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

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Cmq il reprofiling è da scartare,perchè la Bce non accetterebbe + i Tds come collaterale,ergo fallirebbero tutte le Banche Greche Cmq...
 
Cmq il reprofiling è da scartare,perchè la Bce non accetterebbe + i Tds come collaterale,ergo fallirebbero tutte le Banche Greche Cmq...

Infatti si va verso una soluzione che preveda un ulteriore allargamento del programma di aiuti con garanzie derivanti dalle privatizzazioni e gli "Istituzionali" saranno invitati a tenersi in PTF sino a scadenza i GGB. Per poi rinnovarli.
Su quali basi coercitive non saprei, ma con l'EFSF alle spalle l'aspetto "tecnico" si trova ...
 
Greece’s Extension of Bond Maturities Would Amount to Default, Fitch Says

By Maria Petrakis and Andrew Davis - May 20, 2011 4:49 PM GMT+0200 Fri May 20 14:49:38 GMT 2011
Greece’s credit rating was cut one notch by Fitch Ratings, which said that even a voluntary restructuring of the country’s debt being considered by European Union policy makers would be considered a default.
Fitch cut its rating to B+, four notches below investment grade, from BB+ and said that the country could face a further reduction in its creditworthiness.
The rating downgrade reflects the scale of the challenge facing Greece in implementing a radical fiscal and structural reform program necessary to secure solvency of the state and the foundations for sustained economic recovery,'' Fitch said in an e-mailed statement
Fitch’s move follows a two-notch cut to B, five levels below investment grade, by Standard & Poor’s on May 9, which said further reductions are possible as the risk of default rises. The same day, Moody’s Investors Service placed Greece’s B1 ratings on review for a possible downgrade, citing a bigger- than-forecast 2010 budget shortfall, debt sustainability concerns and a deepening recession.
More than a year after Greece received a 110 billion-euro ($156 billion) aid package that aimed to stem the spread of the region’s sovereign crisis, the nation’s debt is rising, borrowing costs are near records and European policy makers are considering additional aid. Its two-year bonds yield more than 25 percent, indicating investors are betting Greece won’t be able to return to markets as planned under the bailout next year, when it was due to sell about 27 billion euros of bonds.



Ireland, Portugal


Ireland and Portugal followed Greece in seeking bailouts as investors shunned the debt of the region’s other high-deficit nations, driving up their borrowing costs.
European finance ministers on May 17 for the first time floated the idea of talks with bondholders over extending Greece’s debt-repayment schedule, saying that last year’s rescue failed to restore the country to financial health. Fitch said even such a voluntary restructuring would constitute default.
The yield on Greek 10-year bonds rose 55 basis points to 16.6 percent, more than twice the level of a year ago when Greece accepted the bailout.
Greece missed its deficit target for last year, reporting a shortfall of 10.5 percent of gross domestic product, versus a target of 9.4 percent.



(Bloomberg)
 
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