Titoli di Stato area Euro GRECIA Operativo titoli di stato - Cap. 2

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Attualmente non credo in un default greco o meglio non voglio crederci ho preferito accorciare un po'
ra ho 75 k della marzo e 34 della maggio perdendo 1 k di nominale ovviamente

Entro maggio potrai uscire dal ginepraio Grecia quindi calma e gesso...
Se come dice Gaudente arrivassero a quotare 5 basta mediare, ma solo se arriva a 5.
 
UPDATE 1-Merkel majority in euro vote hangs in balance
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Reuters - 27/09/2011 18:43:43
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* Bundestag to approve bolstered euro rescue scheme
* Merkel may need centre-left opposition's help
* Her political future hangs on level of support

By Stephen Brown and Noah Barkin

BERLIN, Sept 27 (Reuters) -


Germany's Angela Merkel has convinced some rebels in her party to back new powers for the euro zone's rescue fund in a vote on Thursday, but may still have to rely on the opposition to get the measure passed, in what would be a humiliating setback.

The vote in the Bundestag lower house of parliament is the biggest test of Merkel's leadership since she came to power six years ago.

While passage of the bill is not in doubt thanks to support from opposition parties like the Social Democrats (SPD) and Greens, the way her own lawmakers vote will determine whether Merkel retains her authority until the next election in 2013.

"The whole world is watching this vote," the chancellor said at a meeting of her conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) and their Bavarian allies, the Christian Social Union (CSU).

In a trial vote taken by lawmakers in her bloc on Tuesday, 11 voted against bolstering the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) and two abstained, according to participants. This looked slightly better for Merkel than the last dry run.

But sources gave conflicting signals about how her junior coalition partners, the Free Democrats (FDP), would vote on Thursday, with "no" vote estimates ranging from two to five, and as many as six abstentions seen.

The government has 330 seats in the 620-seat Bundestag so Merkel can afford no more than 19 rebels if she is to deliver the required 311-seat majority without relying on the opposition.

"Having to reach across the aisle would mean Merkel has lost control of her party and coalition partner," Josef Joffe, editor of the influential German weekly Die Zeit, told Reuters.

Worried cabinet ministers have been scrambling to send out a dual message: that Merkel will muster her own majority and that if she fails to deliver that, the government will survive.

The vote has exposed growing German divisions about using taxpayer money to bail out debt-burdened states like Greece.

"The real question is how this vote affects the German electorate longer-term," Josef Schlarmann, who represents the "Mittelstand" of German industry in the CDU, told Reuters.

"Roughly 80 percent of German voters are against an extension of the euro zone's rescue mechanism, while 80 percent of politicians are for it," he said. "The political establishment and electorate are on a collision course."


TOUGH TALK
European leaders agreed in July to boost the full lending capacity of the EFSF to 440 billion euros and endow it with new powers to buy the bonds of stricken euro zone countries and shore up their banks.

Several countries have already ratified the changes, but crucial votes in other member states like Slovakia loom in the coming weeks.

Markets are looking to the vote in Germany to gauge the appetite in Europe's paymaster for continuing to provide aid to stricken euro zone member states like Greece, Portugal and Ireland, all of which have received multi-billion euro bailouts.

Some members of Merkel's coalition, reeling from a series of regional election setbacks, have adopted a tough line on the bailouts in a bid to lure back disillusioned voters, letting the SPD and Greens portray themselves as defenders of the single currency. (news)
Merkel herself has steered a middle road -- talking tough about sanctioning euro countries that don't implement draconian reforms to cut their debt, while pledging to do all in her power to defend the euro.

Juergen Trittin, a leading lawmaker from the Greens seen as a possible finance minister if his party does well in 2013, told Reuters that if Merkel did not get her own majority it would be "the end of the government". (news)
But even if she suffers a setback in the vote, she would face no obligation to dissolve parliament as many opposition politicians have suggested she should do.

Failure to win on her own terms this week would, however,
raise the risks to Merkel from two other votes in coming months -- on a second rescue package for Greece and on the successor fund to the EFSF, the European Stability Mechanism (ESM).

Complicating the calculus for Thursday's vote has been the growing debate about boosting the EFSF even further, or bringing forward the launch of the ESM to 2012 from 2013.

Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble broached these options at IMF meetings on the weekend, infuriating some in Berlin who are worried the talk could undermine support in the EFSF vote.
 
TIMELINE-Greece's debt crisis
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Reuters - 27/09/2011 18:50:37
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Sept 27 (Reuters) -



Greece votes on a deeply unpopular property tax on Tuesday and a 'yes' would allow international lending inspectors to return to Athens and the release of vital aid. (news)
Here is a timeline of economic events since Prime Minister George Papandreou first sealed a bailout deal in May 2010:
May 2, 2010 - Papandreou says Greece has sealed deal with EU and IMF, opening door to bailout in return for extra budget cuts of 30 billion euros ($43 billion) over three years.

-- Three-year package amounts to 110 billion euros and represents first rescue of a euro zone member.

May 4/5 - Public sector workers stage 48-hour nationwide strike. Three people are killed when a bank is set on fire.

May 6 - Greek parliament approves austerity bill.

May 9 - IMF unanimously approves its part of rescue loans, with 5.5 billion euros being provided immediately.

May 10 - Global policymakers install emergency safety net worth about $1 trillion to bolster international financial markets and prevent Greek crisis from damaging the euro.

-- consists of 440 billion euros in guarantees from euro zone states, plus 60 billion euros in European debt instruments. EU finance ministers say IMF will contribute a further 250 billion euros.

May 18 - Greece receives 14.5 billion euro ($18.7 billion) loan from EU and can repay immediate debt.

July 7 - Greek parliament passes pension reform, key requirement of the EU/IMF deal, which includes raising women's retirement age from 60 to match men at 65.

Aug. 5 - EU and IMF inspectors give Greece green light for fresh 9 billion euro tranche from bailout.

September - IMF says Greece is ahead of schedule in economic reform.

Jan. 2011 - Fitch becomes third ratings agency to cut Greek debt to "junk" status after S&P and Moody's.

Feb. 11 - EU and IMF inspectors approve a fresh tranche of 15 billion euros of bailout funds.

May 11 - EU and IMF inspectors arrive in Athens to press Greece to shore up finances and determine if country will get fifth aid tranche of 12 billion euros.

May 23 - Greece unveils series of privatisations, part of goal to raise 50 billion euros by 2015 to pay down debt.

June 1 - Moody's slashes Greece's credit rating by three notches to move it deeper into junk territory.

June 8 - Greece agrees to 6.48 billion euros of extra austerity measures for 2011 and savings up to 2015 to cut deficits and keep getting aid.

June 13 - Greece becomes country with lowest credit rating in the world after S&P downgrades it by three notches, to CCC from B.

June 17 - Papandreou reshuffles cabinet, firing finance minister. Evangelos Venizelos, Papandreou's main party rival, becomes finance minister. The new cabinet wins confidence vote on June 22.

June 28 - Main labour unions launch 48-hour strike.

June 29 - Papandreou wins parliamentary majority in favour of five-year austerity plan by 155 votes to 138, clearing major hurdle to winning acdcess to new international funding.

-- Euro zone finance ministers approve release of next tranche of emergency loans to Greece on July 2, saying 12 billion euros would be paid by July 15.

-- Greek police clash with protesters outside parliament. About 100 people are injured.

July 8 - IMF approves disbursement of about 3.2 billion euros to help Greece pay debts due this month. This tranche brings IMF disbursements to about 17.4 billion euros.

July 21 - Euro zone leaders agree on second rescue package for Greece with extra 109 billion euros ($157 billion) of government money, plus contribution by private sector bondholders estimated to total as much as 50 billion euros by mid-2014.

Sept. 14 - Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy tell Papandreou it is vital to implement reforms and meet fiscal goals set under July bailout plan.

Sept. 21 - Greece adopts more austerity measures, including cutting high pensions by 20 percent. Puts 30,000 civil servants in "labour reserve" on road to redundancy and extends real estate tax.

-- IMF says crisis increased European banks' exposure by 300 billion euros, and they need to recapitalize to ensure they can weather potential losses.

Sept. 22 - Greek workers stage 24-hour strike forcing transport system to standstill.

Sept. 27 - Greece votes on unpopular property tax to persuade IMF and EU it deserves 8-billion-euro loan it needs to pay October salaries and avoid bankruptcy.

((For an Interactive timeline on Eurozone debt crisis please click on Latest News Timeline | Reuters.co.uk ))
((Euro zone debt crisis in graphics (package) Reuters - Euro zone debt crisis in graphics ))
(Reporting by David Cutler, London Editorial Reference Unit and Renee Maltezou, Athens bureau;)
 
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