The "Last" last chance, after the last one and before the next one, for Greece
By Jan Strupczewski and John
O'Donnell and Luke Baker
European policymakers are working on
"last chance" options to bring Greece's debts down and keep it in the euro zone, with the
ECB and national central banks looking at taking significant losses on the
value of their bond holdings, officials said.
Private
creditors have already suffered big writedowns on their Greek bonds under a
second bailout for Athens sealed in February, but this was not enough to put
the country back on the path to solvency and a urther restructuring is on the
cards.
The
latest aim is to reduce Greece's debts by a further 70-100 billion euros,
several senior euro zone officials familiar with the discussions told Reuters,
cutting its debts to a more manageable 100 percent of annual economic output.
This
would require the European Central Bank and national central banks to take
losses on their holdings of Greek government bonds, and could also involve
national governments also accepting losses.
The
favored option is for the ECB and national central banks to carry the cost, but
that could mean that some banks and the ECB itself having to be recapitalized,
the officials said.
The
ECB declined comment on Friday.
Planning
is in the early stages and no formal discussions have yet taken place. But
there is an awareness that Greece is way off-track in improving
its finances and that aggressive action is needed to keep the country inside
the euro zone.
Officials
described a further restructuring of Greek debt as a last chance to restore the
country to solvency, with the agreed goal of cutting its debt to 120 percent of
GDP by 2020 already seen as far beyond reach.
The
International Monetary Fund, a party to the two rescue packages Greece has so
far received, is in favor of overhauling Athens's official-sector loans - a
process policymakers refer to as "OSI" or official-sector
involvement.
"If
I were to assign a percentage chance to OSI in Greece happening, I would say 70
percent," one euro zone official involved in the deliberations told
Reuters.