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

Stato
Chiusa ad ulteriori risposte.
New police squad to fight tax evasion





dot_clear.gif
A new police squad tasked with targeting tax dodgers and armed with the powers to obtain the bank details as well as information about the stock market activities of anybody accused of evading payments was unveiled on Monday.
“The government is determined, society is determined and demands transparency, checks, apportioning of responsibilities and punishment of offenders,” said Citizens’ Protection Minister Christos Papoutsis as he presented the new force, which will be known as the Financial Police and Electronic Crimes Squad.
Papoutsis suggested that one of the areas the new squad would be looking at is online gambling. “The police estimates that the turnover for this is 5 billion euros a year and that the state misses out on 2 billion euros as a result,” said Papoutsis. “Greek banks are unwitting accomplices in this because all the transactions are done using credit cards.”
The new squad consists of 200 officers, 100 of whom have postgraduate degrees in finance, accounting or information technology. Citizens will be able to report suspected offenses by dialing 11012.
Meanwhile, it was revealed yesterday that first instance prosecutor Yiannis Dragatsis is investigating information collected by the state agency that combats money laundering concerning allegations about the group of companies owned by businessman Lavrentis Lavrentiadis.
The agency suggested in its report that Lavrentiadis’s companies had received favorable terms for 51 million euros in loans from Proton Banks, of which the businessman is the main shareholder.






ekathimerini.com , Monday August 1, 2011 (23:17)
 
Local banks at a crucial juncture



Lenders immediately need to change their business model and secure a rational cost structure


dot_clear.gif

dot_clear.gif
By Dimitris Kontogiannis

The second European Union support package may have improved the sustainability of the Greek public debt but it did not put the issue to rest, as the behavior of Greek credit default swaps (CDS) and bonds show.

Under these circumstances, putting the Greek economy on a sustainable growth trajectory is of paramount importance, but this cannot be done as long as the private sector continues to face a credit crunch. In this respect, Greek banks will have to make some tough choices.

We do think that the decisions taken at the last Brussels summit constitute a step forward for the eurozone by giving greater powers to the European Financial Stability Mechanism (EFSF) to contain contagion which is the most important decision they reached in our view.

In addition, they gave Greece some breathing space to adjust its public finances via a maturity extension of its debt and a reduction in the interest rates on new loans provided by the EFSF.

By assuming a 90 percent participation by the private sector in the second support package and a buyback of Greek bonds on the secondary market by about 20 billion euros, this can cut the public debt by some 12 percentage points, or some 26 billion euros.

This reduction may look relatively small for a country facing a debt-to-GDP ratio of more than 160 percent at this point and it indeed is but it is not negligible. Still, the markets are not convinced this is the end game as evidenced by the cost of insuring against a halt of payments on Greek bonds.

The spread on five-year Greek CDS may have receded to 1,700-1,800 basis points from 2,000 points prior to the eurozone summit but they are still extremely high, indicating some investors are willing to pay 17 or 18 percent annually to buy CDS to insure their Greek bond holdings against default. Equivalently, there are market participants out there who are willing to bet on a Greek default by paying CDS at a very high price.

This can be interpreted in two ways. First, the market either thinks the private sector involvement (PSI) will not finally be a success, producing a financing gap, or the country will be forced to restructure its debt once again down the road.
Whatever the case, Greek banks are directly affected by holding government bonds of nominal value exceeding 45 billion euros. They have already paid very dearly for this by seeing the value of their stocks on the Athens bourse plummet, hurting their shareholders.

However, the banks themselves have not shown the losses from their bond holdings because they have parked in the hold-to-maturity and loan receivables portfolios.

By participating in the PSI of the second Greek package, they may have to recognize these losses, proving the stock market right. Assuming a 21 percent haircut, it is generally estimated Greek banks may need a recapitalization of a few billion euros.

This may be a negative development for their shareholders who may not be able to participate and some banks will have to resort to the EFSF and the Financial Stability Fund set up under the first support package, although it is generally good for the Greek economy.

The latter cannot get out of its slump if the private sector is not funded properly and this cannot be done as long as the banks do not recognize all possible losses from their bond portfolios and their nonperforming loans and recapitalize.

Of course, the Greek economy will still have to embark on a far-reaching program of structural reforms and privatizations and downsizing the problematic public sector to boost its international competitiveness in the medium term and raise its potential output growth rate.

Nevertheless, it needs a well-capitalized banking sector to grow. Needless to say, the recapitalization of Greek banks will have to be accompanied by painful cost cuts since the new operating environment at home will be characterized by slower credit growth than in the past.

Moreover, local banks will have to adjust to a different business model from retail banking where they made money easily by providing loans to consumers and small and medium-sized businesses.

The new business model will require that they place more emphasis on asset management, private banking and other sources of income largely disregarded during the boom years of retail banking in the past.

Whether the large local banks can produce these revenue and cost synergies by merging with other local banks to avoid being nationalized remains to be seen. However, they have no choice but to face reality and make some tough decisions.
The Greek economy cannot rely solely on structural reforms and the so-called European “Marshall Plan” to grow out of its misery and make the public debt sustainable.

It needs a well-capitalized banking sector with a rational cost structure and a different business model. This is more so since the US Marshall Plan provided aid and stimulated investment while its European version seems to offer more loans and austerity.


ekathimerini.com , Monday August 1, 2011 (22:47)

***
Analisi.
 
Bund, forte domanda su crescita timori economia

martedì 2 agosto 2011 08:35






LONDRA, 2 agosto (Reuters) - Forte la domanda dei titoli
rifugio, con i futures sul Bund che aprono in rialzo nonostante
l'accordo sul tetto del debito Usa appaia cosa fatta.

Le incerte prospettive economiche offuscano lo scarso
sollievo derivato dal sì della Camera all'innalzamento del tetto
del debito Usa.

"Ok, la legge sul budget Usa è andata ma c'è molta
speculazione sulla debolezza dell'economia" dice un trader.

Il calo dell'azionario asiatico e il non ancora scongiurato
rischio di un downgrade del rating Usa hanno mantenuto una forte
avversione al rischio.

Con il voto favorevole della Camera, 269 contro 161, gli
Stati Uniti hanno innalzato il tetto del debito, decisione che,
una volta approvata anche dal Senato, eviterà il default tecnico
che in assenza di un compromesso tra democratici e repubblicani,
sarebbe potuto arrivare oggi. Attorno alle 18 italiane, la legge
passa al vaglio del Senato a maggioranza democratica, dove non
dovrebbe avere difficoltà ad ottenere l'approvazione.
 
BTP, RENDIMENTO DECENNALE SALE DI 26 PUNTI BASE A 6,27%, MASSIMO DAL 1997 - GRAFICI REUTERS
null.gif
Reuters - 02/08/2011 09:11:28

Punto di non ritorno, interessi al 7%.....ricordo che sono insostenibili.

Occhio a Italia e Spagna
 
BTP, RENDIMENTO DECENNALE SALE DI 26 PUNTI BASE A 6,27%, MASSIMO DAL 1997 - GRAFICI REUTERS
null.gif
Reuters - 02/08/2011 09:11:28

Punto di non ritorno, interessi al 7%.....ricordo che sono insostenibili.

Occhio a Italia e Spagna

Esatto.
Ma sai che ti dico, a questo punto non me ne importa un cazz0.
Che crollassero pure sotto un downgrade di Moody's e con Italia e Spagna tutta Europa & Co.
Chi - se - ne -frega.
Comunque il 7% potrebbe essere il segnale di "smetterla", come il Portogallo è stato il segnale "iniziate".
Boh.
 
Ultima modifica di un moderatore:
Stato
Chiusa ad ulteriori risposte.

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Alto