Sat, Feb 25, 2012, 2:55 AM EST - U.S. Markets closed

S&P downgrades euro zone rescue fund, Greece pressured

By Luke Baker

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - U.S. rating agency Standard & Poor's cut its credit rating of the euro zone's EFSF rescue fund on Monday, and Greece was under pressure to break a deadlock in debt swap talks if it is to avoid an unruly default.

French Finance Minister Francois Baroin said there was no need to shore up the European Financial Stability Facility after S&P downgraded it by one notch to AA+ from triple-A, echoing the view of Germany, the only major euro zone member to retain a top-notch credit rating.

S&P said in a statement the decision was all but inevitable following identical cuts three days earlier to the creditworthiness of France and Austria, two of the EFSF's guarantors.

"We consider that credit enhancements that would offset what we view as the now-reduced creditworthiness of the EFSF's guarantors and securities backing the EFSF's issues are currently not in place," the agency said in a statement.

"We have therefore lowered to AA+ the issuer credit rating of the EFSF, as well as the issue ratings on its long-term debt securities."

A growing number of experts, including a Standard & Poor's official, warned that a Greek default was on the cards, after Greece's talks with creditors broke down on Friday.

Greece was under growing pressure to secure a last-ditch agreement with its private creditors to accept voluntary losses on their holdings of Greek bonds.

Athens risks going bankrupt when 14.5 billion euros of bond redemptions fall due in late March. Without a private sector bond swap involving a voluntary writedown, a 130 billion euro second international bailout for Greece could fall apart.

The talks with creditor banks broke down because of different views on what interest rate is acceptable, the head of the group leading private sector talks said.

Charles Dallara, managing director of the Institute of International Financial, said the banks were "very surprised" at the stance taken by some officials representing both governments and multilateral institutions, without naming them.

The EFSF was set up by the 17 governments that share the European single currency in May 2010 and has so far been used to provide emergency loans to Ireland and Portugal. It is also expected to contribute to a second bailout of Greece.

The fund has an effective lending capacity of 440 billion euros, which depends on guarantees, mainly from the euro zone's AAA countries, only four of which now remain: Germany, Luxembourg, Finland and the Netherlands.

LENDING CAPACITY UNAFFECTED

In a statement, the EFSF said the downgrade would not affect its lending capacity, and emphasized that its short-term rating remained at S&P's top level.

"The downgrade to 'AA+' by only one credit agency will not reduce EFSF's lending capacity of 440 billion euros," said the fund's chief executive, Klaus Regling.

"EFSF has sufficient means to fulfill its commitments under current and potential future adjustment programs until the ESM becomes operational in July 2012," he added.

The ESM - the European Stability Mechanism - is a permanent rescue fund that is expected to have an effective capacity of 500 billion euros, based on paid-in capital of 80 billion euros and callable capital of 620 billion euros.

French Finance Minister Francois Baroin said there was no need to shore up the EFSF despite the S&P rating downgrade.

"The EFSF has kept intact its ability to lend, with enough means and guarantees to fulfill the full range of its present and future commitments," he said in a statement. "There is therefore no need to act on the EFSF at the moment."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman, Steffen Seibert told reporters: "The government has no reason to believe that the volume of guarantees that the EFSF has now should not be sufficient to fulfill its current obligations.

"We should not forget that it has been decided to significantly move forward the ESM and to have it in place in mid-2012, one year earlier than planned."

The euro hovered just above a 17-month trough against the dollar early in Asia on Tuesday, but reaction to the S&P downgrade was muted as it was well expected. Trading overnight was subdued as U.S. markets were shut for the Martin Luther King holiday.

The head of Austria's debt office told Reuters the loss of Vienna's AAA status had also been priced into the market already, and Austria was able to sell treasury bills on Monday at rates very close to zero.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy brushed off the historic loss of Paris' top credit rating for the first time since 1975, a blow to his campaign for re-election in May, saying France's policy would not be dictated by rating agencies.

Contrasting S&P's move with a statement by rival watchdog Moody's, which still has France on an Aaa rating, he said: "My deep belief is that it changes nothing. We must reduce the deficit, we must reduce our spending and we must improve the competitiveness of our economy to return to a path of growth."

LOSERS TO PAY?

Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, whose debt-laden country was downgraded by two notches along with Spain, called last week during a visit to Berlin for the EFSF to be increased to ward off attacks on his country's bonds.

But a senior politician in Merkel's conservative CDU party, Michael Meister, said it was the downgraded countries that should increase their guarantees for the fund.

"Germany was not downgraded so our contribution should not be changed. Countries that were affected must contribute more to the guarantees," Meister told Reuters.

Sources familiar with Greece's talks with its private creditors said EU paymaster Germany was pressing for new bonds to be given to banks in the planned swap to carry a low coupon of less than four percent that would increase the banks' effective losses to 75 percent.

The IMF was also weighing on the talks by warning that the Greek economy and the euro zone's economic outlook have worsened since the bailout package was agreed in October, raising Athens' funding needs to make its debt sustainable by 2020, they said.

Greece put a brave face on the standoff. "There is a little pause in these discussions," Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos told CNBC television. "But I am confident they will continue and we will reach an agreement that is mutually acceptable in time."

(Additional reporting by Lefteris Papadimos in Athens, Steve Slater and Richard Hubbard in London, Jan Strupczewski in Brussels and Fiona Ortiz in Madrid; Writing by Paul Taylor; Editing by Tim Pearce)

 
  • mmmmooooo  •  San Diego, California  •  1 month 9 days ago
    Head of one of Germany's largest companies, Linde industrial Gases, says: "In the medium term Greece needs to exit. And the writedowns on Greek debt will not be between 50 to 70 percent, but in the end will be written down by 100 percent," Reitzle said.
    "If we do not succeed in disciplining crisis countries, Germany needs to exit," said Reitzle who was previously a board member at carmaker BMW and head of Jaguar and Land Rover.
    Asking Germans to pay more than 50 percent taxes to help fund other euro zone countries will erode the will of the German electorate to support rescue measures", Reitzle said.
  • Coppertop  •  1 month 9 days ago
    Trying to find a raincoat before the tsunami. Look for high ground fast.
  • westerner  •  Dallas, Texas  •  1 month 9 days ago
    And Greek officials are in the USA today begging from the IMF and Bernanke. What does that tell you?
  • Scott  •  Independence, Kansas  •  1 month 9 days ago
    how hard is it to live without credit when you bring in millions of tax dollars already.. i make money and have no need of credit.. i have a balanced budget and always have.. simple.. do not spend what you do not have..
  • Coppertop  •  1 month 9 days ago
    Glimmers of optimism have been doused? Welcome to common sense and reality.
  • Anonomous  •  Lowell, Massachusetts  •  1 month 9 days ago
    Retail Sales Were NEGATIVE ! Do you remember all the Stories about BLOWOUT BLOCKBUSTER retail sales before Christmas ?
    That should teach you how corrupt this news reporting system is and eventually the market will go lower as the common man has not been the recepient of any of the trillions being printed only greedy Banksters !
  • william  •  1 month 9 days ago
    I still don't understand why any bank, or anyone else, would still be buying bonds from Greece, Italy, Spain, etc. Do they actually want to lose money?
  • Deepsix  •  Norwalk, Connecticut  •  1 month 9 days ago
    Get it over with! get Greece out of the euro fast and into the Drachma and watch the currency fall like a stone. Maybe this will convince Greece’s Public Unions and Entitled class that no one wants to pull their wagon for them. This will be a great lesson for Americans to look at because the US is next on deck.
  • anonymous  •  1 month 9 days ago
    Loaning money to Greece would be akin to loaning money to someone who is pandering on a street corner. These people never want to hold themselves accountable for the mess they have created, and they're literally stunned when other countries don't want to help them. I mean, how out of touch with reality can you get?
  • P  •  1 month 9 days ago
    The Euro is already in a downword spiral, how would borrowing more help this? If anything they need to be moving toward 10% bank reserve requirement not a 1%. There is no way i would put my money in a bank with a 1% reserve.
  • Thunder  •  1 month 9 days ago
    ''If they get through the next six months, you can see the tide turning''...what a joke, they have been muddling through this for 3 or 5 years?? and it is getting worst by the day...the titanic is going to sink, nothing can stop it sinking
  • NightShift  •  Cookeville, Tennessee  •  1 month 9 days ago
    The whole thing is a "house of cards". The press tries to spin it positive with stories about how there is no wind to knock down the cards, but it will come and they will fall.
  • MICHAEL  •  Augusta, Georgia  •  1 month 9 days ago
    Ben Bernanke and Tim Geithner: you give one more dime of our money to europe I'm coming to Washington. You traitors. We are going down the drain and you help bailout the banks of europe. We would have been better going through a depression.
  • JB  •  Capitol Heights, Maryland  •  1 month 9 days ago
    I have had some contracts for work in Athens Greece. The staff begins shuffling into work at 9:30am then at 10:00 they go for coffee until 11:00 at 12:00 they go to lunch and at 1:30 about half of them return to work then at 3:00pm the parking lot is deserted with tumble weed blowing across the road. They retire at 50 get 6 weeks paid vacation and produce absolutely nothing. What did everyone expect?? Southern Europe is a basket case.
  • A Christian In America  •  1 month 9 days ago
    We are witnessing the rise of the New World Order. America is shortly going to go bankrupt due to over whelming debt.
  • Brian  •  Cheyenne, Wyoming  •  1 month 8 days ago
    Hey, I know what can be done! Let's send over our great savior, BO, and he can save them just like he did US. He will "create" millions of jobs, save all the industries, and he will be out of our hair. It works for both sides, and the village gets the idiot back.
  • Stephen  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  1 month 8 days ago
    If the other fiat currencies act like the dollar, it is impossible to be out of debt. The fed loaned the government every single dollar in circulation with interest attached. Therefore the best we could EVER do is pay back the principle. The entire system needs to be changed.
  • Appletree  •  1 month 9 days ago
    "But the relief could be shortlived due to the rising risk of a disorderly Greek default unless Athens can secure a last-ditch agreement with its private creditors to accept voluntary losses on their holdings of Greek bonds." How often have we heard this over the past year? What consitutes a "last ditch"?
  • Grant Dub  •  1 month 9 days ago
    Greece's great contribution to the world will be the unravelling of the Euro. We are getting a small glimpse of what one world currency will do to the world. Greece might be saving us from that path. In the end Greece is still F-ed, but at least one good thing may come out of this.
  • Patriot Alice  •  1 month 9 days ago
    .It's the rest of Europe that is under pressure, not Greece...The extortion is "Bail me out, or I'll walk"....
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