Showing posts with label financial rescue plan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial rescue plan. Show all posts

Monday, May 10, 2010

Europa zahlt teuer für Illusionen und Versäumnisse: Kommentar zur versuchten Rettung der Währungsunion

Photobucket
Bild: NZZ Online

NZZ ONLINE: Um eine Währungsunion zu bewahren, die wohl kaum zu retten ist, greifen Europas Politiker tief in die Tasche und beugen sämtliche Regeln. Ob die Übung gelingen wird, darauf mag man hoffen, man darf aber auch daran zweifeln.

Man wähnt sich an den Höhepunkt der Finanz- und Wirtschaftskrise erinnert, als in den USA und im Rahmen der G-20 die Summen von Massnahmenpaketen nicht hoch genug ausfallen konnten, um die Märkte von der Entschlossenheit der Politiker zur Krisenbewältigung zu überzeugen.

Das in der Nacht zum Montag von den EU-Finanzministern verabschiedete Massnahmenpaket zur Stabilisierung der Finanzmärkte soll mit dem Preisschild von insgesamt 750 Milliarden Euro wohl genau diese Botschaft aussenden, auch wenn dies eine Höchstgrenze darstellt und die Hoffnung besteht, nie auch nur annähernd so viel wirklich einsetzen zu müssen. Der grösste Teil Last tragen dabei die 16 in der Euro-Währungsunion zusammengefassten Länder. >>> Von Walter Meier | Montag, 10. Mai 2010

NZZ Video anschauen: «Die Bazooka wurde herausgeholt» >>>

NZZ ONLINE: Gigantisches Bollwerk zum Schutz des Euro: EU und IMF beschliessen Rettungspaket von 750 Milliarden >>> tsf. | Montag, 10. Mai 2010

FINANCIAL TIMES: EU buys itself time: In the end, there was no choice. Faced with an existential threat, the European Union has demonstrated that it can act fast if necessary. European leaders deserve respect for finally getting ahead of the situation. >>> Wolfgang Münchau | Monday, May 10, 2010

NZZ ONLINE: Die Börsenparty ist schon vorbei: Ernüchterung nach der EuphorieDas Nothilfepaket für den Euro-Raum hat am Montag für Jubelstimmung an den Börsen gesorgt. Nach nur einem Tag legt sich die Euphorie bereits wieder. In Tokyo drehten die Kurse nach einem guten Start ins Minus. Auch in Europa ist das Feuerwerk vorüber. >>> tsf. | Dienstag, 11. Mai 2010

Friday, April 30, 2010

Fresh Hopes of Greek Aid Lift Euro

THE TELEGRAPH: The euro extended gains against the dollar on Friday as fresh hopes of aid for Greece eased fears about Athens' ability to reduce it massive deficit.



By mid-morning, the single currency was trading above $1.33, up from a one-year low against the dollar of $1.31 hit earlier in the week following downgrades on Greek, Portuguese and Spanish debt.

Stock markets in Germany and France also edged higher as investors took heart at speculation that talks on a rescue loan should be completed in the next few days after it seemed Germany had accepted it must act quickly to support a bail-out. >>> | Friday, April 30, 2010

Friday, April 23, 2010

Greece Calls for Activation of Financial Rescue Package

Photobucket
Prime Minister George Papandreou announces in a televised address on Friday from the island of Kastelorizo that Greece has requested international bailout funds. Photograph: The New York Times

THE NEW YORK TIMES: ATHENS — Describing his country’s economy as “a sinking ship,” the Greek prime minister formally requested an international bailout on Friday, an unprecedented step that will test the bonds of the European Union.

In a nationally televised address, Prime Minister George Papandreou said two waves of austerity measures introduced by the government over the past few months “had failed to convince the markets” that Greece would get its finances under control or be able to avert defaulting on a mountain of debt.

“There is the risk of the sacrifices of the Greek people being lost as rates of borrowing continue to rise,” he said, speaking from the Aegean island of Kastellorizo.

“The time has come for us to ask our partners in the E.U. to activate the mechanism we formulated together,” he said, referring to an emergency aid package arranged two weeks ago. The plan foresees up to €30 billion, or $40 billion, in loans from Greece’s euro-zone partners, as well as up to €15 billion from the International Monetary Fund.

The activation of the E.U.-I.M.F. rescue plan, Mr. Papandreou said, “will send a strong message to the markets that the E.U. is not playing their game and will not leave its currency at risk.”

The announcement means that funding from the I.M.F. can be expedited once the board of the fund has approved the terms. The fund is expected to provide €12 billion, according to E.U. officials.

“We are prepared to move expeditiously on this request,” Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the I.M.F. managing director, said in a statement issued in Washington. >>> Niki Kitsantonis and Matthew Saltmarsh | Friday, April 23, 2010

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Rescue Plan for Greek Economy Is Thrown Into Doubt Amid Claims It Breaches the Maastricht Treaty

MAIL ONLINE: The Greek rescue operation was thrown into doubt yesterday after a German academic said he was planning to launch a court challenge.

Joachim Starbatty, a leading economist and professor at Tuebingen University, said that Athens’s aid package breached the European Union’s Maastricht Treaty.

The move came amid renewed market jitters over whether Greece will actually receive the planned £40billion bailout.

A leading member of the European Central Bank added to nerves by warning that soaring government debt in the region could have ‘severe consequences’ for the stability of the euro. >>> Sam Fleming | Thursday, April 15, 2010

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Political Risk Looms for Merkel: Greece Aid Promise Spurs Grumbling Ahead of Key State Vote for Ruling Coalition

Photobucket
Jürgen Rüttgers, conservative premier of North Rhine-Westphalia, campaigns ahead of a vote that will test Germany's ruling center-right alliance. Photograph: The Wall Street Journal

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: BERLIN—Europe's ever-louder promises of help for Greece may have calmed financial markets for now, but they pose a problem for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who faces growing criticism at home as her resistance to a Greek bailout softens.

Ms. Merkel's center-right coalition will be tested in crucial regional elections on May 9 that could wipe out its thin majority in Germany's upper house of parliament, making it harder for the government to pass its major economic policies into law.

Loaning taxpayer money to Greece at a time when German authorities are strapped for cash to maintain schools and roads at home could potentially add to broader voter dissatisfaction with the performance of the ruling coalition, political analysts say.

So far the election campaign in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany's most populous state, has centered on domestic issues including jobs, education and the appeal and flaws of local candidates. Opinion pollsters say Greece isn't playing a major role. But the center-right, which is lagging in polls, can't afford extra controversy, analysts say.

"If Greece is bailed out shortly before the election, it could lead to an awkward debate for Merkel, with voters questioning why there's money for Greece but not for them," says Gero Neugebauer, a political scientist at Berlin's Free University.

Ms. Merkel's conservative Christian Democrats and their junior coalition partners, the pro-business Free Democrats, who hold a governing majority in North Rhine-Westphalia, are lagging in opinion polls, which show them with about 45% of the vote. >>> Markus Walker | Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Monday, April 12, 2010

An Aid Package in the Billions: Merkel's Bluff Called in Poker over Greece

Photobucket
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at an EU summit in Brussels on March 25. Photograph: Spiegel Online International

SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: The European Union has hammered out a rescue plan for Greece. If Greece goes belly up, Germany will have to fork over 8 billion euros to the relief effort. The government doesn't want to hear about having "buckled." But there's no doubt that Angela Merkel's days as "Madame Non" are behind her.

Christopher Steegmans, spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel, decided that the best defense would be to go on the offensive. In a press conference held in Berlin on Monday, he declared that the state of the European Union's decision on whether to help Greece was "unchanged" -- lest anyone have a chance to claim the opposite beforehand. As he described it, discussions about the proposed €30 billion ($40.8 billion) rescue package for the crisis-plagued county were only about "hammering out technical details" but the time for talking about last resorts had yet to arrive. "The fact that the fire extinguisher is on the wall," he stated, "says absolutely nothing about the likelihood of its being used."

In other words: There's no reason to get excited. There's nothing to see here. Go on about your business, please.

But something about his hasty and unprompted justification elicited the feeling that something just wasn't right. Hadn't something happened? Hadn't Angela Merkel earned the moniker of "Madame Non" just a few weeks ago among EU heads of state and governments for being such a hard-nosed negotiator and blocking all moves to quickly provide the cash-strapped Greeks with some financial shots in the arm? And hasn't the conversation suddenly turned to very concrete sums running into the billions of euros that Berlin can use to give Athens a hand? 'Buckled?' >>> Philipp Wittrock | Monday, April 12, 2010
Euro Rallies On €30 Billion Greek Rescue

TIMES ONLINE: The euro surged to a one-month high and stock markets in Europe and Asia rallied today as traders welcomed a €30 billion (£26.5 billion) loans package for Greece, agreed by the currency's member countries to help the country tackle its debt crisis.

The euro surged to $1.3691 against the dollar, its highest level since mid-March, although concerns about the long-term nature of Greece's debt burden and worries about how the loans package would be implemented limited its gains.

The euro later dropped to $1.3574. Having fallen off sharply last week, it closed in New York on Friday at $1.3497.

"The euro is firmer as traders took heart from the Sunday announcement of the aid package for Greece,” said Daisuke Karakama, a currency analyst at Mizuho Corporate Bank. >>> Miles Costello, David Charter, Brussels | Monday, April 12, 2010

Thursday, February 11, 2010


Germany and France Strike Deal to Rescue Greece from Debt Crisis

THE TELEGRAPH: Germany and France have agreed a deal to “safeguard financial stability” for Greece and the wider eurozone following crisis talks at a European Union summit.

Political agreement on general principles was thrashed out during tense negotiations between Germany, France, Greece and the European Central Bank on Thursday morning.

”There is an agreement on the Greek situation. We will communicate now the agreement to the other leaders,” Mr Van Rompuy said.

Jose Manuel Barroso, the European Commission President, said that Greece would receive support in return for and aligned to progress on sweeping austerity cuts.

”Greece needs to do whatever is necessary, including additional measures, to ensure that the deficit reduction targets for this year are met,” said an official. ”Secondly, in that case the euro zone members should be ready to safeguard financial stability in the euro zone area as a whole.”

The EU summit was delayed to buy time as Germany and France brokered frantic negotiations with the ECB and Commission to save the eurozone by putting together a rescue package for Greece. >>> Bruno Waterfield in Brussels | Thursday, February 11, 2010

Markets Target Euro as Doubt Swirls Over Greece

TIMES ONLINE: The leaders of France and Germany agreed today to work together to tackle the Greek debt crisis but failed to reassure jittery European financial markets.

Both the euro and Greek government bonds enjoyed a moment of respite after reports that the new EU President, Herman Van Rompuy, had brokered a bailout deal in a meeting this morning with President Sarkozy, Chancellor Angela Merkel and Jean-Claude Trichet, head of the European Central Bank.

“Euro area member states will take determined and co-ordinated action if needed to safeguard stability in the euro area as a whole," Mr Van Rompuy told reporters in Brussels, reading from a statement agreed by all 16 eurozone states. "The Greek government has not requested any financial support."

But as the EU's 27 leaders went into summit talks this afternoon, the lack of detail began to weigh with market traders looking for action - and hard cash - not words. The euro, which has lost some 10 per cent in value against the dollar since late 2009, initially rose slightly on Mr Van Rompuy's statement to $1.3755 before falling back $1.3688.

"It just looks like a pledge of solidarity, but no actual details of a program which is why the euro is still in the doldrums,” said Neil Mackinnon, global macro strategist at VTB Capital. “Unless, there’s further news out later this afternoon, the markets will consider the EU summit response as a disappointment." >>> Philippe Naughton and David Charter in Brussels | Thursday, February 11, 2010

Germany, Forced to Buoy Greece, Rues Euro Shift

THE NEW YORK TIMES: BERLIN — As Europe edges toward emergency guarantees to stem market panic over one of the most profligate members of the euro bloc, the country that the region turns to for leadership, Germany, is suffering from growing doubts about the European experiment it long championed.

Reluctant German leaders now find themselves forced to help Greece remain solvent, or risk watching markets attack one weak member after the next, from Portugal to Spain to Italy, threatening the stability of the euro, the European currency Germany fought so hard to create.

On Thursday, European leaders meeting in Belgium announced they had agreed to a political statement to try to reassure bond markets and head off the crisis, and said that finance ministers would work through the details next week.

Earlier, in a conference call with the finance ministers from the 16 countries that use the euro and the president of the European Central Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet, officials said that some action had to be taken to calm markets and take pressure off Greece. It appeared clear that Germany, with an assist from France, would have to take the lead. “The Germans are the only ones with deep pockets,” said Daniel Gros, director of the Center for European Policy Studies in Brussels. “If it was just Greece, they could consider letting them go down the drain, but it threatens the entire euro zone.”

Berlin has been mostly silent on the matter. That is partly to put pressure on Greece, as civil servants struck there Wednesday to oppose cutbacks that the government has promised in order to rein in its enormous budget deficit.

But a bailout will be politically awkward for Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government. It is precisely the financial millstone that opponents warned about when Germany gave up its treasured mark, a move that a majority of people here, in contrast to their political leaders, opposed at the time.

“If the German government would just transfer money to Greece, people in Germany would feel their worst fears had come true,” said Thomas Mayer, chief economist at Deutsche Bank. >>> Nicholas Kulish | Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Watch New York Times video 1: Financial Crisis Deepens in Greece >>>

Watch New York Times video 2: Greeks Strike Amid Financial Crisis >>>

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Bush, Despite Being Part of the Problem, Hails Financial Rescue Plan

President Bush on ''a pivotal moment'' in the US economy >>>

BBC: The US is set to take "unprecedented measures" to tackle the crisis gripping US financial markets, President George W Bush has said.

But he warned the moves, which include spending of billions of dollars to buy up bad debts, would risk "a significant amount" of taxpayers' money.

Legislation for the plan will be pushed through as soon as possible, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said.

The US took action after a week of turmoil on global money markets. Bush Hails Financial rescue Plan >>> | September 19, 2008

The Dawning of a New Dark Age – Paperback (US) Barnes & Noble >>>
The Dawning of a New Dark Age – Hardcover (US) Barnes & Noble >>>