Greece plans an orderly exit out of the Eurozone
according to two sources close to Mr. Papademos, Greek Prime Minister, who spoke
on condition of anonymity earlier today.
The sources confirmed that plans are ready to return
to a legacy currency given the current circumstances and that such exit would
be dealt with, quote “in as orderly a fashion as possible” unquote.
The plan does not come as a surprise but the timing
may be surprising to most members and investors while negotiations about a
severe haircut with the IIF are still ongoing.
Last year’s announcement by Mr. Papandreou, former Prime Minister, that a referendum would be held to decide whether or not to stay in the Eurozone may have set the precedent for developing a plan that apparently will be set in motion.
The stalemate in negotiations about the depth of the
haircut on some of the outstanding Greek sovereign debt, said to be capped at
65-70% while Greece is looking for more concessions, may have set things in
motion as the ultimate alternative.
Mrs. Merkel, German Chancellor, reiterated that she
was willing to protect the integrity of the Eurozone; she also made it clear
that her willingness to bail out Greece have limits.
Germany is willing to combine the temporary EFSF
(European Financial Stability Fund) with the permanent ESM or European
Stability Mechanism but at the same time is trying to build firewalls around
Spain and Italy to limit the Greek contagion from going any further.
That means that Germany is willing to let the Trojan
Horse go in order to protect the integrity and credibility of the euro as an
international currency.
Greece obviously finds itself between a rock and a
hard place and whichever decision is ultimately made, the pain will be the
same.
An exit, no matter how orderly this can be executed,
will mean a 25% devaluation of their legacy currency. Staying in the Eurozone
will mean more austerity packages as imposed by the ECB/IMF as part of the
bailout package.
The latter is strongly opposed by the Greek voters, as
seen with strikes and protests for several months now.
A Greek exit strategy will probably not be announced
officially until early March when the EU finance ministers meet.
More at Greek Debt Solution Likely to Trigger Credit Default Swaps
and prepare-for-greece-to-leave-eurozone.html
and greeks-reject-german-plan-for-eu-budget.html
More at Greek Debt Solution Likely to Trigger Credit Default Swaps
and prepare-for-greece-to-leave-eurozone.html
and greeks-reject-german-plan-for-eu-budget.html
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