by Nikos ChrysolorasVassilis KaramanisPaul Tugwell
June 5,
2015 — 9:53 AM EEST Updated on June 5, 2015 — 11:22 AM EEST
Bloomberg
Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras raised the stakes in Greece ’s showdown with creditors,
rejecting demands for more austerity to receive bailout funds and opting for an
unconventional deferral of International Monetary Fund payments.
Tsipras
told German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande
during a call Thursday night that a list of demands needed to unlock bailout
funds hammered out earlier this week by officials from the IMF and the euro
area can’t be a basis for a deal, said a Greek official, who asked not to be
identified discussing private talks.
“The delay
in the payment to the IMF is an escalation of the confrontation,” said Nicholas
Economides, an economics professor at New York University ’s
Stern School of Business. “It increases the risk of bankruptcy and a Grexit.”
Greek
stocks and bonds opened lower on Friday, with the benchmark Athens Stock
Exchange falling 3.1 percent as of 11:17 a.m. local time. Yields on two-year
notes rose 176 basis points to 25.01 percent.
No
Explanation
Only hours
before the Greek request, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde had told
reporters in Washington
that a bundling of payments didn’t appear in the cards. When asked about the
payment, the Greek premier had told reporters in Brussels on Wednesday, “don’t worry.”
No official
statement was issued yesterday to confirm the bundling request by the Finance
Ministry. Economy Minister George Stathakis on Friday told the BBC that the
offer was “on the table more or less” to put off the payment to the end of the
month.
The request
wasn’t related to a lack of funds as Greece had enough cash reserves to
meet the payment due Friday, said a person familiar with the country’s financing
position. The official asked not to be named as he wasn’t authorized to discuss
the matter publicly.
The euro
dropped 0.68 percent against the dollar to a low of $1.1223 on the news of the
bundling request. The common currency traded higher at $1.1269 as of 9:20 a.m.
in London on
Friday.
Parliament
Address
Tsipras
will address lawmakers at 6 p.m. local time in Athens Friday, after a week of frantic talks
with European leaders failed to yield a breakthrough which would pave the way
for the disbursement of emergency loans necessary to avert default.
Half of
Greeks said the Syriza-led government should abandon its so-called red lines if
creditors don’t accept them in order to have an agreement, according to a poll
published Friday by the newsit.gr website. Almost the same number, 47 percent,
said they disagree with the way the government is conducting negotiations. A
strong majority, 74 percent, of those polled said they wanted Greece to
remain in the euro. The poll was conducted on June 3 to June 4.
“The agreement
and solution which both Greece
and Europe so badly need requires the
immediate convergence of institutions to more realistic proposals, which will
advance economic growth and social sensitivity,” the Greek Finance Ministry
said in a statement.
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