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

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Ciao Tommy , puo' succedere ! Pero' ,( e specie in buoni Hotel ), se ce' qualcuno a fare la Doccia , il personale di Servizio non entra e lascia biglietto che nel caso vuoi la camera fatta li devi richiamare !;)
Ora il Khan puo in effetti essere stato colto da raptus sessuale , magari sotto influenza di droghe apposite , et avere rincorso la "sprovveduta" Cameriera completamente nudo e bagnato per la camera del Sofitel ... :sad::D

Io comunque rimango perplesso.
La faccenda mi quadra poco.
 
IMF chief's arrest won't stop Greek bailout debate

Strauss-Kahn's arrest casts shadow over talks on more aid for Greece but won't stop the debate



David Mchugh and Melissa Eddy, Associated Press, On Sunday May 15, 2011, 11:28 pm EDT
BERLIN (AP) -- The arrest of IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn complicates a key European meeting on whether to give Greece billions more in aid -- but experts insisted one man's troubles won't keep the 17 eurozone nations from trying to contain a debt crisis that threatens them all.
Eurozone financial leaders are to discuss Greece's deteriorating economy Monday at a Brussels meeting where experts will brief them on the situation in Athens. Key questions include what conditions to put on more help to the debt-strapped nation, with European leaders unhappy at what they see as limited Greek efforts to raise money by selling government property.
Strauss-Kahn was arrested Sunday in New York on suspicion of sexual assault on a hotel maid.
Despite the arrest, the International Monetary Fund said in a statement it remains "fully functioning and operational." The IMF Executive Board convened an informal session Sunday and made Strauss-Kahn's deputy, John Lipsky, acting managing director while its chief was unavailable.
The Washington, D.C.-based lending body also sent Nemat Shafik, a deputy managing director who oversees IMF work in several EU countries, to Monday's eurozone meeting to replace Strauss-Kahn.
Strauss-Kahn had to cancel his Sunday meeting with Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin, where the German public is deeply skeptical about putting up any more money for Greece. Germany, as Europe's largest economy, provided a large chunk of the euro110 billion ($157 billion) bailout for Greece from the European Union and the IMF last year.
Strauss-Kahn was scheduled to be arraigned Monday.
Greek government spokesman Giorgos Petalotis insisted the arrest would not affect his nation's efforts to resolve its financial woes.
"The Greek government deals with institutions, not individuals, and continues unimpeded to implement the program that will get it out of the crisis," Petalotis said.
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble struck a similar tone, saying the eurozone meeting would go ahead as planned. And European politicians had already gotten used to the idea that Strauss-Kahn may leave his post soon to run for president of France next year.
Yet others said Strauss-Kahn's immediate departure from the financial stage adds additional uncertainty to the already difficult situation in Europe.
"The leadership vacuum at the IMF comes at a highly inopportune time for Europe, which is teetering on the brink of a full-blown debt crisis," said Eswar Prasad, a professor of international economics at Cornell University and a former IMF official.
Many investors believe that Greece's financial troubles are so overwhelming that a Greek default or a restructuring that would give creditors less than the full value of their bonds is inevitable. But that would be a serious blow to the euro, and eurozone governments and the European Central Bank appear determined to prevent it.
Merkel has stressed that her government will need clear conditions for any new Greek loans before it will back more help. But Schaeuble has conceded that if the experts' full report in June shows that Greece can't pay its debts, something more will have to be done.
The IMF put up euro30 billion ($43 billion) of that Greek loan and also supplies expertise in assessing whether Greece and other countries that get emergency loans are living up to the conditions attached to them.
A euro78 billion ($111 billion) bailout for Portugal was also on the agenda for Monday's meeting in Brussels, as is Ireland's progress in dealing with the financial morass that led to its own EU-IMF bailout. With the terms of the Portuguese bailout largely decided, EU finance ministers are expected to signal approval of that deal.
Although eurozone ministers were talking about Greece, a new bailout announcement was not planned for Monday. Instead, investors expected a general statement of support, followed by days or weeks of more haggling.
Marco Valli, chief eurozone economist at UniCredit, said Greece's troubles were separate from those of Strauss-Kahn, and he expected a decision on more help for Greece in the near future.
"There is no way that just because the IMF's chief gets into personal trouble that Greece would be left alone," Valli said. "Maybe it can have some impact on timing, but our view is that this is not going to have a meaningful impact on the bottom line, which is that Greece would get a second bailout package."
Other analysts agreed that the IMF will simply navigate through the upcoming difficulties.
"The IMF is not a one-trick pony," David Buik at BGC Partners in London. "European markets may be damaged by this news for a few hours but there is plenty of depth to the IMF."
 
Strauss-Kahn oggi davanti al giudice


Slitta udienza tribunale. Capo Fmi accetta sottoporsi ad analisi



(ANSA) - NEW YORK, 16 MAG - Slitta alla mattina di oggi (il pomeriggio in Italia), la comparizione di Strauss-Kahn davanti a un giudice di New York. Il direttore dell'Fmi ha infatti accettato di sottoposti a nuove analisi ed esami corporali, mentre la polizia ha ottenuto un nuovo mandato per esaminare i suoi vestiti. Si difendera' ''vigorosamente'', hanno dichiarato i suoi legali, aggiungendo che e' stanco, ma sta bene.
 
ECB shouldn't wait too long to normalise - Nowotny





Mon May 16, 2011 2:00am EDT

(refiles to change 'government' to 'governing' in paragraph one)


FRANKFURT May 16 (Reuters) - The European Central Bank should not wait too long to normalise its monetary policy, ECB governing council member Ewald Nowotny said, adding that the size of any potential rate hike was a matter of debate. "I can say that we are moving from a period of very low interest rates towards a normalisation. I think it is problematic to wait too long for this normalisation. Of course a rise of rates is being debated. But how big this rise will be remains to be seen," he told German business daily Handelsblatt in an interview published on Monday.
Nowotny also said that Greece may be entitled to receive further loans: "But you have to grant them under very strict conditions."
 
Ultima modifica:
Probe into Aspis fraud heads abroad



Greek prosecutors ask for information from Switzerland and Germany



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A prosecutor’s office in Athens has asked Swiss authorities and Germany’s Deutsche Bank to provide it with details about the financial activity of Pavlos Psomiadis, the president of the defunct Aspis Pronia life insurance firm who has been charged with fraud and embezzlement, Sunday’s Kathimerini has learned.
According to judicial documents seen by the newspaper, Psomiadis is linked to the depositing of some 1 million euros in cash and title deeds in trust funds managed by Credit Suisse. This transaction is linked to a trust at another, smaller, Swiss bank that was set up in October 2009, a month after Aspis had its operating license revoked.
Psomiadis has been charged with providing Aspis’s creditors with a false 550-million-euro letter of guarantee from a British bank to keep the business afloat. The case came to light after 65 investors sued the firm. Prosecutors are also investigating a letter of credit issued by Deutsche Bank.






ekathimerini.com , Sunday May 15, 2011 (23:27)
 
Foot-dragging by banks is being punished by investors



Lenders have no choice but to bite the bullet, recognize losses from bad loans, Greek bonds, cut costs
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By Dimitris Kontogiannis




Greek banks have been making the same mistake the state has in assuming things will get better as time goes by, and apparently they are wrong as well.
Local banks now have little choice but to bite the bullet, recognize the losses from bad loans and Greek bonds, cut costs and recapitalize. If they do not do it, the market will do it for them.
A look at the share prices of Greece’s major listed banks is speaking volumes. The stock price of the National Bank of Greece, the country’s largest credit institution, has lost 33 percent in the last six months and 50 percent in the last 12 months. It recently fell below the level of 5.0 euros where the last rights issue took place.
The stock price of Alpha Bank has fallen 24.4 percent in the last six months and 30 percent in the last 12 months, whereas the share price of EFG Eurobank has dropped 22 percent and 33 percent respectively. The stock performance of Piraeus Bank has also been poor since it has fallen 39 percent in the last six months and 62 percent over a year. Postal Savings Bank, a candidate for privatization, has seen its stock price fall 10 and 20 percent respectively over the same period.
By all accounts, Greek banks have been paying a high price because of the public sector’s severe problems and not the other way around, as is the case in other countries such as Ireland. However, this does not mean they should not be held responsible for other mistakes that they have made on their own.
Extending generously consumer and other forms of credit to their retail customers to go on vacation and fulfill other desires was one of them. It helped banks boost their profits and earned hefty bonuses to their top managers, but ultimately left them with a legacy of non-performing loans they have to cope with today at a time when the Greek economy is contracting.
The same holds true for their relationship with the state. Greek banks, some more than other, were able to earn significant income from doing business with the public sector, including government bonds. This is not to say that they should have turned the blind eye at a time when their home turf needed help, but it is fair to say that their shareholders are now paying the price of their past choices.
It therefore comes as little surprise that the stock market is penalizing Greek banks by driving their stock prices and capitalization down to levels unseen since the second half of the 1990s.
Investors are clearly disappointed by the failure of the state to push through with privatizations and an overhaul of the public sector, controlling primary expenditures while at the same time realizing that heavy taxation has brought even the vital private sector to a difficult position. This has not helped the country’s image and has hurt local banks.
To be fair, investors do not really hold to much esteem the economic policy program (memorandum) Greece signed with its eurozone partners and the IMF <+dash><+roman> Greek bond yield spreads tell the story. But stock market investors are also particularly disappointed by the local banks’ tendency to kick the can down the road much like the state and avoid taking the bitter pill.
Market participants are fully aware of the widespread practice of local banks to extend the maturities of loans that seem problematic to facilitate the borrowers. However, as long as there are no signs of the Greek economy turning around, these loans become candidates for write-offs, as investors know very well.
The same is true for Greek bonds. Investors know that local banks hold the bulk of their Greek government bonds in the portfolios, whereas they are allowed to record them at acquisition price at a time when their prices in the thin secondary bond market have collapsed.
Just to illustrate the difference, the 10-year Greek bond price hovers at around 50 and 55 percent of its face value nowadays, compared to 70 and 80 percent a few months ago. If local banks had mark-to-market these bonds at the time, they should have been in better shape today since the market would have priced that in and perhaps some or all may have found ways to raise capital to boost their capital adequacy ratios.
By failing to act earlier and take the hit, Greek banks are now facing a much worse situation. So, even though they have tried themshelves to avoid taking the bitter pill by postponing some tough decisions thanks to the prevailing accounting rules, the stock market seems to be putting pressure on them to act by compressing their stock values.
There is no doubt that banks would have incurred big losses for existing shareholders if they acted as the stock market had asked them to. Still, choosing to wait, like they did before, may entail even greater costs to them and the national economy.






ekathimerini.com , Sunday May 15, 2011 (23:23)

***
Un'analisi sulle banche elleniche.
 
EURO GOVT-Bunds higher, periphery seen under pressure






LONDON | Mon May 16, 2011 2:19am EDT



LONDON May 16 (Reuters) - Bund futures opened higher on Monday, while lower-rated euro zone debt could remain pressured as the bloc's finance ministers were unlikely to make progress in tackling Greece's debt crisis at a meeting later in the day.
Euro zone finance ministers were seen backing a bailout for Portugal on Monday and only telling Greece it must deliver on agreed fiscal and privatisation targets if it wants new emergency financial aid next year.

Speculation that Greece may have to restructure its debt without further EU help has risen over the past few weeks, sending its short-term debt yields to fresh record highs and hurting sentiment on peripheral markets.
Portugal may find some short-term relief as its 78 billion euros bailout is likely to be approved later in the day, but lingering concerns about Greece may cap any gains.
"That one (a deal for Portugal) might get through, but Greece is a more important story than Portugal at the moment," one trader said. "I don't see anything concrete coming from EU leaders this week, maybe next month."
The trader said he expected investors to buy Bunds on any dips due to risk aversion, with the June contract targetting mid-January highs at 124.9, with last week's low at 123.58 seen as support.
At 0609 GMT, the Bund future FGBLc1 was 4 ticks higher on the day at 124.46, compared with an opening level of 124.57.
Charges of sexual assault on International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn may also increase uncertainty over future aid for Greece, given his pivotal role in brokering bailouts across Europe.
"He's always been quite active in the bailouts that have gone on and maybe it doesn't really help. The IMF is bigger than one man, but I'm sure the market will take it slightly negative," the trader said.
 
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