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Associated Press

Greek PM, eurozone official to hold emergency talk

By NICHOLAS PAPHITIS and DEREK GATOPOULOS , 06.01.11, 12:51 PM EDT



ATHENS, Greece -- Greece's Prime Minister George Papandreou will hold emergency talks with a top eurozone official on Friday as an international review of the country's finances is expected to usher in more drastic cuts needed in exchange for new rescue loans.
The meeting was announced Wednesday by the office of Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, who chairs the group of 17 eurozone finance ministers and recently criticized Greece for being slow in cutting debt and reforming the public sector.


Greece's Socialist government is concluding negotiations with the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to receive a vital fifth installment of its bailout loans later this month, worth euro12 billion ($17.3 billion).
The negotiations' outcome will depend on a review of the country's finances by the EU and IMF due to be published by the end of this week. The talks are considered key to providing possible additional bailout assistance next year, as Greece remains frozen out of the bond markets by high interest rates.
Government spokesman Giorgos Petalotis said Greece is "confident" it will receive the next bailout loan tranche, which is widely expected to come on condition of more pension and pay cuts and consumer tax hikes.
EU officials said there was "good progress" in the talks, but also suggested more austerity measures would be likely.

"Once the review is concluded positively, the EU with the IMF will move on to prepare next steps in order to safeguard financial stability and to continue economic reform in Greece," said Olli Rehn, the EU Commissioner for monetary affairs, at an event in New York.
The governor of Greece's central bank, George Provopoulos, on Wednesday described speculation of a possible Greek exit from the eurozone as "unbelievable and absurd" as the country awaited the results of the international review.
Greeks were already seeing the effects of the intensified austerity measures. Some 7,000 civil service jobs will be placed under review after the government announced Wednesday that 75 state agencies will be closed or restructured over the summer - the first tangible indication of possible government layoffs since the Greek debt crisis began.


The impending cuts have triggered fresh protests.

On Wednesday, scores of unemployed protesters blocked the entrance to the Finance Ministry, while the EU and IMF debt monitors were inside the building. The protesters moved backed after briefly scuffling with riot police.
Demonstrators joining a new Internet-organized protest movement were set to gather for an eighth straight day in Greek cities, while the country's two largest labor unions announced plans to stage a central Athens protest march on Saturday.
Riot police were called in to escort lawmakers out of parliament late Tuesday, after some 200 demonstrators heckled deputies as they left in their cars, some spitting at and kicking the
 
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ECB's Stark Sees Tighter Policy Despite Slowing Euro Economy -Report






By Luca Di Leo
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- European Central Bank Executive Board Member Juergen Stark said in an interview with an Italian daily the ECB will continue to increase interest rates despite the latest signs that the euro zone economy is slowing.
In excerpts of the interview published Wednesday on the website of financial daily Il Sole 24 Ore, Stark also said that while he's opposed to forcing a restructuring of Greek debt, he's open to banks voluntarily agree to buy new bonds when existing ones mature.
"It's not a structural slowdown in the economy and we expect the recovery to continue," Stark said, adding that "further changes to interest rates are being considered. The timing will depend on economic and monetary data."
Amid signs of inflation pressure, the ECB is widely expected to rise its interest rates over the summer, despite concerns that such a move will hamper the recovery for weaker euro zone member states like Greece.
Turning to the Greek crisis, Stark said he would back a so-called "Vienna initiative" that was used to deal with debt problems in Eastern Europe in 2008 and 2009, in which banks volunteer to extend the maturity of loans.
"If this solution is not perceived as a partial or full sovereign default, then it may be a way to include the private sector in Greek financing," Stark was quoted as saying.
Germany is considering dropping its push for an early rescheduling of Greek bonds in order to facilitate a new package of aid loans for the beleaguered southern European country. Discussions were underway Wednesday for the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to grant Greece a fresh loan to bridge funding gaps in 2012 and possibly also 2013, said three sources familiar with the matter.

 
Grecia, rinnovo debito volontario da banche possibilità - Stark

mercoledì 1 giugno 2011 18:43




MILANO, 1 giugno (Reuters) - Il rinnovo volontario dei prestiti alla Grecia da parte delle banche, se non fosse percepito come un default, potrebbe essere un modo per coinvolgere il settore privato nell'affrontare nella crisi del debito del paese, secondo il membro dell'esecutivo della Bce Juergen Stark.
"Se questa possibilità (il rinnovo volontario dei bond) non è percepita come un fallimento o un parziale fallimento sovrano, allora potrebbe in effetti rivelarsi un modo per coinvolgere il settore privato nel finanziamento della Grecia", ha detto Stark, nell'anticipazione di un'intervista che sarà pubblicata domani dal Sole 24 Ore.
Stark ha inoltre sottolineato la necessità di un nuovo aumento dei tassi di interesse.
"In questo contesto economico non è appropriato che i tassi d'interesse reali a breve termine siano negativi.... ulteriori aggiustamenti dei tassi d'interesse sono in considerazione. La loro tempistica dipenderà dai dati economici e monetari" ha aggiunto.
 
(Reuters) - Greece neared a deal with the EU and IMF to avert a near-term default, pushing the euro to a one-month high on Wednesday, but a poor debt auction in Portugal and stalled Spanish wage talks highlighted the risks of contagion.
Sources close to talks between Athens and inspectors from the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF), said they expected the latest review of Greece's fiscal progress to be completed by Friday.
One Greek official involved in the discussions expressed optimism that the so-called "troika" would release the 12 billion euro tranche Greece needs to cover its short-term funding needs.
"There will be a way for the disbursement of the fifth installment to be approved," the official told Reuters, requesting anonymity. "The negotiations with the troika will be concluded today or tomorrow, the latest by Friday."
The German finance ministry played down concerns that the IMF might balk at releasing its share of the aid and leave Europe scrambling to make up the difference.
IMF officials had warned over the past week that they would not pay up unless Greece's 2012 funding gap was addressed, forcing euro zone governments to come up with a broader financing plan.
"Everyone seems to be converging slowly but surely toward a consensus which is likely to involve a mix of additional aid, more austerity and some private sector involvement," said Gilles Moec, an economist at Deutsche Bank in London.
The reassuring signals helped the euro push up to a four-week peak against the dollar, which was further undermined by weak U.S. jobs data.
PORTUGAL COSTS SPIKE
In a reminder of the ongoing challenges faced by the 17-nation currency bloc roughly 1-1/2 years after its debt crisis erupted, Portugal saw its short-term borrowing costs spike higher in a bill auction and data showed manufacturing weakness in the so-called euro zone periphery.
The country, which agreed to a 78 billion euro EU/IMF bailout last month and received its first tranche on Wednesday, sold 850 million euros in four-month T-bills at an average yield of 4.967 percent, more than 30 basis points above what it paid for three-month paper less than a month ago.
Elisabeth Afseth, a fixed income analyst at Evolution securities, said the sale showed there was "still a lot of nervousness in the market and fears that there will be contagion from the Greece situation to Ireland and Portugal."
In neighboring Spain, Economy Minister Elena Salgado conceded that talks between unions and employers on reforming collective wage bargaining were stalling.
A reform of rules governing wage agreements would be one way to reassure markets and Spain's peers that it is serious about boosting productivity levels that are among the lowest in the euro zone. The government has warned it will push through the reforms unilaterally by June 10 if no deal is possible by then.
Ireland, the other country alongside Greece and Portugal to receive a bailout, received some good news overnight when Standard & Poor's said it believed the country had a good chance of returning to the capital markets next year to raise long-term funding.
PRIVATE SECTOR PLAN
But Greece remains a major worry and even a deal to tide it over through the end of 2013 is unlikely to assuage concerns that it will eventually be forced into a coercive restructuring of its debt, which stood at nearly 330 billion euros -- or close to 150 percent of GDP -- at the end of last year.
A harsh restructuring that would force losses on private creditors has been ruled out for now, but Germany and allies like Finland and the Netherlands are insisting on some sort of symbolic participation from the private sector.
Sources have told Reuters for the past two weeks that investors who hold Greek bonds that are due to mature in 2012 and 2013 will be encouraged to roll over that debt under a scheme similar to the "Vienna Initiative" used in early 2009 to safeguard banking systems in central and eastern Europe.
It is unclear what incentives governments could offer to convince investors to buy new Greek bonds, but in similar cases in the past, they have been promised higher coupons, preferred creditor status or collateral as inducements.
In addition to the private sector role, a new package for Greece -- expected to total around 65 billion euros according to EU officials -- could involve a mixture of collateralized loans from the EU and IMF, as well as more revenue measures.
Athens could also come under pressure to accept unprecedented intrusive external supervision of its privatization program, which has yet to sell anything since the 110 billion euro EU/IMF rescue one year ago.
"We needed the extra commitments from the Greeks to get this done," said Moec of Deutsche Bank. "There is still doubt about whether the opposition will accept all of this, but the government seems to be making all the efforts it can."
While confirmation of the latest aid tranche could come soon, haggling over the shape of a second bailout package is expected to continue over the coming weeks, culminating in a summit of EU leaders in Brussels on June 24.
 
European Officials Work on New Greek Aid



By CHARLES FORELLE
in Brussels and MARCUS WALKER
in Berlin


European finance officials met late Wednesday in Vienna to prepare a fresh aid package for Greece, people close to the matter said, but the talks must first bridge a crucial gap between Germany and the European Central Bank over whether to force private investors to share the pain of propping up the indebted nation.
Plucked from the brink of default in May 2010 by other euro-zone countries and the International Monetary Fund, Greece is once again verging on a critical cash shortage. Officials have conceded that Greece—already the beneficiary of €110 billion ($158 billion) in promised rescue aid—will need roughly an additional €30 billion in each of 2012 and 2013.
They are racing to figure out a plan before a meeting of finance ministers later this month.
At least some of the money will have to come by way of a further bailout from taxpayers in Europe's stronger countries—chief among them Germany. But at the Vienna meeting Wednesday, officials from the German finance ministry pressed for Greece's bondholders to bear some of the burden by accepting late repayment of their investments. That "reprofiling" of Greek bonds is anathema to the ECB.
For the time being, the standoff continues. Still, Germany may ultimately have to relax its insistence that maturity extensions be part of a package to be agreed on in late June, a senior German official said this week. Berlin has no serious alternative to lending Greece more money to avoid default, but a debt rescheduling probably can't be agreed on in the short term, the official said. Germany hasn't made a final decision, however.
Many private analysts say the euro zone's squabble over what to do now misses a broader point: Greece, they say, is highly unlikely to ever pay all of its debts back—no matter if they are delayed for a few years or not.
"A debt reprofiling is not enough," said Rodrigo Olivares-Caminal, a senior lecturer in financial law at the University of London and a visiting professor at a Greek business school. "That was an option in 2009, early 2010, but not in 2011."
The European Union's solution—to provide Greece with money in order to calm markets enough that the country could go back to them for financing—hasn't worked. Greek bond spreads, a measure of investors' reluctance to lend, are far higher than they were last year. And, between the end of 2009 and the end of 2011, Greece will have added €50 billion in debt.
"They are trying to put out fire with gasoline," said Mr. Olivares-Caminal.
He and others advocate forcibly reducing Greece's debt by telling creditors they will receive only part of their money back. European governments have made clear they aren't ready to contemplate that.
For Germany and most other countries, an extension of maturities is as far as they will go.
Germany has for weeks argued that Greek bondholders should be persuaded to accept an extension of bond maturities, as a way to reduce Greece's funding needs in coming years.
The central bank argues that even such a voluntary agreement would amount to default by Greece and could trigger severe capital flight from other indebted euro-zone countries. ECB officials also argue that a default in any form would render Greek bonds ineligible as collateral for ECB loans to banks, threatening the Greek banking system with insolvency.
 
Grecia: Moody's taglia rating a Caa1, outlook negativo - 2-
Nuova valutazione uguale a rischio sostanziale di default (Il Sole 24 Ore Radiocor) - Londra, 01 giu - Il rating Caa1 corrisponde a un rischio sostanziale di default. Moody's spiega il declassamento con l'aumento del rischio che la Grecia non riuscira' a stabilizzare il proprio indebitamento senza una ristrutturazione a fronte delle crescenti sfide di fronte al Governo, delle prospettive di crescita molto incerte del Paese e di una serie di performance insufficienti rispetto ai target di consolidamento del bilancio. Inoltre aumenta la possibilita' che la 'Troika' dei suoi supporter, costituita da Fmi, Bce e Ue, possa chiedere in futuro la partecipazione di creditori privati nell'ambito di una ristrutturazione del debito come precondizione al proprio sostegno. Considerati assieme, questi rischi implicano la possibilita' accresciuta di un default. Il rating Caa1, aggiunge Moody's, include il fatto che i negoziati in corso tra il Governo greco e la 'Troika' sfocino in un sostegno ufficiale per il Governo e nell'annuncio di ulteriori misure di austerita' e riforme strutturali. L'outlook negativo sul rating Caa1, prosegue Moody's, riflette l'idea dell'agenzia che l'indebitamento molto elevato del Paese, i rischi di attuazione molto alti nel pacchetto di riforme strutturali e il bisogno di Atene di un sostegno esterno includono rischi di un possibile nuovo abbassamento del rating. Com-pal-
 
Grecia: Moody's taglia rating a Caa1, outlook negativo - 2-
Nuova valutazione uguale a rischio sostanziale di default (Il Sole 24 Ore Radiocor) - Londra, 01 giu - Il rating Caa1 corrisponde a un rischio sostanziale di default. Moody's spiega il declassamento con l'aumento del rischio che la Grecia non riuscira' a stabilizzare il proprio indebitamento senza una ristrutturazione a fronte delle crescenti sfide di fronte al Governo, delle prospettive di crescita molto incerte del Paese e di una serie di performance insufficienti rispetto ai target di consolidamento del bilancio. Inoltre aumenta la possibilita' che la 'Troika' dei suoi supporter, costituita da Fmi, Bce e Ue, possa chiedere in futuro la partecipazione di creditori privati nell'ambito di una ristrutturazione del debito come precondizione al proprio sostegno. Considerati assieme, questi rischi implicano la possibilita' accresciuta di un default. Il rating Caa1, aggiunge Moody's, include il fatto che i negoziati in corso tra il Governo greco e la 'Troika' sfocino in un sostegno ufficiale per il Governo e nell'annuncio di ulteriori misure di austerita' e riforme strutturali. L'outlook negativo sul rating Caa1, prosegue Moody's, riflette l'idea dell'agenzia che l'indebitamento molto elevato del Paese, i rischi di attuazione molto alti nel pacchetto di riforme strutturali e il bisogno di Atene di un sostegno esterno includono rischi di un possibile nuovo abbassamento del rating. Com-pal-


Colpo di scena....olèèèèèè

:V:clap::party::winner::yeah::invasion::ola:

:grinangel:
 
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GRECIA: MOODY'S TAGLIA RATING. 'RISCHIO DEBITO FUORI CONTROLLO' (ASCA) - Roma, 1 giu - Moody's ha tagliato il rating sul debito della Grecia da B1 a Caa1 con un outlook che resta negativo. Secondo l'agenzia, Atene ''potrebbe fallire nel tentativo di stabilizzare il suo debito''.

Sei grande Moody's :winner::godo:
 
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