BY PAUL TAYLOR
PARIS Sun Apr 13, 2014 3:55am EDT
(Reuters) -
Call it the Great Stretch.
Two years
ago, Greece 's
debt crisis almost brought the euro zone crashing down.
Now
European partners are preparing to ease Athens '
debt burden without writing off their loans but by stretching them out into the
distant future, extending maturities from 30 to 50 years and further cutting
some interest rates, EU officials say.
But with
its economy shattered, the country is still a long way from being able to fund
itself unassisted in the market. The International Monetary Fund says Greece is
likely to need further financial help from the euro zone over the next two
years.
One reason
why the sale of 3 billion euros in five-year bonds at a yield of 4.95 percent
went so smoothly, on the eve of a support visit by German Chancellor Angela
Merkel, was that investors are widely anticipating official debt relief.
"That
has been quite substantially priced in, and the market is also expecting Greece to be quickly upgraded by the credit
rating agencies," said Alessandro Giansanti, senior rate strategist at ING
bank in Amsterdam .
"In a
second stage, the market is also expecting a reduction in principal on official
debt, and no private sector involvement (write-down) in the coming years,"
he said.
Whether
such expectations are fully realized will only become clear later this year,
when negotiations start with the euro zone and the IMF on Greece 's
longer-term funding, and the end of its wrenching bailout program.
But EU
leaders share an interest in helping conservative Prime Minister Antonis
Samaras' shaky coalition cling to office rather than seeing leftist
anti-bailout firebrand Alexis Tsipras sweep to power demanding a massive debt
write-off.
"EXTEND
AND PRETEND"
North
European creditor states strongly oppose outright debt forgiveness, which
critics say would unfairly reward past Greek mismanagement. Parliaments and
eurosceptics might rebel or challenge any write-off in court.
But
extending the maturities and cutting the borrowing cost has already been done
once - the loans were originally granted for five years at a punitive interest
rate - and it is less politically explosive in Germany ,
the Netherlands and Finland .
It is a
government version of the "extend and pretend" behavior of private
lenders who keep bad loans on their books, hoping something will turn up,
rather than writing down losses.
"This
kind of restructuring of official sector debt has already quietly been
happening," said Elena Daly, principal at EM Consult, a Paris-based
sovereign debt consultancy.
"Stretching
out the official sector loans and reducing their interest rates opens a window
for new private sector lending without fear of competing with existing official
sector creditors when the time comes for repayment," she said.
A country's
debt profile - the timeline of future repayment or refinancing obligations - is
more important to investors than the absolute size of its debt stock.
Asked what
European authorities planned to do about the mountains of official debt owed by
Greece , Ireland and Portugal , a senior EU policymaker
replied with a riddle.
Who was Britain 's prime minister, he asked, when it paid
off its World War Two lend-lease debt to the United States ? The answer is Tony
Blair in 2006, more than 60 years after the war ended. Indeed, Britain still has some World War One debt to Washington outstanding,
a century after that conflict began.
HAND BRAKE
After two
EU/IMF bailouts worth a total of 240 billion euros and a "voluntary"
write-down of privately held bonds, Greece has a public debt equivalent
to 175 percent of its national output, far beyond what the IMF considers
sustainable.
Gross
domestic product has slumped by 25 percent, wages and pensions have been cut
sharply and unemployment stands at nearly 27 percent, including more than half
of all young people.
With anemic
growth just starting to return, there is scant prospect of reducing the debt to
the targets set by the "troika" of international lenders of 124
percent of gross domestic product in 2020 and 110 percent in 2022.
Interest
payments swallow nearly 5 percent of Greece 's
GDP, twice as much as in France .
Ireland and Portugal , which
also received euro zone bailouts, are also paying between 4.5 and 5 percent of
their national income in debt service.
It would
require improbable economic growth rates for many years to bring those debt
numbers down substantially, forcing governments to run high primary budget
surpluses before debt service that crowd out public investment.
Trying to
revive an economy while meeting that level of debt service is like accelerating
with the hand brake on.
Once the EU
statistics office confirms in the coming weeks that Greece has achieved a primary
budget surplus before debt service costs, the road to official debt relief
should be open.
Ironically,
last week's dabble in the bond market may make it harder for Athens to win a debt write-off that would
hasten its recovery. With foreign investors piling into the euro zone as a
relative safe haven compared to emerging markets, the risk premium on weaker
European countries' sovereign debt over benchmark German bonds has fallen
almost to pre-crisis level.
German
officials are already saying there is no urgent need for debt relief. As
throughout the euro zone crisis, once the market heat is off, Berlin is reluctant to act.
EU
officials say the Great Stretch may not be extended beyond Greece to Ireland ,
which has already returned to market funding, or Portugal , expected to exit its
bailout program next month without requesting further official assistance.
Yet it
would make sense to grant the same terms to them too to speed their post-crisis
recovery and narrow Europe 's politically
dangerous north-south divide.
(Writing by
Paul Taylor; Editing by Susan Fenton)
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