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Greece faces hurdles amid hints of accepting terms.

ANALYSTS SAY THERE IS LACK OF WILL AMONG ALL PARTIES TO REACH A DEAL

- By Banking Editor

TThe government is under domestic pressure to find a solution. However, the terms of a new bailout programme are likely to be harsher than those on the table last week.”

Eirini Tsekeridou | Fixed income analyst at Julius Baer

he Greek government’s overtures to its creditors yesterday indicating its willingnes­s to accept many of the terms of a bailout package that it had rejected earlier has raised the hopes of a new deal, averting the crisis.

Despite some ongoing deliberati­ons between Greece and its creditors well past the deadline to pay the €1.6 billion (Dh6.5 billion) loan to the IMF, some analysts see numerous hurdles on the way to a new deal between Greece and its creditors.

As widely expected Greece did not pay the €1.6 billion to the IMF on Tuesday but asked for an extension of the deadline which the IMF said it will consider. Greece is not in default but “in arrears”, limiting it from using the IMF’s resources until the arrears are cleared, a process which could take weeks.

In a surprise move, late on Tuesday before the official expiry of its second bailout programme, Greece asked the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) for a €29 billion loan to cover its domestic and external debt obligation­s for the next two years, a restructur­ing of its outstandin­g debt and an extension of the current programme until this loan is in place.

Although no extension is granted yet, the Eurogroup is clearly considerin­g the new proposals and the new terms of the bailout which analysts say could be harsher than the previous ones.

Obligation­s

“It is unlikely that the IMF will grant an extension to Greece’s missed deadline. While the other official creditors have the right to ask for an accelerati­on of their obligation­s, it might not be in their interest to do so. As capital controls are aggravatin­g the situation for the Greek population, the government is under domestic pressure to find a solution. However, the terms of a new bailout programme are likely to be harsher than those on the table last week,” said Eirini Tsekeridou, fixed income analyst at Julius Baer.

There remain considerab­le hurdles to any comprehens­ive new deal. Officials from the European Union, Germany and the IMF, among others, remain deeply sceptical about whether the Greek government would follow through on commitment­s to the kinds of changes the creditors are seeking. And there has been little progress in addressing the issue underlying Greece’s troubles: whether and how the country should be granted any reduction in its debt payments.

Sceptics say the new round of discussion­s that has opened between Greece and its creditors could at best postpone the inevitable exit of Greece from the euro because of the visible reluctance Greece to keep to its commitment­s and increasing frustratio­n among its creditors. Some even compare the current round of negotiatio­ns to those ahead of the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

Lehman default

“There is exactly the same feeling into the air as before the Lehman default. I remember being almost alone in thinking Lehman would fail to secure their life, but market and Fed kept seeing solutions last minute,” said Steen Jakobsen, Saxo Bank’s Chief Economist.

Some analysts even suspect that the creditors along with Germany want a leaner and more discipline­d Eurogroup that supports a stable currency.

“It could be reasonably argued that there is growing evidence to suggest that there is a campaign to drive Greece out of the Eurozone. Much of this, it could be said, is being driven by Angela Merkel’s German government, which it would seem is seeking to hold Greece up as an example to other peripheral Eurozone member states.

“The firm message coming from Merkel, who has keen and intuitive sense of the public mood in Germany, appears to be that to remain in the Eurozone, countries must come into line, accept all the terms and conditions, or face the consequenc­es,” said Nigel Green chief executive of deVere.

 ?? AP ?? Desperate times Pensioners reach for numbers to enter a bank in Athens yesterday. About 1,000 bank branches were ordered by the government to reopen yesterday to help desperate pensioners without ATM cards to obtain up to €120 from their retirement...
AP Desperate times Pensioners reach for numbers to enter a bank in Athens yesterday. About 1,000 bank branches were ordered by the government to reopen yesterday to help desperate pensioners without ATM cards to obtain up to €120 from their retirement...

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