Sun, Feb 26, 2012, 9:18 AM EST - U.S. Markets closed

EU leaders to agree on permanent bailout fund, balanced budget

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By Jan Strupczewski and Luke Baker

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - EU leaders will sign off on a permanent rescue fund for the euro zone at a summit on Monday and are expected to agree on a balanced budget rule in national legislation, with unresolved problems in Greece casting a shadow on the discussions.

The summit - the 17th in two years as the EU battles to resolve its sovereign debt problems - is supposed to focus on creating jobs and growth, with leaders looking to shift the narrative away from politically unpopular budget austerity.

The summit is expected to announce that up to 20 billion euros ($26.4 billion) of unused funds from the EU's 2007-2013 budget will be redirected toward job creation, especially among the young, and will commit to freeing up bank lending to small- and medium-sized companies.

But discussions over the permanent rescue fund, a new 'fiscal treaty' and Greece will dominate the talks.

Negotiations between the Greek government and private bondholders over the restructuring of 200 billion euros of Greek debt made progress over the weekend, but are not expected to conclude before the summit begins at 9:00 a.m. EST.

Until there is a deal between Greece and its private bondholders, EU leaders cannot move forward with a second, 130 billion euro rescue program for Athens, which they originally agreed to at a summit last October.

Instead, they will sign a treaty creating the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), a 500-billion-euro permanent bailout fund that is due to become operational in July, a year earlier than first planned. And they are likely to agree the terms of a 'fiscal treaty' tightening budget rules for those that sign up.

PERMANENT RESCUE FUND

The ESM will replace the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), a temporary fund that has been used to bail out Ireland and Portugal and will help in the second Greek package.

Leaders hope the ESM will boost defenses against the debt crisis, but many - including Italian premier Mario Monti, IMF chief Christine Lagarde and U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner - say it will only do so if its resources are combined with what remains in the EFSF, creating a super-fund of 750 billion euros ($1 trillion).

The International Monetary Fund says an agreement to increase the size of the euro zone 'firewall' will convince others to contribute more resources to the IMF, boosting its crisis-fighting abilities and improving market sentiment.

But Germany is opposed to such a step.

Chancellor Angela Merkel has said she will not discuss the issue of the ESM/EFSF's ceiling until leaders meet for their next summit in March. In the meantime, financial markets will continue to fret that there may not be sufficient rescue funds available to help the likes of Italy and Spain if they run into renewed debt funding problems.

"There are certainly signals that Germany is willing to consider it and it is rather geared toward March from the German side," a senior euro zone official said.

The sticking point is German public opinion which is tired of bailing out the euro zone's financially less prudent. Instead, Merkel wants to see the EU - except Britain, which has rejected any such move - sign up to the fiscal treaty, including a balanced budget rule written into constitutions. Once that is done, the discussion about a bigger rescue fund can take place.

After nearly three years of crisis, some economists believe the combination of tighter budget rules, a bigger bailout fund and a commitment to broader structural reforms to boost EU productivity could help the region weather the storm.

"The fiscal compact and the ESM will shape a better future," said Carsten Brzeski, a euro zone economist at ING.

"Combined with ongoing austerity measures and structural reforms in peripheral countries, and, of course, with a lot of ECB action, the euro zone could master this stage of the crisis."

Economists say the pivotal act in recent months was the European Central Bank's flooding of the banking sector with cheap three-year money, a measure it will repeat next month.

GREEK DEAL?

While EU leaders are managing to put together pieces of legislation and financial barriers that might help them stave off a repeat of the debt crisis, immediate concerns - especially over Greece and potentially Portugal - remain.

By far the most pressing worry is the seven-month-long negotiation over private sector involvement in the second Greek rescue package. A deal in the coming days may help restore investor confidence, although Greece will still struggle to reduce its debts to 120 percent of GDP by 2020 as planned.

"If there is a deal, the heads of state and government can endorse it, welcome it and say that now it is up to Greece to agree to and deliver on reforms to get the second financing package," the euro zone official said.

Negotiators believe they have until mid-February to strike a deal. Failure to do so by then would likely force Greece to miss a 14.5 billion euro repayment on its debt due in mid-March.

Even if Athens can strike a deal with private bondholders to accept a 50 percent writedown on the nominal value of their bonds, it may still not be enough to close Greece's funding gap.

The IMF has suggested it may be necessary for public sector holders of Greek bonds - including the ECB and national central banks in the euro zone - to write off some of their holdings in order to close the gap.

Such a move would not necessarily involve the ECB or national central banks incurring losses, they would just be expected to forego any profit on the bonds they have bought.

But German ECB board member Joerg Asmussen told Reuters there was no possibility of the ECB taking part in the private-sector restructuring of Greece's debt.

(Reporting By Jan Strupczewski, editing by Mike Peacock)

 

38 comments

  • Umberto  •  St James, New York  •  27 days ago
    Is it me or are these Euro bankers even more full of it than the Fed.
  • Rob  •  Culpeper, Virginia  •  27 days ago
    billion, trillion, quintillion... does anybody care anymore? not really sure why I even bother working for this "money"
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  27 days ago
    Oh boy, another agreement. 17 summits in 2 years.
  • Abolish the Fed  •  Denver, Colorado  •  27 days ago
    Alert: We must educate everyone to this fraud to ultimately save our country
    Most of the bonus money being paid by these crooked banks originates from the US Federal
    reserve who forks money to these banks in the name of saving the financial system but the debt
    gets added to the US national debt and the money goes into the hands of the bank execs while the toxic debt on these banks books continues to lose value.
    Here is how it is done: The Fed says to the bank how much money do you want ?
    The banks says for example 2 billion so the fed make a a bookkeeping entry for 100 billion of treasury bills for this bank. In 1 year they pay the bank 2 billion !
    (the 2 billion gets added to the US national debt bankrupting the country eventually).
    Now the bank gives 1 billion to it's execs in the form of bonuses in order for them to continue to live the lavish lifestyles to which they are accustomed and in the case of banks who received tarp money the bank gives the fed 1 billion back and they write an article about how the banks paid back the tarp money so the tarp plan was a smart plan for the taxpayer ignoring the hidden interest on the treasury bills that got added to the national debt. Most of the big wall st banks are doing this game thats how they show profits each quarter even though the value of real estate upon which their solvency depends continues to decline...
  • rayt  •  27 days ago
    We probably are footing the bill thru the backdoor so as not infuriate the american taxpayer .
  • Art  •  27 days ago
    A permanent bailout fund? Big deal, we already have one in this country, it's called the Federal Reserve. We spend, they print. Works great so far......
  • Ralph  •  Los Angeles, California  •  27 days ago
    There permanent bailout fund is called the United States Federal Reserve.
  • westerner  •  27 days ago
    Just more lipstick on a pig designed to prop up the Euro.
  • educated  •  San Jose, California  •  27 days ago
    permanent bailout fund eh?
  • red dragon  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  27 days ago
    EUROPEAN LEADERS AGREE ON ETERNAL TAXPAYER BAILOUT AND ASSURE THE WORLD THAT THEY WILL HAVE MORE ELEGANT MEETINGS AND EXPENSIVE GETAWAYS TO CONTINUE TO PLOT TO SCREW THE TAXPAYER
  • James  •  27 days ago
    "Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner - say it will only do so if its resources are combined with what remains in the EFSF, creating a super-fund of 750 billion euros ($1 trillion)."
    Great Timmy. That's like giving every Greek citizen 88,000 dollars. All you US taxpayers need to work harder.
  • Ron  •  27 days ago
    "To agree." What kind of reporting is that? That is pure speculation. They haven't agreed to much in the past three months. It's all hope. It's all pixie dust.
  • better  •  Surfside, California  •  27 days ago
    stop the nonsense. They have announced "we have a solution" several times over the last few months and it just keeps getting worse. Where are the real reporters?
  • ANNM  •  Meriden, Connecticut  •  27 days ago
    so many lies - the words are becoming worthless. their is NO money only MORE words to backstop bad paper. shift the burden private to public Gov't but the burden is still there. can not fix insolvency with liquidity - only buys time.
  • Al  •  Murfreesboro, Tennessee  •  27 days ago
    a "PERMANENT BAILOUT FUND"? On the bright side Mondays headlines Wall Street soaring high on GREAT NEWS from EU, and the United States has almost completely fixed it's problems over the weekend and ALMOST everyone will be to work by Friday, and everyone can go back to buying houses by next week!! Everyone run to the streets and party!! all thanks to your great president remember to vote for him again!! WOW
  • george  •  27 days ago
    THE GERMAN TAXPAYERS ARE EXTREMELY FRUSTRATED AFTER TIME AND TIME AGAIN BEING ASKED TO BAIL OUT THOSE IRRESPONSIBLE COUNTRIES WHO FAIL TO EVEN COLLECT THE TAXES DUE FROM THEIR OWN CITIZENS. THOSE COUNTRIES NEED TO TAKE THOSE BUDGETARY STEPS, AND THEIR CITIZENS NEED TO PAY WHAT THEY OWE.
  • A A  •  Bensalem, Pennsylvania  •  27 days ago
    The REAL suckers, are the Chinese and everyone else who have gobs of American debt. We are NEVER paying it back. We can't. And we just keep printing more and more and more.... And going to war to save the currency.
    Eventually oil will no longer be pegged to the dollar, and the standard of living in the US and Europe is going to drop dramatically
  • UNKNOWN  •  Ridgeland, Mississippi  •  27 days ago
    Obama in 3 years has not had a budget. That is why the deficits in the past 2 years have grown faster than anytime in the history of this country. US is Greece. We just keep printing money no matter what. SOON THE DOLLAR WILL HAVE THE VALUE OF THE PESO UNDER OBAMA.
  • Jim  •  Charlotte, North Carolina  •  27 days ago
    The fiscally responsible bailing out the "financially less prudent". Sounds familiar.
  • Anthony  •  Albuquerque, New Mexico  •  27 days ago
    Fantastic! Now that they are solving their problems, and are spending $24Billion on "job creation", maybe they can send their experts to the U. S. and help Obama!
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