I Get By With Alittle Help From My Friends....
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
I Get By With Alittle Help From My Friends....

Dinar Outcast


You are not connected. Please login or register

Greece raises euro1.95bn in T-Bill sale

Go down  Message [Page 1 of 1]

1Greece raises euro1.95bn in T-Bill sale Empty Greece raises euro1.95bn in T-Bill sale Tue Apr 20, 2010 10:40 am

littlekracker



Greece raises euro1.95bn in T-Bill sale

Under heavy pressure, Greece raises euro1.95bn in treasury bill sale

DEREK GATOPOULOS
AP News

Apr 20, 2010 09:16 EDT

Greece has raised euro1.95 billion ($2.62 billion) in a 13-week treasury bill auction that was more than four times oversubscribed, the public debt management agency said Tuesday.

But the good news on the debt front was offset by figures showing a spike in unemployment, with 62,000 jobs lost in January as Greece remained locked in recession.

The auction was aimed at shaving the country's crucial borrowing requirement for May, as Athens mulls whether to use a joint eurozone-International Monetary Fund rescue package. Talks with European and IMF officials on the package are due to start in Athens Wednesday.

Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said he would travel to the United States Friday to attend an IMF meeting, and would hold talks with U.S. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn.

Struggling to cope with a debt pile of euro300 billion ($406 billion), Greece needs to borrow about euro54 billion this year alone and has a projected public debt of more than 120 percent of gross domestic product through 2011, before easing slightly the following year.

Greece has been promised euro30 billion ($40.3 billion) in standby loans from eurozone countries this year, but will now begin negotiations for a potential "multiyear program."

George Provopoulos, the governor of the Bank of Greece, suggested markets remain unsettled by Greece's large debt and borrowing needs.

"In the coming year, our borrowing needs will continue to be high — as they are this year — and this creates the perception that the public debt will continue to follow an upward trend instead of being stabilized," he said, adding that promised help from the eurozone and IMF was key to "restoring credibility."

Tuesday's auction sought to raise euro1.5 billion ($2 billion) and was oversubscribed by 4.61 times, with euro6.921 billion in offers, the debt management agency said. It also accepted euro450 million in non-competitive bids, it said. The yield for the 13-week bills stood at 3.65 percent, compared to the 1.67 percent yield from a similar bill issued in January that was oversubscribed by 3.23 times.

"The message of today's auction is that we raised euro1.95 billion, so our borrowing requirements for May have fallen below euro10 billion — and that's very important," Finance Minister Papaconstantinou said during a news conference.

Last week, Greece successfully raised euro1.56 billion in six and 12-month treasury bill auctions, but at punishingly high rates. The yield for the 12-month bill sold last Tuesday stood at 4.85 percent compared to 2.2 percent for the previous issue in January, while the yield for the 6-month bills was 4.55 percent compared to 1.38 in a similar auction in January.

Greece's cost of borrowing has spiraled in recent weeks. The interest rate gap, or spread, between Greek 10-year government bonds and their benchmark German equivalent on Tuesday hit another record high at 4.74 percentage points. Greece is struggling to borrow at acceptable cost so it can avoid default or asking for a eurozone bailout.

Data released Tuesday showed that unemployment hit a five-year high of 11.3 percent in January, when the total number of unemployed people reached 567,132. In December 2009 unemployment was 10.2 percent, and 9.4 percent in January 2009. Weak economic growth prospects lead some analysts to say that even if Greece gets a bailout this year, it will be difficult to pay its huge debt load over the coming years.

Wednesday's talks with the IMF and European Central Bank officials in Athens aim at hammering out details of the rescue package announced in Brussels earlier this week.

Talks are expected to last at least 10 days, Papaconstantinou said, adding that not all consultations may be completed during that time.

The government has insisted it doesn't want to activate the rescue mechanism and prefers to tap the market for its borrowing needs. But as its borrowing costs spiral, that option becomes increasingly difficult in the long run.

Papaconstantinou stressed that the fact the package is available means Greece will not face the possibility of default.

"If our country activates the mechanism, the approval will be very rapid. So there is no way that Greece will be left out on a limb in May — either through borrowing on the markets or through the support mechanism."

___

Associated Press writers Elena Becatoros and Nicholas Paphitis contributed to this report.

Source: AP News

Back to top  Message [Page 1 of 1]

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum