Friday, June 3, 2011

EU, IMF Wind Up Greek Economy Review as Second Bailout Readied

Bloomberg
June 3, 2011

European Union and International Monetary Fund officials will today complete a review of Greece’s plan for 78 billion euros ($113 billion) in asset sales and austerity measures as they prepare the nation’s second bailout in little more than a year.

The assessment caps a week when Greece’s fiscal crisis worsened enough for Moody’s Investors Service to raise the probability of a default to 50 percent. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou will discuss the findings at 3 p.m. on a visit to his Luxembourg counterpart Jean-Claude Juncker, who leads the group of euro-area finance ministers.

“The medium-term plan is largely completed and some technical details remain,” George Petalotis, Papandreou’s spokesman, said yesterday. “There were no major hiccups.”

Papandreou is promising 6.4 billion euros of spending cuts this year, another 22 billion euros up to 2015, and 50 billion euros in sales of assets including Hellenic Telecommunications Organization SA and Public Power Corp SA. The pledges are key to securing a fifth payment of loans under last year’s 110 billion- euro EU-led rescue as well as more financing over the next two years as borrowing costs lock Greece out of markets.

Moody’s downgraded Greece to Caa1, on a par with Cuba, and raised the nation’s risk of default on June 1 after policy makers considered asking investors to reinvest in new Greek debt when existing bonds mature. The move prompted Greek 10-year bonds to fall to the lowest since January.

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