The ongoing negotiation between the government of Greece and the IIF (Institute of International Finance that includes representatives of private banks and investors) has come to a standstill over debt talk. The bone of contention is a fresh demand that Germany and the IMF (International Monetary Fund) is trying to clamp on private creditors of Greek government bonds. As both sides are refusing to budge from their positions, the issue of Greece’s outstanding debt remains unanswered.
Under the new demand, private bondholders are expected to accept lower interest rates on their Greek bonds. Plus, they are supposed to swap their existing bonds with new 30-year bonds with below 4 percent interest rate. Experts are of the opinion that for private investors this could amount to 60%-70% loss on Greek bonds.
An agreement on debt talk was expected to be reached by this Monday. The intention was to give lenders to Greece enough time to arrange for second rescue package of €130 billion prior to EU’s next Summit scheduled on January 30. With participation of private creditors mandatory for receiving further financial aid, the latest setback has cast a doubt on how Greece would come up with €14.5 billion debt repayment on 20th March.
Finding a solution to the latest crisis is important for leaders of EU. This would not only bring down Greece debt on a sustainable path, but would also have a positive impact on eurozone nations as a whole.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Greece debt talk suffers a fresh setback
Labels:
debt talk,
Eurozone nations,
Germany,
Greece,
Greece economy,
Greek bonds,
IIF,
IMF,
rescue package
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