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IMF: Bailout Fund Should Be Used To Bolster Market Confidence



WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--The European Union needs to ensure that its emergency bailout program "has sufficient resources and can deploy them in a flexible manner to provide effective support" and to reassure skittish markets, an International Monetary Fund spokesman said Thursday.

"Whether this is achieved by raising the overall level of resources or making more effective use of existing ones is a matter for the Europeans," David Hawley said in a regular press briefing.

Although opposed by Germany, U.S. and E.U. officials are pressing for the European Financial Stability Facility to be used prior to a country's loss of market access for sovereign-debt financing. One proposal is to allow the EFSF to be used to buy a country's bonds before a crisis.

The IMF's Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn was recently in Berlin, but the IMF declined to elaborate on the details of his message to German officials.

Although recent Spanish and Portuguese bond auctions aimed at rolling over some of the government debt due in coming months went better than expected, continuing high yields reveal concerns that the two countries may need to tap the bailout.

One IMF option could be the use of a new lending facility called the precautionary credit line, that would allow a country that has relatively sound fiscal policies in place to potentially avert the need for a post-crisis bailout. Hawley declined to say whether any countries had applied for a PCL.

Separately, the IMF spokesman said the interest rate on Ireland's emergency IMF loan would likely fall as a result of one part of the fund's governance restructuring. The IMF is in the process of applying a new calculus on each member countries' contribution to the fund. The new math will adjust Ireland's interest rate down, but the spokesman couldn't give an exact figure.

Hawley reiterated that it wasn't in Greece's interest to restructure its debt, as many market analysts and economists expect is inevitable. Rather, the IMF would support an extension of IMF loans.

The spokesman also said that economic pressure was building in the region around Tunisia after the political crisis. "While the region's oil-importing countries have only seen a relatively mild slowdown in growth in the past year...this growth rate is below the level required to create sufficient jobs to absorb new entrants to the labor market," Hawley said.

"High unemployment is a long-standing but increasingly urgent economic challenge," he said.
 
ASE General Index Reclaims The 1,550 Level



Amid rumours and foreign press reports about some form of Greek debt restructuring, the General Index ended just below 1550 units on Thursday with enhanced turnover.

Greek spreads, which follow a tightening trend recently, were again on the spotlight along with the results of American banks.

Analysts note that the Greek market obviously attempts to move independently. However, they state that so far the foreign investors have been the key factor for the recent upward trend.

Analysts welcomed the enhanced turnover, expecting the rise to continue.

The dismissal of a German press report about restructuring the Greek debt by both the German and the Greek Finance Ministries brought optimism to the market, said Kyprou Securities in its morning report.

“Optimism should prevail on the ASE today but some profit taking from the recent sessions’ rise is on the cards for today”, while “mid-term volatility is very possible for the ASE”, it added.

"Expectations of a resolution to the European and local debt crisis are giving the market a strong positive momentum and I also suspect that a "January affect" may be contributing," a senior equity analyst told Dow Jones Newswires. "But volatility is high and we don't have firm news to back expectations, so prudence is warranted just in case disappointing catalysts surface."

Across the board, the General Index ended at 1546.93 units, up 2.62% despite its poor opening. 58.93mn units, worth EUR164.93mn were traded, while 117 shares ended with gains, 45 declined and 123 remained unchanged.

Banks ended at 1345.65 units, up 2.89%, after a fluctuation of 64 units. The performance of Bank of Cyprus stood out, climbing by 6.64%, while National Bank, Alpha Bank and Eurobank rose by 3.28%, 2.83% and 2.57% respectively. Marfin Popular Bank, Hellenic Postbank, Proton Bank, ATEbank and Attica Bank posted gains of more than 1%, while Piraeus Bank decline by 1.91%.

(capital.gr)
 
discipilne ciao pure tu sul titanic grecia speriamo in bene ciao

Ciao Buttozzo, ormai in grecia mi ci sono piazzato stabilmente, i miei primi (sciagurati) ingressi dovrebbero risalire a un anno fa circa, stasera controllo il mio storico.. calma e pazienza in attesa degli eventi..
 
Fmi: prestito Grecia, forse piu' tempo


Possibile modifica tassi di interesse del prestito all'Irlanda



(ANSA) - WASHINGTON, 20 GEN - Il Fondo Monetario Internazionale non esclude la possibilita' di estendere i tempi del prestito alla Grecia. Lo ha detto il portavoce David Hawley, precisando che qualsiasi decisione verra' presa in accordo con le autorita' europee e che non esiste al momento alcun orientamento per una ristrutturazione del debito. Quanto all'Irlanda Hawley ha detto che il tasso di interesse del prestito potrebbe cambiare quando il riaggiustamento nelle quote dei paesi rappresentati al Fondo sara' esecutivo.

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Vedere il post sopra in inglese.
 
Borsa Atene: Ase chiude a +2,6% su miglioramento sentiment


MILANO (MF-DJ)--L'indice Ase della Borsa di Atene termina le contrattazioni in rialzo del 2,6% a quota 1546,9 punti. I volumi si attestano a 164,9 mln euro.
"Le aspettative sulla possibile risoluzione della crisi del debito europeo e locale innescano il miglioramento del sentiment del mercato greco", commenta un analista senior. "La volatilita' rimane comunque alta, per questo motivo manteniamo una certa cautela", aggiunge l'esperto.
In territorio positivo Bank of Cyprus a +6,6%, Ppc a +4,8%, Hellenic Telecoms a +3,6%, National a +3,2%, Opap a +3%, Coca Cola Hellenic a +2,9%, Alpha a +2,8% ed Eurobank a +2,5%.
 
Greece’s 2010 Budget Gap Shrank 37%, Beating Target

By Maria Petrakis and Marcus Bensasson - Jan 20, 2011 5:39 PM GMT+0100


Greece’s central budget deficit shrank 37 percent last year, beating a target to reduce the shortfall by 33 percent, the Finance Ministry said today.

The 2010 deficit was reduced to 19.5 billion euros ($26.2 billion), from 30.9 billion euros in 2009, the Athens-based ministry said in an e-mailed statement. The figures are broadly in line with preliminary data released on Jan. 10.

Ordinary budget expenditure declined 9.1 percent to 65.2 billion euros from 71.8 billion euros in 2009, with primary expenditure decreasing 10.9 percent to 51.7 billion euros. Ordinary revenue increased to 51.2 billion euros from 48.4 billion euros in 2009, a 5.5 percent increase.

Beating the target boosts Greek hopes that it succeeded in cutting the 2010 general budget deficit, which includes outlays by state-owned institutions and companies, to 9.4 percent of gross domestic product.

(Bloomberg)

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Nonostante vari analisti, guru ecc. dicono ogni giorno che la Grecia non riuscirà mai a farcela, non posso far a meno di osservare che gli impegni presi dal Governo di Atene sono sempre stati rispettati.

Il Memorandum sottoscritto procede nella sua realizzazione: lo dicono i numeri, non le teorie.
 
Greece must put assets on line for loans-German IWH-INTERVIEW


* ECB should issue loans secured against Greek assets - IWH
* Greece running out of time to restore finances - Blum



By Dave Graham


BERLIN, Jan 20 (Reuters) - Greece will only be able to reassure capital markets and get its finances under control again by 2020 if it secures European loans against its own assets, Germany's IWH economic research institute said on Thursday.

Responding to reports that euro zone nations were discussing a plan to restructure Greek debt, IWH president Ulrich Blum said in an interview that easing borrowing conditions on Greece's current loans was not enough to restore market confidence.

"I have grave doubts about this plan. If the markets are realistic they know Greece can't manage it because the country won't be able to turn around its current account deficit by 2014," Blum told Reuters.

"We have to come up with a much longer term solution where we can reassure markets with much lower rates of interest."

The Halle-based IWH is one of six leading German institutes that advise Chancellor Angela Merkel's government on economics.

"We need to create enough confidence in Greece to get us through to 2020 so that its economy can recover to the extent where the problem resolves itself," the IWH chief said.

To do this, stronger steps were necessary, said Blum, adding that he hoped Greek policymakers would themselves take the lead in providing innovative solutions to the problem.

"All the loans to the country need to be secured," Blum said. "The European Central Bank could provide the money and the debt would be secured against the country's property and assets. That's exactly what we did in Germany in 1923."

Germany used various assets to back a new currency issued in 1923 in order to tackle rampant hyperinflation after World War I and find a way to restructure its wartime reparation payments.

Blum argued that Greece's economy was too reliant on foreign capital to become competitive before a temporary bailout fund set up by the euro zone expires in mid-2013.

If Greece cannot service new debt by then, bondholders face the prospect of "haircuts" or losses on their investment. Greece would not have recovered sufficiently by then, Blum said.

"So if the German taxpayer has to pay, there has to be a price for the Greek taxpayer too. And given that the Greek taxpayer can't pay just now, we have to secure loans in such a way that we believe that we'll get our money back," he said.

Now markets were betting against Greece returning to solvency because they did not believe the country would ever be able to raise the money needed to settle its debts, Blum said.

"Public assets are a rock solid security. We need to create a situation that breaks the psychological spiral," he said.


"Loans would become cheaper because we would no longer be dealing with a state that would have to raise the money via taxes and turning the economy around. The islands will always be worth more than the debts, so you don't need to sell them."

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