Running out
of options to keep his country afloat, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
ordered local governments to move their funds to the central bank.
Greek bonds
fell after the move, pushing three-year yields to the highest since the
nation’s debt restructuring in 2012. The order was questioned by local
officials and slammed by the leading opposition party.
The decree
to confiscate reserves now held in commercial banks and transfer them to the
central bank could raise about 2 billion euros ($2.15 billion), according to
two people familiar with the decision. The move, reminiscent of step that
cash-strapped Argentina has taken over the past decade, shows how time is
running out for Tsipras, a point made by European officials who addressed the
matter at IMF meetings in Washington in recent days.
“Central
government entities are obliged to deposit their cash reserves and transfer
their term deposit funds to their accounts at the Bank of Greece,” according to
the decree issued Monday on a government website. The “regulation is submitted
due to extremely urgent and unforeseen needs.”
A default
on the country’s 313 billion euros of obligations and a euro exit would be
traumatic for the currency area and plunge Greece into a major crisis, European
Central Bank governing council member Christian Noyer told French newspaper Le
Figaro in an interview published Monday.
Just Enough
Greece’s
three-year yield jumped 183 basis points, or 1.93 percentage points, to 28.7
percent as of 5 p.m. London time. Credit-default swaps suggested about an 81
percent chance of Greece being unable to repay its debt in five years, compared
with about 67 percent at the start of March, according to CMA data.
The new
funds may be just enough for salaries and a 770 million-euro payment to the IMF
due on May 12, the people said.
The move is
a sign of the “dire liquidity situation for the Greek financial system as the
government pools all liquidity available,” said Gianluca Ziglio, executive
director of fixed-income research at Sunrise Brokers LLP in London. The “next
step may be forcing all public-sector entities, including public-sector
companies to do the same,” he said.
The Athens
city council and the union of municipalities and communities in Greece will
convene tomorrow to debate the order.
George
Papanikolaou, mayor of the Athens suburb of Glyfada said that local officials
have “a responsibility to serve our citizens and improve their living
standards.”
‘Internal Default’
Glyfada has
cash reserves of about 16 million euros, he said in an interview. Greece’s main
opposition party decried the seizure.
“The
deadlock that’s been brought on by the government can’t be paid for by using
the wealth of the Greek taxpayer and through an internal default,” Kostas
Karagounis, spokesman for the New Democracy party, said in a statement.
Argentina’s
President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner in 2008 nationalized about $24 billion
of pension fund assets held in 10 private plans as her government struggled to
find financing. The government justified the move as protecting retirement
savings from the vagaries of the market.
Then in
2010 and again in 2012, Fernandez rewrote the central bank’s charter to allow
the government to use foreign reserves for its own debt spending and payments.
Budget Targets
Greece and
its creditors remained at loggerheads with time running out. The sides haven’t
even set 2015 budget targets, let alone policies to meet them, an official
representing creditors said Monday, asking not to be named as talks aren’t
public. A spokesman for the Ministry of Finance declined to comment when
contacted by phone.
European
leaders want Greece to do more to revamp its debt-burdened economy, with
progress to be reviewed on April 24 in Riga, Latvia, when finance ministers
from the currency bloc meet. European Commission Vice President Valdis
Dombrovskis said in an interview in Washington that creditors might need to
wait until mid-May to see what Greece can deliver.
‘Negative
Development’
“The
situation with Greece needs to be resolved soon,” Cypriot Finance Minister
Harris Georgiades said in a Bloomberg Television interview Monday. “It would be
a negative development if no progress is made at the meeting in Riga.”
That
message was echoed by the Finance Ministry in Germany, Greece’s biggest country
creditor.
“The
coordination process must pick up considerable momentum and the responsibility
for that lies with the Greek government,” ministry spokeswoman Friederike von
Tiesenhausen said in Berlin.
Greek
officials, including Deputy Prime Minister Yannis Dragasakis, remained defiant
over the weekend, saying the government won’t betray its electoral promises and
worsen the pain that came from previous austerity measures.
While
“so-called” partners, including unidentified IMF officials, want to “blackmail”
Greece into adopting measures that would hurt the working class, “we won’t
betray the people’s mandate,” Energy Minister Panagiotis Lafazanis said,
according to an interview published Sunday in Athens-based Real News newspaper.
(Πηγή:
bloomberg.com)
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