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Greek Bonds Beat Peers as Market Succumbs to ECB: Euro Credit

February 01, 2011, 6:32 AM EST

By Anchalee Worrachate


Feb. 1 (Bloomberg) -- The mantra “Don’t Fight the Fed” has saved many Treasury traders. Investors in euro-denominated debt are learning to treat the European Central Bank with the same respect.

Greek debt beat its counterparts in January, handing investors a 3.8 percent return, even as most global investors in a Bloomberg poll predict the nation will default. Irish bonds staunched losses to their best performance since December 2009, after shedding 11 percent in November when the government was forced to seek a bailout. In both cases, strategists say, ECB buying inspired the turnaround.

“I don’t go around meeting people who are particularly optimistic on Greece,” said David Owen, chief European economist at Jefferies International Ltd. in London. “The biggest holders of the Greek paper would probably be the ECB and banks within the euro region, which are holding the bonds because they can’t really realize losses by selling them. Sentiment hasn’t improved much.”

The ECB has spent 76.5 billion euros ($105 billion) on bond purchases since May 10 to stabilize markets rocked by the region’s sovereign-debt crisis. It didn’t buy anything last week, the first halt in three months. The program is part of a European Union-led push to defend the euro after Greece’s near- default stoked concern that some nations in the region would struggle to finance their budget deficits.

Selective Buying

The purchases, which traders with the knowledge of transactions have said are focused on Greek, Irish and Portuguese bonds, have helped to reduce the extra yield that investors demand to hold 10-year Greek debt instead of benchmark German bunds to a near three-month low of about 816 basis points, down from a record 978 reached on Jan. 7.

Greek debt recorded its first gain in four months in January, beating AAA rated German debt and French securities, which handed investors losses of 1.40 percent and 1.15 percent respectively, including reinvested interest. Irish debt lost 0.58 percent last month, while Portuguese bonds shed 1.65 percent, their smallest monthly decline since August.

“There’s a certain amount of optimism out there as people in the market feel that policy makers are perhaps getting closer 1to a solution,” said Pavan Wadhwa, head of European interest- rate strategy at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in London.

Greek stocks climbed the most in Europe today after Credit Suisse Group AG raised its rating on the country equities to “benchmark” from “underweight.” The benchmark ASE index has surged 16 percent this year for the biggest advance among 24 developed markets tracked by Bloomberg. Greek bonds also rose, pushing the 10-year yield down 36 basis points to 10.98 percent.

‘Much More Optimistic’

Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou said last week he has become more confident that Europe’s leaders can work together to solve the region’s debt crisis.

“The fact that questions were raised in the public debate, even about the viability of the euro, was a positive thing,” Papandreou said on Jan. 28 in Davos, Switzerland. “Now, the leadership in Europe is saying the debate is over, we will do whatever is necessary. I’m much more optimistic that there is a will.”

The nation’s debt as a percentage to gross domestic product stood at 127 percent in 2009, the highest in the 27-nation EU. The EU says the measure will rise to 156 percent in 2012 before peaking in 2013.

Greece has cut spending, raised taxes and trimmed wages to tackle the deficit, which swelled to 15.4 percent of GDP last year. To secure the EU-IMF aid, the government pledged to trim the shortfall to meet the EU’s 3 percent limit in 2014.

That didn’t stop Moody’s Investors Service from placing Greece’s Ba1 bond ratings on review for a possible downgrade on Dec. 16, citing heightened concerns about the country’s ability to reduce its debt to “sustainable levels.”

Bloomberg Poll

Greece’s economy, which went into a recession in the fourth quarter of 2008, is forecast to contract by almost 3 percent this year, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, after shrinking an estimated 4.2 percent in 2010.
Expansion is hampered by austerity measures linked to the bailout package.

Almost three-quarters of respondents in a Bloomberg Global Poll conducted between Jan. 21 and Jan. 24 said Greece will likely default on its debt, while 53 percent said Ireland would also probably do so.

“The liquidity support via the ECB’s bond purchases, and any future purchases, perhaps by other bailout mechanisms, is provided in the hope that longer-term sovereign issues of countries such as Greece will be addressed,” said Richard McGuire, a senior fixed-income strategist at Rabobank International in London. “But you have to understand that what you are seeing in the market might be false.”

‘Useful’ Tool

Among measures being discussed by European policy makers ahead of a March summit meeting is how to expand the European Financial Stability Facility’s mandate, after the backstop failed to stop contagion spreading to Ireland.

ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said on Jan. 26 that it may be “useful” for the 440 billion-euro bailout fund to buy government bonds to help ease tensions in financial markets. Deutsche Bank AG Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann said that he also supports the idea.

JPMorgan estimates that if the EFSF, created in May to contain the debt crisis, buys all outstanding Greek debt, the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio will fall by 32 percentage points.

“You don’t want to stand in the way of the ECB, or the EFSF, especially if it is given power to start buying bonds,” said Wadhwa at JPMorgan.

Aviva Investors’ deputy chief investment officer Shahid Ikram isn’t about to buy Greek or Irish bonds, saying policy makers are “just kicking the can a bit further down the road.” The London-based firm oversees $370 billion in assets.

The EFSF is “another special-purpose vehicle that takes debt from A and puts it into B,” said Ikram. “There’s still too much debt around and it doesn’t go anywhere. We stay out of Greece and Ireland for now.”
 
Credit Suisse: The Bad And The Good News For Peripheral Europe



Credit Suisse said on Tuesday that there are both good and bad news for the European periphery.

The bank noted that there will be more deflation. “On our calculations, Greece, Spain and Portugal need wages to fall 7%, 3% and 2%, respectively, to restore competitiveness versus core Europe”, according to a report.

It added that about a third of Greek and Irish government debt has to be written off (yet, this seems largely priced in).

Credit Suisse doesn’t think that peripheral Europe is a systemic crisis. Europe in aggregate looks stable, Spain survives just, while the cost to core Europe of not bailing out the periphery is estimated at $0.5trn–1.0trn, so core Europe is expected to continue to support peripheral Europe.

Additionally, Credit upgrades Greece from underweight to benchmark, while the Greek market now looks attractively valued as “consensus nominal GDP growth expectations for 2011, at minus 1%, now look realistic”.

Credit Suisse added that an extension of maturity of the European Union/International Monetary Fund bailout loan for Greece (and Ireland) is likely to be extended from three to seven years.

“The IMF might be particularly willing to help Greece owing to the potential effects of not helping Greece on the Balkans”, it said.

(capital.gr)
 
EU Said to Near Agreement on Bailout Fund Buying New Bonds

February 01, 2011, 8:04 AM EST

By James G. Neuger

Feb. 1 (Bloomberg) -- European officials are nearing a consensus to enable the euro rescue fund to buy distressed governments’ debt in private placements, while divisions fester over possible acquisitions of outstanding bonds, said three people familiar with the discussions.

Agreement on allowing the 440 billion-euro ($605 billion) European Financial Stability Facility to purchase bonds from the issuers may mark a step toward a broader overhaul of the rescue fund. Moves under discussion include secondary market purchases, using loans for governments to retire traded debt at a discount, and better aid terms, the people said.

Buying bonds directly instead of offering bailout loans, as the fund does now, may enable struggling countries to retain access to markets and avoid the stigma of dependence on rescue financing, said the people, who declined to be named because the deliberations aren’t public.

“The fund should have the greatest possible flexibility and the greatest possible breadth,” Spanish Economy Minister Elena Salgado told broadcaster Telecinco in Madrid today.

Bond buying is part of the crisis-fighting package that leaders will examine at a Feb. 4 summit in Brussels, though decisions on the details will be put off until another summit in late March.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has called for a “comprehensive” solution that reinforces the EFSF, which expires in 2013, sets up a permanent rescue mechanism and tightens controls over future fiscal slippage.

In what was designed as a stopgap move in May, the European Central Bank has bought 76.5 billion euros of bonds of countries such as Greece, Ireland and Portugal to maintain a lid on their borrowing costs.

ECB Absence

In a sign that the immediate pressure is off, the ECB didn’t do any buying last week, its first absence from the debt markets in three months. The euro notched its 14th gain in 17 days today, reaching $1.3737 as the sense of emergency subsided.

Portugal’s 10-year bond yield fell 15 basis points to 6.90 percent today, dipping back below the 7 percent level that helped push Greece and Ireland into aid packages. Portugal and Spain have brushed aside suggestions that they will have to resort to European Union help.

The worst “could be over,” though it is too early to declare the crisis “dead,” EU Economic and Monetary Commissioner Olli Rehn said in Helsinki today.

Spain’s AA credit rating was affirmed today by Standard & Poor’s, which said its outlook remained “negative.”

As the ECB refocuses on fighting a rise in inflation to a two-year high of 2.4 percent in January, political leaders are looking to relieve it of the bond-market interventions that were never part of its core mission.

Original Intent

Bond purchases were the original declared purpose of the EFSF, which was cobbled together on a May weekend after a hastily engineered 110 billion-euro loan package for Greece failed to calm markets.

The EFSF was then used to offer loans instead, deemed by Germany to be an easier way of making sure that countries receiving aid cut budget deficits and overhaul their economic management.

While a private-placement program wouldn’t necessarily change the aid terms, it would give lending governments a tradable security that they could later offload on the market, the people said.

The EFSF may lack the firepower to buy back enough outstanding debt to make a difference to the most debt-swamped nations. While officials are discussing ways to put all of the fund to use, there’s no proposal under consideration to increase its 440 billion-euro headline figure.

Irish Terms

Ireland, facing elections after the recourse to 67.5 billion euros in aid brought down Prime Minister Brian Cowen’s government, is pressing for EU money on more affordable terms.

Ireland’s loans come at an average rate of 5.8 percent, about 300 basis points more than the EU’s cost of borrowing -- a penalty rate intended by Germany to make aid a last-ditch option.

Lower rates “would be a signal that would provide a lot of relief,” said Alessandro Leipold, a former International Monetary Fund official. “This notion of punishing the country which underlies all this talk about a last resort and penalty rates is rather silly.”
 
Grecia: continua ondata scioperi

Incrociano le braccia i dipendenti del trasporto pubblico

01 febbraio, 13:43



(ANSA) - ATENE 1 FEB - 'Le leggi le approva il Parlamento e non i sindacalisti'. E' il messaggio severo che il ministro greco delle Infrastrutture, Reppas, ha mandato ai sindacalisti dei mezzi di trasporto pubblico, che hanno deciso di proseguire le agitazioni con uno sciopero di 48 ore per oggi e domani, mentre per venerdi' hanno in programma un'astensione dal lavoro di cinque ore. Tutto questo nel momento in cui i prezzi dei biglietti di tutti i mezzi di trasporto pubblico sono aumentati del 40%.
 
Gli auguri per il capodanno lunare cinese da parte dei leader esteri

2011-02-01 15:21:17 cri
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Alla vigilia della Festa di Primavera, il capodanno lunare cinese, il Premier Britannico David Cameron ha rilasciato un discorso, esprimendo i suoi migliori auguri al popolo cinese, al popolo inglese e a quello di tutti gli altri paesi del mondo, dicendo inoltre che la Gran Bretagna ha bisogno dei valori tipici della cultura cinese.

Cameron ha detto che i cinesi hanno dato preziosi contributi alla Gran Bretagna e i loro successi, conseguiti in ambito scientifico, alimentare, medico, come pure in quello delle ricerche, sono noti ovunque. I valori tipici della cultura cinese, quali la dedizione al lavoro, lo spirito aziendale e l'armonia sociale, sono i valori di cui la Gran Bretagna ha piu' bisogno.

Lo stesso giorno il presidente greco Karolos Papoulias, su invito dell'ambasciatore cinese in Grecia Luo Linquan, ha celebrato per la terza volta nel suo mandato, insieme agli impiegati dell'ambasciata cinese, il capodanno lunare cinese. Papoulias ha espresso la speranza che la cooperazione tra Cina e Grecia possa avere un futuro sempre più promettente.



(Radio Cina Internazionale)
 
Πτώση του σπρεντ κάτω από τις 800 μ.β.


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Άκρατος ενθουσιασμός στην αγορά της Αθήνας.

Σημαντική αποκλιμάκωση, κάτω από τις 800 μονάδες βάσης, καταγράφει σήμερα η επιτοκιακή ψαλίδα, ή σπρεντ, των ελληνικών 10ετών κρατικών τίτλων, καθώς στην αγορά επικρατούν προσδοκίες για μια «συνολική απάντηση» στην κρίση χρέους από τους Ευρωπαίους ηγέτες.
Το σπρεντ στις 15:30 διαμορφωνόταν στις 796,6 μονάδες βάσης.
Εξαιρετικό διαμορφώνεται και το κλίμα στο ΧΑ, όπου ο γενικός δείκτης καταγράφει κέρδη άνω του 4%.
Την ίδια στιγμή, πτωτικά κινείται και το σπρεντ του πορτογαλικού 10ετούς ομολόγου έναντι του γερμανικού Bund. Συγκεκριμένα, υποχωρεί κατά 18 μονάδες βάσης στις 370 μονάδες βάσης.
Ευχάριστη εξέλιξη είχαμε σήμερα και στην Ισπανία, όπου η S&P προχώρησε σε επιβεβαίωση της κατάταξης ΑΑ της χώρας, παρέχοντας μια ακόμη ένδειξη ότι η κρίση στην Ευρωζώνη έχει αρχίσει να «μαλακώνει», τουλάχιστον για την ώρα.
Κατά την S&P, η τρέχουσα κατάταξη ΑΑ της Ισπανίας αντανακλά ικανοποιητικά τη μεγάλη και διαφοροποιημένη οικονομία της χώρας, καθώς και την αποφασιστικότητα της κυβέρνησης Θαπατέρο να μειώσει το δημοσιονομικό της έλλειμμα και να προχωρήσει σε μεταρρυθμίσεις για τη βελτίωση της παραγωγικότητας της οικονομίας.
Επίσης, το σπρεντ των βελγικών ομολόγων έναντι των αντίστοιχων γερμανικών συρρικνώνεται κατά 10 μονάδες βάσης στις 90 μονάδες βάσης.
Εξάλλου, αξιοσημείωτη είναι από το πρωί η κίνηση στην αγορά ομολόγων, καθώς η συντριπτική πλειονότητα των μεγάλων ξένων πελατών προβαίνει σε μαζικές αγορές ελληνικών τίτλων.
Ισχυρό ενδιαφέρον υπάρχει από τους περισσότερους γνωστούς διεθνείς οίκους αλλά και θεσμικά χαρτοφυλάκια για τα ελληνικά χρεόγραφα - κυρίως τα 10ετή και άνω.
Ενδεικτικά, ο τζίρος στο σύνολο της αγοράς ξεπέρασε τα 4 δισ. ευρώ, ενώ τις προηγούμενες ημέρες κυμαινόταν στην περιοχή των 100-150 εκατ. ευρώ.
Παράγοντες της αγοράς ερμηνεύουν την ξαφνική μεταστροφή της τάσης στο γεγονός ότι οι περισσότεροι επενδυτές προεξοφλούν την εξεύρεση λύσης για το χρέος της Ελλάδας, αλλά και συνολικά για τα δημοσιονομικά της ευρωζώνης. Έτσι, προχωρούν σε απόκτηση θέσεων για να πουλήσουν σε υψηλότερες τιμές μόλις επισημοποιηθεί η απόφαση.


kathimerini.gr


Gli spread vanno sotto gli 800 pb.
Grosso entusiasmo alla Borsa di Atene.

Un importante ridimensionamento è avvenuto oggi sulle obbligazioni decennali del governo greco andate sotto gli 800 punti base, riflettendo le aspettative del mercato per una "risposta globale" alla crisi del debito da parte dei leader europei.

Lo spread alle ore 15:30 è intorno agli 796,6 punti base.
In ottima forma anche l'indice ASE, dove si registrano incrementi di oltre il 4%.

Allo stesso tempo si è verificato anche un movimento di restringimento verso il basso dello spread portoghese di 10 anni sul Bund tedesco. In particolare, in calo di 18 punti base a 370 punti base.

L'indice S & P ha proceduto poi a confermare il rating AA del paese, fornendo così un ulteriore prova che la crisi nella zona euro è iniziata ad "ammorbidirsi", almeno per ora.

Secondo S & P, il rating AA attuale della Spagna riflette adeguatamente la sua economia ampia e diversificata, accompagnata in questo dalla determinazione del governo di Zapatero di ridurre il deficit di bilancio e di procedere con le riforme per migliorare la produttività dell'economia.

Contemporaneamente, lo spread belga rispetto al bund si è ridotto di 10 punti a 90 punti base.

Sono notevoli, inoltre, gli scambi questa mattina sul mercato obbligazionario e la stragrande maggioranza dei principali clienti esteri stanno effettuando acquisti massicci su titoli greci.

Un forte interesse è rivolto dalla maggior parte delle imprese internazionali e dagli investitori istituzionali per le obbligazioni elleniche decennali.

Il fatturato complessivo del mercato ha superato i 4 miliardi di euro, mentre nei giorni precedenti gli scambi erano di 100-150 milioni di euro.

Questi fattori di mercato fanno spiegare l'improvvisa inversione di tendenza da parte della maggior parte degli investitori, ritenendo vicina la soluzione per il debito della Grecia, ma più in generale verso una risposta di governo per la zona euro.

(traduzione libera)
 
La Borsa di Atene si avvia verso la chiusura con volumi altissimi di scambio, oltre i 200 MLN.
Tenete conto che nelle scorse settimane eravamo tra i 60 e i 100 MLN giornalieri.
 
EU Eyes Comprehensive Debt Plan, Bond Buyback For Banks-Sources



By Costas Paris and Alkman Granitsas
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES



ATHENS (Dow Jones)--European leaders will discuss later this week a comprehensive plan to address the continent's debt crisis that would include measures to buy back tens of billions in sovereign debt now held by Europe's commercial banks, government and private sector sources said.

The plan also includes measures to slash interest payments on loans made to struggling euro-zone member countries, such as Greece and Ireland; extending the repayment period of Greece's loan up to 30 years; as well as a program to repurchase some EUR50 billion in Greek sovereign debt now held by the European Central Bank.

On Friday, the 27 leaders of the European Union will meet in Brussels to thrash out the details of the European Financial Stability Facility, a special purpose vehicle set up last year and authorized to raise up to EUR440 billion in emergency financing for countries struggling with debt crises. A final agreement is expected at a second summit scheduled to take place March 24-25.

"I'd say it's the first time that EU leaders will sit down to find a complete solution rather than a piecemeal approach as was the case in the past," said a senior official in a euro-zone member government. "For the first time, they will try to be ahead of the markets rather than reacting to them."

Since the onset of the debt crisis in Europe, Greece--and then later Ireland--were forced to seek emergency loans from the European Union and International Monetary Fund in exchange for a series of tough fiscal and economic reforms.
 
La Borsa di Atene ha chiuso con l'indice ASE a 1663 punti (un mesetto fa eravamo a 1400 ...) segnando una progressione positiva giornaliera del 4,41%.
Fortissimi gli scambi a 240 MLN.
 
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