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Donnerstag, 31. Mai 2012
ECB lets local lenders tap cash
ECB lets local lenders tap cash
Alpha and Eurobank report significant losses in Q1 after debt restructuring
Local banks have officially returned to the European Central Bank cash pool after their capital boost on Monday with 18 billion euros’ worth of bonds from the Hellenic Financial Stability Facility, ECB head Mario Draghi confirmed on Thursday.
The Italian banker also announced that the country’s four main lenders, National, Alpha, Eurobank EFG and Piraeus, would gradually be disengaged from the emergency liquidity assistance (ELA) of the Bank of Greece in association with the Eurosystem.
Last February, due to the private sector involvement (PSI) in the Greek debt restructuring, the ECB had stopped accepting Greek collateral for the supply of liquidity to the country’s banks.
Still, the PSI dealt a major blow to Alpha and Eurobank that they are yet to recover from, as their first-quarter results, issued yesterday, have shown. Alpha, the country’s second-biggest lender, recorded net losses of 107.8 million euros in the January-March period, and Eurobank, Greece’s third-biggest, reported losses of 236 million. In the same quarter last year, Alpha had posted net profits of 10.5 million euros, while Eurobank had registered losses of 5 million.
Both banks attributed the severe deterioration of their finances to the “deep economic recession,” as Eurobank said in a statement, after reporting a 9 percent increase in provisions on a yearly basis, to 356 million euros. “Impairment losses on loans amounted to 320.7 million euros,” announced Alpha, which is a rise of 23.2 percent from the first quarter of 2011.
Regarding the PSI process, the man who negotiated it on the part of Greece’s private creditors, Charles Dallara, reiterated on Thursday that the Greek restructuring cannot be repeated for Spain.
“Greece was unique. The size of the Spanish economy is too large for a private sector involvement,” the head of the Institute of International Finance told Dutch newspaper Het Financieele Dagblad.
ekathimerini.com , Thursday May 31, 2012 (22:39)
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Ach so,ob man bei einem PSi als Kleinanleger ausgeweidet wird, hat nun nur noch mit der Groesse des Landes zu tun. Es ist also unverhaeltmaessig die Privaten bei Spanien zu involvieren, aber legitim dies den Steuerzahlern quasi über den official sektor aufzubuerden und bei kleinen Ländern wie Griechenland umgekehrt? Ich glaube die drehen nun alle durch, verkehrte Welt...kannst Du gleich mal die Aussage vom IWF für einen Schriftsatz kopieren. Aber vermutlich liegts an den Dokus der Spanienbonds...haben die nicht schon Cacs....???Dann hier leider keine Cram Down law...?
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