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

Stato
Chiusa ad ulteriori risposte.
Cina potrebbe incrementare posizioni in governativi zona euro
null.gif
Reuters - 21/04/2011 14:51:26
null.gif
null.gif
null.gif
BRUXELLES, 21 aprile (Reuters) - L'ambasciatore cinese presso l'Unione europea annuncia che Pechino potrebbe decidere di aumentare la quota di titoli di Stato della zona euro attualmente in portafoglio e auspica che i paesi dai conti pubblici in difficoltà garantiscano la sicurezza degli investimenti.

Rivolgendosi alla stampa in occasione di un pranzo a Bruxelles Song Zhe spiega che la Cina sta acquistando governativi dell'area euro nell'intento di diversificare gli investimenti e tale strategia è destinata a proseguire.

"Come prossimo passo è possibile che acquistiamo di più" dice.

"Speriamo che i governi possano garantire i nostri investimenti", risponde alla domanda sulla possibilità di una ristrutturazione del debito che naturalmente eroderebbe il valore degli asset europei in portafoglio a Pechino.

Forse ci saranno acquisti pesanti in Spagna.
Per la Grecia, nonostante i continui richiami di sostegno, la Cina non è mai entrata pesantemente.
Più presente invece nell'economia ellenica.
 
China Open to Buying More Bonds of Indebted Euro-Area Countries

By Jonathan Stearns - Apr 21, 2011 2:28 PM GMT+0200


Thu Apr 21 12:28:03 GMT 2011
China is open to buying more bonds of indebted euro-area nations as part of a strategy to bolster the European Union economy and diversify away from investments in U.S. debt, said the Chinese ambassador to the EU.
Song Zhe said China owns “several billion euros” of bonds sold by Greece and Portugal and might embark on another round of purchases of sovereign debt in the euro area.
In the next step, it is possible we will purchase more sovereign debt” in Europe, Song told reporters today in Brussels. “We hope to see financial stability and sustained economic growth in the euro zone.”
Song said China believes the EU can overcome the euro area’s debt crisis, which was triggered by Greece last year and has since engulfed Ireland and Portugal. With the International Monetary Fund, the EU organized a 110 billion-euro rescue of Greece last May and an 85 billion-euro bailout of Ireland in November and is now preparing 80 billion euros in emergency aid for Portugal.
The fundamental aim of Chinese investments in Europe is to protect China’s “huge” foreign-exchange reserves, according to Song. “We do have confidence in the currency and it will remain one of our choices for investment.”
China’s foreign-exchange reserves jumped to a world-record $3 trillion in March.
China is in discussions to invest in the restructuring of Spain’s savings banks, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said today, after a four-day visit by Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero to Asia.
China already holds 25 billion euros of Spanish sovereign debt, up from 6 billion euros in 2009, Zapatero said on April 15 at the end of his Asian tour. That’s equivalent to 12.5 percent of the Spanish debt in foreign hands, he told reporters.

(Bloomberg)
 
Ultima modifica:
L'importante che ci mettano i soldi....poi vedano loro :D

Lo scorso anno, i cinesi hanno dichiarato che non mancavano di sostenere gli ellenici quando torneranno ad emettere.
Sappiamo che le emissioni dei bot/greek vengono sottoscritte generalmente (non l'ultimo trimestrale, però) per almeno un 30/40% da investitori esteri, ma non sappiamo quali.
 
Citi Says Cooperating With Greek Probe, No Wrongdoing



(Rewrites, adds Greek details)



LONDON (Dow Jones)--Citigroup Inc.(C) said Thursday it is cooperating with Greek authorities following official allegations that an email from one of its employees stirred debt-restructuring rumors that roiled the country's financial markets.
Two Greek government officials told Dow Jones Newswires Thursday that the bank in question was Citigroup.
Citigroup has denied any wrongdoing.
A Greek government official alleged that the email speculating on a Greek debt restructuring over the Easter holiday was sent Wednesday afternoon, when Greek bank stocks and bond prices came under heavy selling pressure.
The finance ministry so far hasn't published evidence linking the suspect email to the market moves.
A Citigroup spokesman said in an e-mailed statement Thursday that the bank doesn't "consider there to have been any wrongdoing" by the bank or its employees and it is cooperating with the authorities.
The Greek finance ministry said Wednesday it had asked for an investigation into possible criminal conduct behind market rumors that Greece was about to restructure its debt.
The ministry said an email from brokers at an international investment bank referring to a restructuring of Greece's debt during the Easter weekend has been forwarded to the Athens prosecutor's office.
The finance ministry said such rumors "clearly lack seriousness and are ridiculous."
Greek bond yields rose to new euro-era highs Wednesday, with two-year yields moving above 21%, on continuing fears that Greece will have to restructure its debt.
"The public prosecutor has opened an investigation and has asked for assistance from the office for the investigation of financial crimes, as well as from foreign regulatory authorities," the official said.



***
L'Affaire Citigroup ...
 
Stato
Chiusa ad ulteriori risposte.

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Alto