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

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e noi dopo di cosa ci preoccupiamo? e il tuo thread, che fine farebbe?:lol:

a parte le battute, molti opinionisti lamentano che si stia solo sprecando dei soldi...quanti commenti in tal senso hai postato anche tu?

Il nostro thread spero scenda di interesse nel più breve tempo possibile ... ma non ci giurerei ... :lol::lol::lol:.
Gli analisti, il più delle volte, fanno le analisi sui titoli che vengono individuati dai loro datori di lavoro.
Un conto è fare analisi, un altro stare con il fiato sul collo come fanno per la Grecia.
Non ho mai visto un "pressing" così pesante, per titoli tutto sommato poco rilevanti (se non fosse per l'attacco all'Euro).
 
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Fitch: euro zone summit plans to reduce credit risk

NEW YORK, March 14 (Reuters) - Fitch Ratings said on Monday
the initiatives taken by euro zone leaders during a weekend
summit will reduce near-term sovereign credit risk in the
region.


17:15-14/03
 
Avevo lasciato un ordine a 63,10 in vendita per 50k ....sul 2016 ...che velocità ..spazzato via ...troppa fretta:wall: ...ho preso le "briciole" ...380 euri .. adesso mi rimangono le 2019 30k ...sposterò il cash su IW per entrare sulle Övag 10% che nel frattempo sono scese un po ...
 
Borsa Atene: Ase chiude a +5,2% su miglioramento sentiment


MILANO (MF-DJ)--L'indice Ase della Borsa di Atene termina le contrattazioni in rialzo del 5,2% a quota 1662,38 punti, beneficiando delle dichiarazioni dell'Ue, di settimana scorsa, in merito all'allentamento dei termini di pagamento dei crediti greci e al sostegno nelle aste bond. I volumi si attestano a 239,9 mln euro.
"Alcune delle incertezze sulla Grecia hanno iniziato a dissiparsi pertanto abbiamo assistito alla ritrovata propensione all'acquisto", commenta un analista locale.
In territorio positivo tra i bancari National Bank a +10%, Eurobank a +9,8%, e Alpha Bank +6,7%, tra le blue chips Opap a +3,6% e Ote a +5,1%. red/est/ria


 
EU Decisions Sent Greek Stocks Soaring



Greek banks skyrocketed on Monday, as they recorded their biggest increase since May 2010, pushing the market ahead in a very heavy turnover.

In the wake of the European Summit, which decided to ease repayment terms on Greece΄s loans and support its bond sales, the domestic market managed to differentiate its course from the European indices.

The market sentiment was also helped by the narrowing of Greek government bond spreads and the reports by JPMorgan and Nomura, which upgraded European banks to “overweight” and placed a “long” rating on Greece, Portugal and Spain.


Across the board, the General Index ended at 1662.38, up 5.15%, moving on positive grounds throughout the trading session. Approximately 60.03mn units worth EUR 239.87mn were traded on Monday. A total amount of 156 shares rose, 24 declined and 39 remained unchanged.

"We saw renewed buying interest today because some uncertainty about a Greek default has been removed," a local analyst told Dow Jones Newswires. "I think we΄ll see this rally continue, but only by another 100 points."

Across the board, the General Index ended at 1662.38, up 5.15%. Approximately 60.03mn units worth EUR 239.87mn were traded on Monday. A total amount of 156 shares rose, 24 declined and 39 remained unchanged.

Banks soared at 1441.76 units, up 8.71%. Hellenic Postbank (+11.73%), Proton Bank (+10.26%) and National Bank (+10.12%) posted double digit profits, while Eurobank, Piraeus Bank and ATEBank climbed by 9.83%, 8.9% and 7.69% respectively. Bank of Cyprus, Alpha Bank, Attika Bank and Marfin Popular Bank gained 7.25%, 6.71%, 6.6% and 6.59% respectively.

(capital.gr)

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L'indice ASE era intorno a 1730 punti, quando lo spread era a circa 770 pb.
 
Good news, but targets remain elusive

Greece needs to privatize state assets, though 50 bln euros by 2015 seems a long shot


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By Dimitris Kontogiannis


Greece is the major beneficiary of the decisions taken by European leaders on March 11, but this is not cause for celebration because they do little to address the country’s two most important issues: economic growth and public debt reduction at a time when budget deficit figures show a clear deterioration.

The informal eurozone council meeting last Friday offered more than the markets -- which had thought that major decisions would not be announced until the March 24-25 EU summit -- had expected.

The most unexpected announcement included a lower interest rate to Greece, the increase of the lending capacity of the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) to 440 billion euros from an effective 250 billion euros currently, and the green light to the EFSF and the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) to buy bonds issued by countries with bailout programs in the primary market.

As far as Greece is concerned, the EU will extend the maturity of the existing loan to a four-year grace period from two, and a six-year repayment period from three. This means that the average maturity of the loan is 7.5 years from three years or so before.

The decision to extend the maturity of the eurozone loan is not surprising since it had been pre-announced in November when Ireland sought financial assistance from the EU.

But the decision to lower the interest rate charged on the loan to Greece by 100 basis points is indeed significant. It will help ease somewhat the burden of servicing the public debt, by proceeding in two ways: First, by lowering the annual interest payments recorded in the budget, therefore facilitating the attainment of the budget deficit goal. Second, by putting the debt-to-GDP ratio in a downward trajectory if nominal GDP growth exceeds the country’s average cost of borrowing, assuming revenues are more than primary expenditures, that is, it runs a primary budget surplus.

The decision on increasing the lending capacity of the EFSF to 440 billion euros along with the authority to buy newly issued bonds by a country with loan programs means Greece could rely on financial assistance from the EFSF in 2012-2013 if it is unable to access bond markets by then.

This is important because it is unlikely that Greece will be able to borrow from private investors at reasonable interest rates by then.

It is reminded that the 110-billion-euro loan from the eurozone and the IMF is about equal to the amount of interest and principal Greece is going to pay to its creditors in the three-year period, running from May 2010 through May 2013.

This has been done by design with the country borrowing more than the money it is paying out to its creditors in 2010 and gradually borrowing less than the total amount of interest plus principal, making it necessary to fill the gap from April 2012 onwards by issuing new bonds to private investors.

Of course, Greece will have to fortify its fiscal framework via legal means and fully complete the 50-billion-euro privatization plan cited in the updated economic policy program (Memorandum.)

The first is possible, but coming up with privatization proceeds of 50 billion euros by 2015 to reduce the public debt, although desirable, seems unrealistic at this point. Assuming the average size of a Greek deal is 100 million euros, the country will have to produce one such deal every three days to meet the goal of 50 billion euros in 1,500 days, as one investment banker put it.

Notwithstanding the strings attached, it has been said that behind the EU’s attractive offer is the realization that the implementation risks of the Greek economic program have increased both on the structural reform front and most importantly on the fiscal front.

The latest figures on the state budget show that the deficit in the first two months of the year was larger than in the same period last year despite the fact that expenditure on the Public Investment Budget was down by more than 65 percent year-on-year. According to an official with good knowledge of the fiscal situation, the deviation of the budget deficit figure from the projected one in the first quarter of the year will be even bigger, making it very difficult to meet the 2011 deficit goal of 7.5 percent of GDP.

In this context, the decisions of the EU Council meeting on March 11 should be welcome, though they largely reflect concerns that the Greek economic program is at risk. Still, they do little to address the thorniest issues, that is, putting the Greek economy back on track and tackling the solvency issue.

However, rekindling economic growth looks like an even greater challenge as the apparent derailing of the fiscal program in the first months of the year will most likely bring about more austerity measures, feeding the vicious cycle. In this regard, some basic tenets of the economic program, namely relying on more taxes to cut the budget deficit, will have to be reexamined.

As far as tackling the solvency issue is concerned, this may be held back by the natural inclination of Greece’s EU partners to put first the interests of the banks and pension funds holding Greek debt and their concerns that the country may contaminate other weak eurozone countries, therefore creating havoc. So, putting pressure on Greece to raise 50 billion euros in privatization proceeds may be the best solution at hand at this point.

All in all, the EU decisions on Greece should be welcomed, but with a pinch of salt because they don’t cope with the country’s two major problems: economic growth and public debt reduction in an effective way.

ekathimerini.com , Sunday March 13, 2011 (23:54)

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Sempre molto acuti i commenti di questo bravo giornalista greco.
Da leggere.
 
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