The
investors opt for another scattering of the Greek public debt, and their
interest is shot until 22%, Before the lack of advances in the negotiations
between Brussels and the Government from Athens sink now new speculations on
the possible one 'default' of Greece.
Greece would
be getting ready to give one of the most dramatic steps in its recent history:
to declare the suspension of payments if it is not able to reach an agreement
with their international creditors at the end of this same month, according to
Financial Times that mentions informed sources on the positions of the
Government of Alexis Tsipras. The Hellenic Government could retain payments of
2.500 million to the IMF that should carry out in May and June, if an agreement
is not reached, FT informs. On the other hand, the Greek Executive denies to be
getting ready for an unpaid one.
In short,
'Financial Times' he adds that Athens could retain payments of 2.500 million to
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) if an agreement is not reached in the
negotiations on its debt. The Executive led by Syriza has denied that he is
getting ready for an unpaid one, and it highlights that it continues the
negotiations with Brussels. But the circumstances that are appreciated in the
markets already point to the liquidation. The cousin of risk ascends in hardly
one month of 800 to 1.200 basic points and the investors carry to an extreme
the caution again. The result is another scattering of the Greek public debt.
The avalanche of sales shoots the profitability demanded to the Greek debt at
untenable levels. The interest of its voucher to two years already reaches
22%.
The parquet
of Athens is deflated near 20% in less than two months. What demonstrates that
the internal economy of the country is also contagious of the growing fears on
the financing of Greece? After a timidly rising opening, the Greek variable
rent rotates to the drop and he returns to the red numbers. In their backward
he moves away from the 800 points. In less than two months, the Bag of Athens
suffers a next long pole to 20% regarding the registered annual maxima the past
February 25.
The British
newspaper adds that the Hellenic Executive that is being left without funds to
confront the payment of the wages of the public employees and of the state
pensions. We have arrived at the end of the road. . . If the Europeans don't
liberate the cash of the rescue, there is not another alternative" (to the
default), FT publishes mentioning the Greek Government's official's
declarations.
Officially,
however, the Executive of Alexis Tsipras has denied that he is getting ready
for that supposition: "Greece is not getting ready for an unpaid of its
debt", it has pointed out in an official statement the first minister
office, in which assures that "the negotiations are advancing quickly
toward a mutually beneficial" solution.
That the
warning of a possible nonfulfillment of the commitments foreseen for next
months can be a negotiating tactics, it is possible but I find that it is
already too repeated as tactics this reminds me the shepherd's fable that
boring of keeping sheep next to its other partners to amuse he screamed What
the Wolf comes until at the end he/she really came and nobody paid him
attention with what the wolf ate up all the sheep.
Being
plentiful in this sense, the British newspaper points out that other European
governments, annoying for the rhetoric of confrontation of Greece with the Eurozone
for what they describe as a not very serious attitude on the part of its
Government in the negotiations, would have begun also to elaborate contingency
plans. Before the more and more imminent crash of the lying Greek economy.
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