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Showing posts with label Greek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greek. Show all posts

Thursday, March 15, 2012

A Second Greek Bailout Is Approved by Euro Zone Nations

Excerpt from an article in

The New York Times
Thursday, March 15, 2012

A Second Greek Bailout Is Approved by Euro Zone Nations

By STEPHEN CASTLE

LONDON — After months of tortuous and tense negotiations, a second bailout for Greece finally became a reality on Wednesday when euro zone nations formally approved the plan and authorized the release of the first multibillion-euro loan installment.

In a statement, Jean-Claude Juncker, who, as the president of the Eurogroup, leads the finance ministers of the 17 European Union members that use the euro, said the national governments had formally approved Greece’s second rescue, which is valued at 130 billion euros ($170 billion). “All required national and parliamentary procedures have been finalized,” he said.

Finance ministers gave their political seal of approval to the accord earlier in the week, but the announcement on Wednesday signified the end of negotiations that had provoked tensions between Greece and some of its creditors and that periodically had teetered close to failure.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Next Time, Greece May Need New Tactics

Excerpt from an article in

The New York Times
Saturday, March 10, 2012

Next Time, Greece May Need New Tactics

By LANDON THOMAS Jr.

LONDON The Greek government was able to legally strong-arm most of its private bondholders into accepting the debt reduction deal it completed Friday. But next time — and experts predict there will almost certainly be a next time — Greece might have much less leverage.

That’s because as a result of Friday’s deal, the bulk of Athens’s 260.2 billion euros ($341 billion) in remaining government debt will now be held by the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank and the individual European nations that have lent Greece money and contributed to the region’s bailout fund.

Politically, Greece would be hard-pressed to force debt losses on such a formidable international group, the way it did with the private banks and hedge funds that have just been forced to accept a 75 percent loss on their Greek bond holdings. Greece’s main creditors, in effect, are now foreign taxpayers — who are likely to be much less malleable than the private creditors if Greece needs to renegotiate its staggering debt load a year or two down the road.

“From now on, whatever happens in Greece, it will be a matter between Greece and the taxpayers of the rest of the euro area,” said Jacob F. Kirkegaard, an analyst at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.

The final private creditor deal announced Friday was agreed to by nearly 86 percent of the bondholders; the number was expected to rise to 95 percent after Athens invoked a so-called collective action clause forcing others to join in. Without such a deal, Greece had strongly implied, it might default altogether, with no one getting paid. The outcome has enabled Greece to reduce its debt load by just over 100 billion euros, or about $132 billion.

Later in the day, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association ruled that the agreement was nonetheless a technical default by Greece — a ruling that will mean payouts on some insurance contracts, known as credit-default swaps, that various investors had taken out on the privately held Greek debt. Around $70 billion in default swaps on that debt are outstanding, although analysts expect the net payout to end up at only $3.2 billion or so.

Greek Credit-Default Swaps Are Activated

Excerpt from an article in

The New York Times
Saturday, March 10, 2012

Greek Credit-Default Swaps Are Activated 

By PETER EAVIS

Greece's debt restructuring will prompt payouts on credit-default swaps tied to the country's government bonds.

The decision by the International Swaps and Derivatives Association ends months of speculation that a Greek default might not set off the swaps, a result that could have undermined their role as insurance against debt defaults.

"We saw today that the credit-default swap market worked," said the association's chief executive, Robert Pickel. "Market participants expected it to work."

Still, doubts about the instruments' effectiveness may linger. European officials initially shaped the Greek debt restructuring to avoid activating them. The concern is that future restructurings could be arranged to stop swaps from paying out.

"This is the right result, through a very circuitous path," said John Sprow, chief risk officer at Smith Breeden Associates, a fund management firm.

While Greece's debt exchange has been in the works for weeks, the restructuring activated the swaps only after the country made a legal move on Friday.

The Greek government chose to apply so-called collective action clauses, which it had earlier inserted into its bonds registered under Greek law. The deal maximized total debt relief for the country, but it also forced losses on bondholders - a credit event, and therefore a trigger, for the swaps.

Friday, March 9, 2012

ISDA Announces Greece 'Credit Event'

CNBC’s Steve Liesman, Kelly Evans, Bob Pisani & Maria Bartiromo discuss the ISDA announcement that Friday’s Greek bond swap constitutes a “credit event.”

To see the discussion, click the link below:

Greek Default

It’s official!  The Greek government has defaulted!

Probably not many folks are surprised, but it is now official.

For a video, click the link below: