Mon, May 28, 2012, 12:38 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Greece secures bailout to avoid debt default

Greece steps back from brink of default as eurozone stitches together $170 billion rescue

BRUSSELS (AP) -- The countries that use the euro pulled Greece back from an imminent and potentially catastrophic default on Tuesday, when they finally stitched together a euro130 billion ($170 billion) rescue they hope will also provide a lifeline to their common currency.

But the patchwork of measures — including the implementation of austerity measures in Greece and approval by skeptical German and Dutch Parliaments — required to give the rescue a chance of success means it's unlikely to be the end of the continent's debt crisis.

European markets edged lower, having enjoyed solid gains in the run-up to the meeting on expectations a deal would be secured, while the euro rose 0.2 percent.

The finance ministers from Greece and the other 16 countries that use the euro wrangled until the early morning hours over the details of the rescue, squeezing last-minute concessions out of private holders of Greek debt.

The eurozone and the International Monetary Fund, which will be providing the money for the new bailout, hope the new program will eventually put Greece back into a position where it can survive without external support and secure its place in the euro currency union.

The accord, which had been months in the making, seeks to reduce Greece's massive debts on all fronts, with both private and official creditors going beyond what they had said was possible in the past.

On top of the new rescue loans, Athens will also ask banks and other investment funds to forgive it some euro107 billion ($142 billion) in debt, while the European Central Bank and national central banks in the eurozone will forgo profits on their holdings.

The deal "closes the door to an uncontrolled default that would be chaos for Greece and Greek people," said European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso.

But despite those unprecedented efforts, it was clear that Greece, which kicked off Europe's debt crisis two years ago, was at the very best starting on a long and painful road to recovery. At the worst, the new program would push the country even deeper into recession and see it default on its debts further down the line.

"It's not an easy (program), it's an ambitious one," said Christine Lagarde, the head of the IMF, adding that there were significant risks that Greece's economy could not grow as much as hoped.

Including Greece's first bailout worth euro110 billion ($146 billion), the new deal means every Greek man, woman and child will owe the eurozone and the IMF about euro22,000 ($29,000).

In Athens, the reaction to the news was a mixture of relief the country has avoided financial catastrophe and fear of a dark future.

"I don't see (the agreement) with any joy because again we're being burdened with loans, loans, loans, with no end in sight," architect Valia Rokou said in the Greek capital.

The eurozone and Greece had been under pressure to reach an accord quickly to prevent Athens from defaulting on a bond payment on March 20. The fear is that an uncontrolled bankruptcy could unleash market panic across the continent, unsettling other struggling countries like Ireland, Portugal or the much bigger Italy or Spain.

Despite the promise of new rescue loans, the other 16 euro countries made clear that their trust in Greece is running low. Before Athens will see any new funds, it has to implement a range of promised cuts and reforms.

Greece will also have to pass within the next two months a new law that gives paying off the debt legal priority over funding government services. Athens also has to set up an escrow account, managed separately from its main budget, that will have to contain enough money to service its debts for the coming three months.

These requirements, together with tighter on-the-ground monitoring, are an unprecedented intrusion into the fiscal affairs of a sovereign state in Europe and mean Greece could eventually be forced to pay interest on its debt before compensating teachers or doctors.

Greek politicians nevertheless greeted the package as a turning point for their battered country.

"It's no exaggeration to say that today is a historic day for the Greek economy," said Greek Premier Lucas Papademos, who had rushed to the finance ministers' meeting to lend weight to his country's pleas for help.

The deal is expected to bring Greece's debt down to 120.5 percent of gross domestic product by 2020 — around the maximum the eurozone and IMF consider sustainable. At the moment, it stands at more than 160 percent of GDP.

But as Greece's economy faces a fifth year of recession, confidence that it can reach the 120 percent target in 2020 was fading quickly.

"One can discuss at length the assumptions on which this (target) is based," German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said. "Because of that we decided to at least be sincere about the figures."

Ahead of the meeting, Greece's international creditors — the EU, the ECB and the IMF — warned that without new measures the debt would still remain close to 129 percent by the end of the decade even under its optimistic scenario. That shortfall persisted even though Athens had faced down violent protests to pass a massive new round of cuts and reforms through Parliament just last week.

So to reach a successful outcome, the finance ministers had to fight on many fronts.

The representatives of private holders of Greek debt had to agree to steeper losses than they had earlier said was possible. The Institute of International Finance said the bond swap could see Greece's debt reduced by euro107 billion immediately. On top of that, investors will be asked to give Athens 30 years to repay them, compared with just under 7 years. Average interest rates would fall to 3.65 percent from around 4.8 percent.

Jean Lemierre, who was co-heading the talks for the IIF, said overall losses for private bondholders would be above 70 percent when accounting for the new bonds' longer repayment period and lower interest rate.

A Greek finance ministry official said the bond swap is expected to take place on March 12.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with ministry rules, said responses to the bond swap offer, which will be launched by the end of this week, will be evaluated on March 9 to determine whether at least 66 percent of bondholders are willing to participate. That is considered the minimum to make the deal viable.

The Greek government will submit legislation to parliament introducing collective action clauses, which would force reluctant investors into the deal.

Private investors weren't the only ones having to give ground.

The eurozone countries will reduce the interest that Greece has to pay for its first package of bailout loans to 1.5 percentage points over market rates from between 2 percentage points to 3 percentage points currently.

At the same time, the European Central Bank and the national central banks in the countries that use the euro will forego profits on their Greek debt holdings, again reducing the costs for Greece.

But several hurdles remain before Greece will see any of the money or other benefits of the new program.

Apart from the implementation of more than 30 different savings and reform measures by Greece, the new bailout has to be debated by parliaments in several member states, including Germany, the Netherlands and Finland.

The IMF also still has to decide how much of the euro130 billion bill it is willing to stump up. The fund had earlier indicated its contribution will be lower than the one-third of the total it has provided in previous bailouts.

IMF chief Lagarde said the fund's board would decide on its contribution in the second week of March.

"In doing so it will have in mind the overall program, but also additional matters such as the proper setting up of a decent firewall," Lagarde said with reference to Europe's current and future bailout funds.

At the moment, the overall ceiling for eurozone rescue loans has been set at euro500 billion ($663 billion), much of which has already been committed to Ireland, Portugal and now Greece. Euro leaders will decide at their summit in early March whether that ceiling should be increased.

Perhaps most crucially, however, may be new national elections in Greece scheduled for April, which could upend the political landscape in the country. The leaders of the two main parties have committed to the cuts and reform program, but anti-bailout parties have been gaining in the polls.

___

Derek Gatopoulos and Elena Becatoros in Athens, Greece, and Don Melvin in Brussels contributed to this report.

 
  • John Smith  •  3 months ago
    Why were the European banks bailed out? Because they've underwritten billions in CDS against Greece and a DEFAULT would mean insolvency for them. Get the facts straight!
    • Area2Fred 3 months ago
      Meanwhile Greek and Italians are cleaning out their bank accounts.
    • A 3 months ago
      Lets be absolutely clear on this; The Banking Cartel is being bailed out and the Greeks are being enslaved. This is a disaster for the Greek people and it puts the banks above the law. Papademos is a puppet of Goldman Sachs...
    • xtra 3 months ago
      the sacking of Greece by Goldman.
  • Wild Bill  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    A 74% loss by bondholders is called a DEFAULT.
    • mike hunt 3 months ago
      Now they have a bigger problem. Who will want to buy bonds in the future?!?
    • Moderator 3 months ago
      Not a default when the same banks that sold CDS sit on the board of the ISDA which determines what is a default. Nothing to see here, move along....
    • Rum 3 months ago
      The private lenders will want a greater return on any future sovereign debt that they purchase. Contagion.
  • freedom47  •  None, Italy  •  3 months ago
    look like a stock market crash is coming.....
    • d 3 months ago
      Only crash coming is the sound of the shorts getting crushed.
  • Daemonicus  •  3 months ago
    This is the second bailout. Who wants to bet there will be a third?
    • matchpoint 3 months ago
      Exactly!
      We should start calling it a "fail-out"
    • Cool Geek 3 months ago
      What about the fourth? Well too obvious... Fifth?
    • bigbd 3 months ago
      The Germans were correct.
  • ryan  •  Fremont, California  •  3 months ago
    the EUROZONE is just buying time
    • Bob F 3 months ago
      If banks just took a 70% loss on Bonds, who will buy bonds in the future?
  • B2U  •  3 months ago
    It looks like a default, it smells like a default, it walks like a default....it is a DEFAULT. End of story.
  • proposedsolutionsblogspot  •  3 months ago
    This avoids a disaster? Who are they fooling? It is a disaster just like the United States is a disaster with an even larger debt problem both in magnitude and relative debt per person more than 2 times that of Greece!
  • John Smith  •  3 months ago
    NO, the headline should read "EUROPEAN BANKS SECURE BAILOUT, GREECE REMAINS IN SERVITUDE" Can't the AP and the rest of the media shills for the ECB and Eurocrats just once present a story without propaganda intent?
  • Keith  •  Omaha, Nebraska  •  3 months ago
    “Concerns still linger over whether the incoming government in Athens would have any incentive or wish to enforce the austerity measures after they have received the bailout
    package.”

    My bet is that they don't and then what?
  • DaveBliss  •  3 months ago
    Greece is the most minor of the debt problems in Europe, and if it took this much to bail them out, imagine what it will take to deal with the debt in the other EU countries, let alone the hulking behemoth that is the US debt. This will not end well.
  • Lucky  •  Hobart, Australia  •  3 months ago
    greece saved for another few days ,, it is greece every day here and it will be here again tomorow
  • RM  •  3 months ago
    Everyone who thinks the problem is solved is encouraged to demonstrate this faith by purchasing Greek bonds. I will stick with more sure investments in pork bellies and amazing attachments which enable Mack trucks to go 100 miles on a gallon of pixie dust.
  • itslikethis  •  Pensacola, Florida  •  3 months ago
    Deal reached in the morning. Comes apart again in the afternoon.
  • KahokFan99  •  Collinsville, Illinois  •  3 months ago
    The beginning of the end for the Euro and CDS on sovereign debt. Private investors will no longer buy PIIGS debt. Let's see, invest $1 get $.36 back over 30 years. Buy CDS and after the fact governments legislate them invalid. Sounds like something my ex financial advisor would put my money in.
  • Tired  •  3 months ago
    What people are failing to realize is this.....
    They can not pay what they owe now....
    What makes anyone think that they will be able to afford it in the future.....
  • John Smith  •  3 months ago
    The EU's games to preserve it's bank and welfare state Ponzi have gone from ridiculous to absurd. Nothing about this "deal" (and nothing has been ratified yet) changes the fact that Greece is in free fall and PIIG debt is now ridiculous (contract rights mean nothing).
  • Mark  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
    They haven't solved their problem, they just put it off. They are still structured to spend much more money than their government takes in.
  • ChrisL  •  Castlebar, Ireland  •  3 months ago
    It's a default. The agencies will declare it before the end of the week. If not, they may spin it to March 23rd. Well done AP, yet more top notch "journalism" from your intrepid reporters!
  • whited  •  3 months ago
    Let's see how much smiling and hand shaking is going on in a few months.
  • Morpheous  •  Fort Worth, Texas  •  3 months ago
    This is the end result of giving away benefits to gain relection and then having to take them back when the money runs out. Are you watching Mr. President? When this happens to the US, who will bail us out?
 
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