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

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Forex, euro si stabilizza dopo recupero su progressi Ue-Grecia

venerdì 24 giugno 2011 08:31






SINGAPORE, 24 giugno - (Reuters) - Euro stabile questa mattina sul dollaro, dopo il rimbalzo di ieri seguito ai progressi sul fronte greco compiuti nel vertice europeo di Bruxelles.
Ma le ricoperture sulla valuta unica si sono di fatto fermate, vista l'incertezza che ancora grava sull'intera vicenda, in attesa del voto del parlamento greco sul piano di austerità quinqeunnale del paese, passaggio indispensabile per lo sblocco dei prestiti ad Atene e il varo di un nuovo pacchetto di aiuti.
Alle 7,50 italiane l'euro-dollaro tratta a 1,4255 da 1,4260 della chiusura di ieri, dopo esseresi fermato nelle ultime ore appena sotto la resistenza tecnica indicata dagli analisti a 1,4286.
"Parte della speigazione del rimbalzo così veloce dell'euro sta probabilmente nel fatto che c'è stata la chiusura di alcune posizioni in vista del weekend" spiega Tsutomu Soma di Okasan Securities. "Ma credo che si debba mettere un punto interrogativo sulla possibilità dell'euro di estendere il recupero".
Secondo David Rodriguez di DailyFX, "il potenziale di incertezza suggerisce che l'euro può tornare indietro altrettanto velocemente, al primo segnale di pericolo".
L'euro si stabilizza anche sul franco svizzero in area 1,1950, dopo aver toccato ieri il nuovo minimo storico di 1,8470. Euro-yen a 114,70 da 114,74; dollaro-yen a 80,45 da 80,46.
 
German Banks Haven’t Reached Decision on Greece, Boersen Reports

By Niklas Magnusson - Jun 24, 2011 8:22 AM GMT+0200 Fri Jun 24 06:22:35 GMT 2011




German financial institutions have so far not reached a decision on participating in a Greek rescue by rolling over the country’s debt, Boersen-Zeitung reported today, without saying where it obtained the information.
The banks and insurers, which met with central bank representatives in Frankfurt on June 22, want a European Union guarantee on the Greek debt they may prolong the maturities on, the newspaper said. The German financial institutions will submit proposals before Sunday evening on the potential amount they are willing to roll over, Boersen-Zeitung reported.
 
ECB's Noyer: Banks Understand Must Take Part In Greece Bailout




PARIS -(Dow Jones)- Banks "understand very well" that they must voluntarily participate in the Greece bailout, Christian Noyer, member of the governing council of the European Central Bank said Friday.
Speaking in an interview with French radio RTL, Noyer insisted that euro-zone member countries all agree now on the need of a better economic policy coordination and that the creation of a euro-zone finance minister would be "a very good idea and that it must be done."
"A strong governance [within the euro zone] is needed," he added, noting that "for years, we've been lax. States did all they could to weaken the Stability and Growth Pact." "Debt must be reduced, it's lethal," he also said.
Noyer, who is also the governor of the Bank of France, said that the French government must keep up its efforts to curb public spending and balance public finances.
 
EU, IMF, ECB: Reached Satisfactory Deal On Greek Austerity Measures



BRUSSELS -(Dow Jones)- The troika of the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund reached a deal with Greece on additional austerity measures, the Commission confirmed early Friday.
"Heads of Mission of the European Commission, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank and the Greek authorities have reached tonight a satisfactory agreement on a set of measures to close the fiscal gap for the years 2011-2014," a statement put out by the European Commission said.
The European Commission said it now expects the medium-term fiscal program to be translated into "concrete legislative measures," including also the agreement on Greece's privatization plan.
"The Commission is looking forward to the voting of both legislative bills next week in the Greek Parliament," it said in a statement.
 
ECB Trichet: Disbursement Of EU-IMF Aid To Greece Depends On Ongoing Talks



BRUSSELS -(Dow Jones)- European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said Thursday that the disbursement of financial support for Greece from the European Union and International Monetary Fund would depend on ongoing discussions.
In comments to reporters following an evening of talks on the Greek debt crisis and economic issue with European leaders in Brussels, Trichet was asked if he was confident Greece would get a disbursement from the euro zone and the IMF that would allow the country to avoid default.
"We will follow very carefully what is being done ... it depends very very much on the finalization of the discussions that are taking place right now. But all that I know is that it is going on, and this hard work on the spot in Athens is proceeding as we would consider ... appropriate."
On Thursday night, a senior Greek government official reported that there was a deal between the government and the European Commission and the IMF on new austerity measures.
The news was confirmed early Friday by the European Commission, the IMF and the ECB.
 
2nd UPDATE: Greece, EU Reach Deal On New 5-Year Austerity Package - Official



By Costas Paris, Laurence Norman and Alkman Granitsas
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

(Adds European Commission confirmation of deal.)

BRUSSELS -(Dow Jones)- Greece has agreed to an austerity package with the European Union and the International Monetary Fund through 2014 that could clear the way for a new bailout loan if Greece's parliament approves the measures, an official said late Thursday.
"We have a deal after the Greek government agreed to more spending cuts and some higher taxes," the official, with direct knowledge of the talks, told Dow Jones Newswires.
The deal was later confirmed in a statement by the European Commission on behalf of the troika of the Commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF.
"Heads of Mission of the European Commission, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank and the Greek authorities have reached tonight a satisfactory agreement on a set of measures to close the fiscal gap for the years 2011-2014," a statement said.
The European Commission said it now expects the medium-term fiscal program to be translated into "concrete legislative measures," including also the agreement on Greece's privatization plan.
"The Commission is looking forward to the voting of both legislative bills next week in the Greek Parliament," it said in a statement.
The Greek official said the deal was reached after Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos agreed to lower the minimum taxable income for Greek taxpayers to EUR8,000 from EUR12,000 previously.
The deal also depended on Greek agreement on a special crisis levy on all taxpayers, ranging between 1% and 5% depending on income. Although the government had already announced that levy, previously it foresaw a 3% or 4% cap on it.
There are "some very small details that need to be ironed out but the basic framework has been agreed," the official said.
A deal between Greece and the visiting officials on the additional austerity had been widely expected.
IMF spokesman William Murray declined to comment. A spokesman for the European Commission wasn't immediately available.
Greece's parliament is due to vote on the overall austerity package by Tuesday, with a vote on the implementing legislation, and a related EUR50 billion privatization plan, set for Thursday. Euro-zone finance ministers made clear earlier this week that overall plan, and laws implementing it, must be passed before a July 3 meeting at which they will decide whether to release the latest tranche in an existing EUR110 billion bailout the country received last year.
Last Sunday, euro-zone finance ministers said a small technical mission would make an extra visit to Athens this week to iron out final details of the austerity plan.

 
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