Titoli di Stato area Euro GRECIA Operativo titoli di stato - Cap. 1 (4 lettori)

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tommy271

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IMF denies forcing Greece to restructure debt




IMF Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn denied press reports claiming that the fund was trying to force Greece to restructure its debts and that it has lost faith in the country's economic recovery.
"We are supporting the Greek government in its position that it doesn't want a restructuring of the debt...» Strauss-Kahn told students at George Washington University late on Monday.
He said the challenge for Greece was to make its economy more competitive and restructuring the country's debt would not resolve that issue.
"To restore growth in Greece, you have to restore competitiveness. That is the real problem and what we've tried to address,» he added.
But the IMF chief acknowledged that Greece could have been in a better situation if the IMF and the European Union were able to help earlier as the country battled a debt crisis last year.
"But for governance problems, political problems within the European Union, it took more time than necessary and of course, the later you do what you have to do the worse it is,» Strauss-Kahn said.






ekathimerini.com , Tuesday April 5, 2011 (12:23)
 

Pyrinos

Nuovo forumer
Le consuete aste per i titoli di 6M e 3M sono programate per 12 e 19 di Aprile.
L΄ aspetativa per il rendimento è di 4,8% per i 6 M

:ciao:
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
EU Barroso: should Not Impose Too High Costs On Ireland, Greece



BRUSSELS (Dow Jones)--The European Union should not impose costs on Ireland and Greece that are too difficult for those countries' citizens to pay, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said Tuesday.
Barroso expressed worries about a division within Europe, between countries with healthier balance sheets and those with weaker finances.
He was speaking in Strasbourg at a meeting of the European Parliament.
"[We] can't impose costs which are very difficult for Greek and Irish citizens to pay," Barroso said.
He also addressed calls for taxing the financial industry for the costs of the financial crisis.
"Several member states oppose it fundamentally," he said. "They will not agree."
The European Commission is instead assessing different options for the financial sector. For instance, the commission recently proposed the introduction of a common corporate tax base.
"The commission has put forward a proposal and we will fight for it," said Barroso.
In response to parliamentarian questions on Portugal, where borrowing costs have risen to what many deem as unsustainable levels amid a political vacuum, Barroso said the political crisis in Portugal has complicated the scenario.
"The commission will try to help Portugal in finding the most appropriate solution," he said.
European Council President Herman van Rompuy followed Barroso's remarks, and addressed criticism of the E.U.'s economic reform plans by central bankers.
"There may be a central bank governor...who has certain criticism," said van Rompuy. "But I can quote others...who are extremely close to the Netherlands who have an entirely different opinion."
 
Ultima modifica:

tommy271

Forumer storico
ECB set to lay out rate hike strategy



(Associated Presse)

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) — The spotlight will fall on the European Central Bank on Thursday as markets look to see how aggressively the bank follows up an expected interest rate increase as it seeks to snuff out rising inflation.
Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet has made it clear that a spike in inflation is not the legacy he wants to leave when his term ends Oct. 31, and he has clearly signaled his determination to start raising rates despite the economic ripples from the disasters in Japan and turmoil in the Arab world and Europe's own debt crisis.
His stance, which has been echoed by others on the bank's rate-setting panel, has provoked concerns about the impact on stumbling economies in Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain.
Left to their own devices, none of those countries would be considering higher borrowing costs — Ireland and Greece are trying to scratch out an economic future from the rubble of their bailed out economies, while Portugal is on the verge of grasping for a financial lifeline and the Spanish economy remains weighed down by an unemployment rate above 20 percent.
Because it is the monetary authority for all the euro countries, the ECB must find one rate that fits 17 countries in the context of its target of keeping inflation just below 2 percent. Trichet's repeated message in recent weeks has been that the bank must now step in to prevent a wage-price spiral in which inflation expectations become built into the economy.
"Our definition of price stability is the needle in our compass," Trichet said in a speech Monday.
Others think that stance could be too blinkered and potentially self-defeating as higher interest rates have the potential to rein in growth and accentuate the problems in the most indebted countries.
"It remains to be seen whether, in view of Portugal's imminent collapse, worrying about inflation being marginally above the 'sacred' 2 percent level is entirely appropriate at this stage," said Jeremy Batstone-Carr, director of private client research at Charles Stanley.
Away from the so-called periphery countries, such as Portugal, the economic situation is distinctly different, particularly in export powerhouse Germany, the biggest euro economy, where unemployment has fallen as low as 4.4 percent in the factory-rich southwest state of Baden-Wuerttemberg.
That partly explains why the bank is poised to raise its key refinancing rate, which determines the cost of short-term credit to banks, by a quarter of a percentage point to 1.25 percent on Thursday. It has stood at a record low of 1 percent since May, 2009.
With an increase more or less fully priced in, the bigger issue in the markets is what guidance the bank gives about future plans as inflation in March jumped to 2.6 percent, largely due to higher food and energy costs.
"In our view it is obvious that more hikes will follow," said Carsten Brzeski at ING. "With interest rates pointing north, the interesting question is whether it will hurt."
Households are not going to like higher borrowing costs in the least, especially as in many countries, such as Spain and Ireland, they are grappling with collapsing house prices as well as higher taxes.
However, Guillaume Menuet at Bank of American Merrill Lynch said the impact on Spanish mortgage payers, for instance, shouldn't be too much, given that the additional interest costs represent only a small added burden, on top of the dizzying 12 percent plunge in disposable income last year. Mortgage rates are already so low they are effectively negative when inflation is taken into account inflation.
Spanish Finance Minister Elena Salgado says Spain can absorb an interest rate increase "without any difficulty."
The ECB's stance puts the Frankfurt-based bank at odds with the U.S. Federal Reserve, which has not given any sign of raising rates from the current rock-bottom 0 to 0.25 percent range. Attention at the Fed is focusing instead on when the central bank might bring an end to its quantitative easing program, in which it in effect creates new money by buying securities from banks.
The program is regarded as carrying some inflationary risks but is intended to support growth and jobs as the economy recovers from the severe shocks of the financial and economic crisis that began in 2007.
The Bank of England also announces its monthly interest rate decision on Thursday. Even though inflation in Britain is running at 4.4 percent, the bank is expected to keep its benchmark interest rate on hold at the record low of 0.5 percent as the majority of rate-setters fret about the fragility of the economic recovery
 

g.ln

Triplo Panico: comprare
spread fermo: bene!

A metà giornata situazione invariata, la Borsa ha arrestato la discesa trovando un punto di forza attorno ai 1500 punti mentre i nostri spread rimangono ancorati intorno ai 946 pb.

:ciao: E questa è una notizia positiva. Parafrasando un celebre detto di un magistrato: resistono, resistono, resistono ;).
Ciao, ciao, Giuseppe
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
:ciao: E questa è una notizia positiva. Parafrasando un celebre detto di un magistrato: resistono, resistono, resistono ;).
Ciao, ciao, Giuseppe

Si, Giuseppe.
Intorno ai 950 pb. (sul decennale) abbiamo trovato uno zoccolo duro da una decina di giorni a questa parte.
Per il momento, situazione immutata.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Greek Bank Deposits Seen Down 8% This Year, Recovery In 2012-NBG



ATHENS (Dow Jones)--The stock of deposits in Greece's banking system are expected to shrink by another 8% this year as individuals and businesses tap savings to cover cash needs, but will begin to stage a recovery starting in 2012, the National Bank of Greece SA (NBG) said in a report Tuesday.
"The pressure of financing needs is expected to be appreciable in 2011 leading to a further reduction in deposits [of about 8%]," the report said, adding that from next year, deposit flows will be marked by a "sustainable upward trend from 2012 that will exceed the nominal increase in gross domestic product."
The report, issued by the bank's economic analysis department, says that in 2012, deposit inflows will grow by 5% on a year-on-year basis, and will accelerate to a rate of 6%, equal to about EUR13 billion, in 2013.
Since the start of the Greek financial crisis in late 2009, Greece's banking system has seen an outflow of about EUR40 billion in deposits, equal to roughly 14% of total system deposits.
The vast majority of those outflows, about 85% of last year's total, or EUR34 billion, was during the first seven months of 2010 when worries over the Greek financial crisis were at a peak and led many depositors to stash their cash in what they considered safer, offshore banks.
Since then, the rate of outflow has dropped significantly, signaling a return to confidence in the Greek banking system, the report said.
However, continuing cash needs by individuals and businesses facing both cuts in income and reduced access to bank lending amid Greece's ongoing economic recession, has forced many depositors to draw down their savings, the report added.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Greece, Portugal And ECB’s Rates In Eurogroup’s Agenda



Greek Finance Minister Giorgos Papakonstantinou will be required to explain the reasons of the new revision of state deficit (2010) in the extraordinary meeting of ministers in Budapest later this week.

Eurogroup meets in order to initiate decisions, which hang at poise since the European Summit in late March, regarding the financing of Eurozone’s temporary rescue fund (EFSF). However, diplomatic sources note that the situation in Portugal will be at the centre of attention, while the implementing of Memorandum of Understanding in Greece and the new deficit gap will follow in the agenda.

According to sources, Portugal will be forced to seek for EFSF help, although it appears able to cover its €4.3b loans, as the yield of the five-year bond exceeds 9.5%. Irish request for lowering of its loan interest rates and the already decided extension of repayment period and the decrease of interest rates for Greece are not included in the agenda.

On the contrary, Eurogroup is expected to discuss at length European Central Bank’s intention to increase its interest rates on Thursday and the consequences of this movement.

Additionally, it will seek "explanations" from Portugal in order to enable EFSF move early if necessary in the coming weeks.

Eurogroup is concerned as the 2010 deficit of Greece appears to be larger than estimated in the previous revision (9.4% of GDP). Hellenic Statistical Authority and Eurostat bring in a new upward revision of deficit, which may lead to additional revenue measures besides the revised Memorandum of Understanding.

(capital.gr)
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
German Industry Backs ‘Overnight’ Euro Insolvency Proceedings

By Brian Parkin and Rainer Buergin - Apr 5, 2011 3:05 PM GMT+0200 Tue Apr 05 13:05:45 GMT 2011

Euro-area states that are unable to forgo a financial lifeline should be forced to restructure their debt at speed, “overnight” if necessary, to avoid spooking markets, the head of Germany’s BDI industry federation said.
Greece’s capacity to return quickly to financial health may be “illusory,” Hans-Peter Keitel said in a speech to savings bank executives in Berlin today. Should the prospect of a permanent bailout for such states arise “we must consider a sovereign insolvency that shouldn’t take weeks or months to implement, but 24 hours, including the participation of private creditors,” he said.
There may be “no realistic alternative” to locking over- indebted countries out of the euro region, said Keitel, who added that Germany’s economic outlook this year has become overshadowed by risks including Japan’s earthquake and turmoil in North Africa and the Middle East. “We tread a fine line, and as mountaineers know straying to the left or right of the path is dangerous.”
Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said yesterday the cost of a debt restructuring “would be much greater than the benefit,” both for Greece and the rest of Europe. Portuguese bonds fell today and the cost of insuring the nation’s debt rose to a record after Moody’s Investors Service said a bailout, the third in the euro region after Greece and Ireland, is inevitable.
Greece will return to bond markets by the start of next year, Papaconstantinou said in an e-mailed transcript of an interview with state-run NET radio in Athens. International Monetary Fund Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said yesterday the lender supports Greece’s rejection of a debt restructuring.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Oggi la Borsa di Atene ha chiuso invariata, rispetto alle pesanti perdite dei giorni scorsi.
L'indice ASE segna 1489 punti con - 0,2%. Volumi di intermediazione scarsi a 80 MLN.

I nostri spread rimangono stabili intorno a 945 pb., con diversi spunti di allargamento sino a 950 pb. poi rientrati.
 
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