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

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Greece could see loan rate cut


Ireland already hoping for more favorable terms of borrowing, as Eurogroup will discuss on Monday



Greece may have a chance to improve the terms of its borrowing agreement, after sources suggested that Ireland’s cost of borrowing from the European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF) could go down.

The issue is under discussion in Brussels and may be included in the agenda of the eurozone finance ministers’ meeting on Monday.

Athens has already secured pledges for an extension to its repayment period, but financial analysts such as David Mackie of JPMorgan Chase and Julian Callow of Barclays Capital believe that this country could also benefit from a drop in borrowing rates by EFSF, as is being discussed at the seat of the European Union.

Economists and analysts are in favor of a decline in the interest rate by up to 50 percent for Ireland’s 85-billion-euro package. “Europe should bring down the cost of borrowing by half, that is by 250 basis points,” Mackie noted on Ireland, which was the first country to resort to the EFSF.

Ireland’s debt will next year amount to 114 percent of its gross domestic product, while Greece’s will soar to 156 percent, the highest in the history of the eurozone.

The Irish interest rate should therefore drop to 3.2 percent, “given that growth will not be any higher than 1 percent this year and 2 percent in 2012,” Mackie added. He did not mention how many basis points Greece’s rate should drop by, but that should not be any different.

The analyst suggested that “what is needed is a combination of fiscal austerity to reduce primary deficits and a prolonged period of subsidized cost of borrowing which would ensure that the fiscal adjustment is used to improve the momentum of the debt and not to serve a higher debt” in the future.

An extension to Greece’s loan repayment period “would send a positive signal to markets,” according to Marco Buti, the head of the European Commission’s Directorate General for Economic and Financial Affairs.

Reducing the cost of borrowing forms part of a package of broader changes to the EFSF that are being examined, also including an increase to its funds, as the finance ministers of France and Belgium suggested yesterday, and the extension of its role through the capacity to repurchase debt.

(Kathimerini.gr)

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Siamo sulla giusta strada ... se sarà fatto.
 
Fitch cuts Greek rating


Ratings agency Fitch cut Greece’s credit rating to junk yesterday, citing persisting doubts over the country’s ability to pull itself out of a severe debt crisis that has shaken the eurozone.

The rating agency cut Greece’s rating to BB+ from BBB- and kept it under negative outlook. Greek debt is now rated junk by all three major rating agencies.

“The downgrade acknowledges that while Greece’s economic and fiscal performance under the [European Union and International Monetary Fund] program has in many respects exceeded expectations, its heavy public debt burden renders fiscal solvency highly vulnerable to adverse shocks,” Fitch said in a statement.

In response to the downgrade, the Greek Finance Ministry said steps made on the fiscal front, reforms and the upcoming extension of the 110-billion-euro loan prove that the Fitch decision is not supported by objective criteria. The downgrade also showed the need to revise how rating agencies operate in Europe, added the ministry.


(Kathimerini.gr)
 
Clinton to visit Athens next month



US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is due to visit Greece early next month for talks with government officials that are expected to focus on the latest attempt at Greek-Turkish rapprochement and a recent drive to boost ties between Greece and Israel, sources said yesterday.

Clinton is expected to visit Athens on February 6 or 8 and, apart from foreign relations, it is anticipated that she will broach the issue of the recent spike in domestic terrorism in Greece as well as American concerns about international terrorists slipping into the country unnoticed amid a relentless influx of illegal immigrants. Another topic on the agenda is the ongoing dispute between Greece and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) over the Balkan state’s official name. Washington is pushing for FYROM’s NATO accession but Athens insists that the country cannot join the alliance before the name spat is resolved.

Last March, when Clinton received Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou in Washington, she had praised him for his efforts to boost bilateral relations between Athens and Ankara. This time, Greek-Turkish relations are expected to be less of a priority than the Cyprus problem as the latest peace drive on the divided island is foundering.

Aegean tensions remained the focus of attention in Greece’s Parliament though. Papandreou yesterday accused the leader of the Communist Party (KKE), Aleka Papariga, of slander after she said that the government was ready to compromise Greece’s position on the delineation of the continental shelf around the island of Kastellorizo. “I am sorry, Mrs Papariga, because you have become the worst propagandist for extreme Turkish positions,” Papandreou said. “The things you are saying here in the Greek Parliament would not even occur in the dreams of the most extremist Kemalist general of Turkey’s deep state,” the premier added. Papandreou stressed that the government’s foreign policy priority remained “the peaceful resolution of the dispute over the continental shelf,” noting that Greece would propose a joint appeal to the International Court of Justice at The Hague if exploratory talks with Turkey do not progress.


(Kathimerini.gr)


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Politica estera.
 
La Grecia non si ritirerà dall'Eurozona

2011-01-15 19:32:08

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Il 14 gennaio, il commissario dell'Ue al mercato interno e alla supervisione finanziaria, Michel Barnier, in visita in Grecia, ha definito impossibile la comparsa del problema del ritiro della Grecia dall'Eurozona, visto che l'anno scorso i paesi membri dell'Ue hanno dimostrato unità e aiuto reciproco con delle azioni concrete.
Barnier ha osservato che sebbene l'economia greca stia ancora affrontando un'ardua situazione, le prospettive di sviluppo non sono negative, quindi è ragionevole credere la Grecia possa avere un futuro migliore. Egli ha aggiunto che la Grecia presenta delle superiorità nel turismo, nel trasporto marittimo e nell'agricoltura, e il suo sistema bancario rimane sano e forte.


(Radio Cina Internazionale)
 
I TITOLI DEI GIORNALI:

The Saturday edition of Athens' dailies at a glance

The economic crisis in the EU and measures to be taken, and other economic issues were the main front-page item in Athens' dailies on Saturday.



ADESMEFTOS TYPOS: "Samaras: Memorandum is neither only option, nor solution".

AVGHI: "Hundreds of schools being wiped off the map".

AVRIANI: "New hit by speculators against Greece".

ELEFTHEROS: "Accusations against Papandreou on Greece's bankruptcy".

ELEFTHEROS TYPOS: "Deposits abroad through the Tax Bureau's sieve".

ELEFTHEROTYPIA: "They're hiding the dioxins we are consuming".

ESTIA: "The same mistake for 100 years - Increases in taxes, reductions in incomes".

ETHNOS: "Blackout in state hospitals - Waiting list of up to 10 months".

IMERISSIA: "1.5 trillion euros rescue agreement - Decisions/shields for Greece and euro".

KATHIMERINI: "Outrageous benefits in the DEKO (public utilities and organisations)".

LOGOS: "The tax reform has failed".

NAFTEMPORIKI: "Stability Fund, with 1.5 trillion euros 'dowry' from Europe".

NIKI: "Waterloo as of Monday - Pharmacies closing".

RIZOSPASTIS: "Government conceding rights in the Aegean so that the monopolies will grow rich".

TA NEA: "Payment of VAT in three monthly installments - Relief measure".

VRADYNI: "Samaras: Growth the only solution".

(ana.gr)
 
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