Greece sells
1.3 bln euros in T-bills
Greece sold 1.3 billion ($1.7 billion) euros of treasury bills and its
financing costs rose for the first time this year after general elections failed
to yield a clear winner capable of forming a government.
Greece sold the 26-week bills today to yield 4.69 percent, up from 4.55
percent at the previous auction on April 10. Investors requested 2.6 times the
amount sold compared with 2.62 times previously, the Athens-based Public Debt
Management Agency said.
Greek political leaders are meeting for a second day to try to form a
government after New Democracy’s Antonis Samaras, who won the most seats in
Parliament, said he couldn’t forge a coalition. The stalemate is fueling
investor concerns about the country’s ability to stick to the terms of its
European Union bailout and remain in the single currency.
“With another round of new elections by June looking to be a reasonably high
probability, the political uncertainty in Greece will remain a big issue for
some time now,” Deutsche Bank AG strategists Jim Reid and Colin Tan wrote in a
note to investors today. “It’s also inevitable that there will be much debate
about Greece’s future within the eurozone.”
The attempt to form a government now passes to Alexis Tsipras, the head of
Syriza. Tsipras ran on a pledge to overturn Greece’s bailout, helping Syriza
emerge as the country’s second- most voted party. He has said he will seek to
form a coalition with other parties that favor reversing the 130-billion-euro
bailout, the country’s second aid package, which came after Greece carried out
the biggest debt restructuring in history.
Citigroup Inc. said on Monday that the election outcome increases the risk of
Greece leaving the euro by the end of 2013 to as high as 75 percent.
Treasury bill sales are the only source of private finance Greece relies on
after the country received the two rescue packages from the EU and International
Monetary Fund. Interim Prime Minister Lucas Papademos in March secured the
second package, after private creditors wrote down about 100 billion euros of
their bond holdings. [Bloomberg] |
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