By MIKE
BIRD
Market
Watch
JUN. 8, 2015, 2:51 AM
The
deadline for a deal to resolve Greece 's
ongoing drama seemed to be pushed back last week. But new stresses could appear
as early as this week if there is no noticeable progress on the talks.
Last week Greece decided
to combine the four debt payments it owed to the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) in June — worth about €1.5 billion ($1.66 billion, £1.09 billion)
collectively — into one, which will be due at the end of the month.
That
delayed for three weeks the payment that was owed Friday and meant Athens could wait longer
for a bailout deal. But at least according to some analysts, that will be
little to no relief in the tense talks.
Much of the
timeline actually remains the same, as Bank of America Merrill Lynch
researchers pointed out in a note, titled "Brinkmanship in Greece : fasten
your seat belts," on Monday morning.
Previously,
the hard deadline for approval of both Greek and other European parliaments was
the end of June — and that's still true now.
Here's BAML
FX strategist Athanasios Vamvakidis:
When it's
put like that, the three weeks left don't seem like such a long time. Last
week's dramatics suggest that the two sides are still far from a deal, with
each presenting proposals and counterproposals that disregard the other's red
lines.
At the end
of last week Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras was referring to the
creditors' suggestions as illogical and absurd. Meanwhile over the weekend EU
Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker has accused Tsipras of distorting the
discussions that took place last week. Juncker is generally perceived as one of
Tsipras' few potential allies, or at least one of participants most likely to
be flexible to keep Greece
in the eurozone.
BAML's
Vamvakidis adds that because positive developments need to start soon for the
June 30 deadline to be reached, "we may see negative scenarios unfolding
even before June 30."
Barclays
analysts also lay out the potential for political crisis in a note:
In our
view, this reflects mounting divergence within the Syriza party, especially
about the government’s acceptance of more fiscal measures and pension cuts in
order to reach a deal. We think compromise on these thorny issues by the Greek
government will be costly politically. It could trigger a political crisis that
would accelerate deposit outflows and result in the imposition of capital
controls on Greek banks.
So the new
June 30 deadline doesn't actually give the negotiators much more room to
breathe, and the inevitable crunch — whether financial or political — is
looming.
Read more:
http://www.businessinsider.com/greece-fasten-your-seatbelts-2015-6#ixzz3cTFFBuMZ
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