this time it's not wayward Greek
statisticians' fault.
The whopping, yet mystifying drop in foreign claims on Greek
borrowers shows up in the Bank for International Settlements'
quarterly banking statistics, 104 pages of endless number
columns that chart global banks' international exposures.
The most recent data, which are up to date as of December
2009, were published last week. When analysts turned to the file
to assess the possible damage of a Greek debt restructuring
after Tuesday's S&P ratings downgrade, some were puzzled by the
massive change. [ID:nLDE63R0Y1] [ID:nLDE61A1VT]
None of the partiesinvolved in compiling the statistics
agreed to go on the record, but several officials confirmed that
the change in the Swiss exposure was due to a reclassification
of Greek bank EFG Eurobank <EFGr.AT>.
The BIS statistics show claims based on thenationality of
the lender's "ultimate owner".
EFG, Greece's No. 3 bank by assets, is controlled by Greek
billionaire Spiros Latsis via a holding company, which until
last year was based in Geneva and has since moved to Luxembourg.
So it camethat EFG's Greek loans were, in the eyes of the
BIS statistics, an exposure of a Swiss bank, thus inflating by a
factor of 15 a number that at the new level of $3.6 billion
reflect better what "real" Swiss banks hold in Greek debt.
In Luxembourg,however, EFG's holding company does not have
a banking license, which means that Luxembourg does not report
this company's consolidated foreign exposure to the BIS.
Hence, the exposure formerly known as Swiss did not move
anywhere else, it dropped out of the picture. The total exposure
of European banks to Greece fell to $189 billion according to
the BIS' December data, from $253 billion three months earlier.
In this case, the change does make the new set of data more
realistic.
EFG-- which does have a small Swiss sister bank, EFG
International <EFGN.S>, owned by the same holding company -- is
seen by market participants as a domestic Greek, not a foreign
Swiss bank. If anything, the old numbers were misleading.
But thechange once highlights pitfalls of the BIS data,
which are a unique and extremely useful resource for analysts
and economists, but require a close knowledge of how they are
compiled to avoid gross misunderstandings.
Emerging European policymakersand some economists blamed a
mistaken reading of the same BIS statistics for spooking markets
last year by overstating the exposure Western Europe's banks
have in the former Communist east.
In this case, too, the BIS numbers were not inaccurate,but
were open to a superficial interpretation because they do not
differentiate between cross-border claims and claims by banks'
local subsidiaries, which tend to be covered by local deposits.
Taking into account that 60 percent of it was vialocal
subsidiaries, Europe's $1.5 trillion exposure to emerging Europe
looked much more manageable, because the local deposits meant
that not all of that had to be refinanced on wholesale markets.

bel casino
 

Imark

Forumer storico
$60 bln Greek debt vanish and it's not what you think

* Swiss Greece exposure drops to $3.6 bln from $64 bln
* Greece's EFG Eurobank was recorded as Swiss bank in past
* Change highlights pitfalls in BIS banking statistics

By Boris Groendahl and Albert Schmieder
VIENNA/ZURICH,April 29 (Reuters) - Swiss banks' exposure to
Greece dropped to $3.6 billion from $64 billion in the three
months to December, and this time it's not wayward Greek
statisticians' fault.
The whopping, yet mystifying drop in foreign claims on Greek
borrowers shows up in the Bank for International Settlements'
quarterly banking statistics, 104 pages of endless number
columns that chart global banks' international exposures.
The most recent data, which are up to date as of December
2009, were published last week. When analysts turned to the file
to assess the possible damage of a Greek debt restructuring
after Tuesday's S&P ratings downgrade, some were puzzled by the
massive change. [ID:nLDE63R0Y1] [ID:nLDE61A1VT]
None of the partiesinvolved in compiling the statistics
agreed to go on the record, but several officials confirmed that
the change in the Swiss exposure was due to a reclassification
of Greek bank EFG Eurobank <EFGr.AT>.
The BIS statistics show claims based on thenationality of
the lender's "ultimate owner".
EFG, Greece's No. 3 bank by assets, is controlled by Greek
billionaire Spiros Latsis via a holding company, which until
last year was based in Geneva and has since moved to Luxembourg.
So it camethat EFG's Greek loans were, in the eyes of the
BIS statistics, an exposure of a Swiss bank, thus inflating by a
factor of 15 a number that at the new level of $3.6 billion
reflect better what "real" Swiss banks hold in Greek debt.
In Luxembourg,however, EFG's holding company does not have
a banking license, which means that Luxembourg does not report
this company's consolidated foreign exposure to the BIS.
Hence, the exposure formerly known as Swiss did not move
anywhere else, it dropped out of the picture. The total exposure
of European banks to Greece fell to $189 billion according to
the BIS' December data, from $253 billion three months earlier.
In this case, the change does make the new set of data more
realistic.
EFG-- which does have a small Swiss sister bank, EFG
International <EFGN.S>, owned by the same holding company -- is
seen by market participants as a domestic Greek, not a foreign
Swiss bank. If anything, the old numbers were misleading.
But thechange once highlights pitfalls of the BIS data,
which are a unique and extremely useful resource for analysts
and economists, but require a close knowledge of how they are
compiled to avoid gross misunderstandings.
Emerging European policymakersand some economists blamed a
mistaken reading of the same BIS statistics for spooking markets
last year by overstating the exposure Western Europe's banks
have in the former Communist east.
In this case, too, the BIS numbers were not inaccurate,but
were open to a superficial interpretation because they do not
differentiate between cross-border claims and claims by banks'
local subsidiaries, which tend to be covered by local deposits.
Taking into account that 60 percent of it was vialocal
subsidiaries, Europe's $1.5 trillion exposure to emerging Europe
looked much more manageable, because the local deposits meant
that not all of that had to be refinanced on wholesale markets.

bel casino

Avevo pensato che le banche svizzere si fossero sbarazzate dei TdS greci, ed invece era una storia così...
 
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