By John
Glover and Radoslav Tomek - Oct 22, 2012 11:23 AM GMT+0300
Greece is spiraling into the kind of
decline the U.S. and Germany
endured during the Great Depression, showing the scale of the challenge
involved in attempting to regain competitiveness through austerity.
Alexandra
Hudson, Reuters | Oct. 21, 2012, 8:11
AM
BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany's
Finance Ministry is considering a debt buy-back as a possible way of reducing Greece's huge
debt pile which threatens to rise well above a target level of 120 percent of
GDP by 2020, according to German news magazine Spiegel.
The
International Monetary Fund and Europe are still far from finding a common
formula to tackle Greece's
explosive debt crisis, with the IMF insisting on a "haircut" on the
principle that Athens
owes its creditors, while euro-zone governments dismissed the proposal because
of political repercussions.
(Reuters) -
Greek workers will walk off the job for the second time in three weeks on
Thursday, hoping to show EU leaders meeting in Brussels that a new wave of wage
and pension cuts will only worsen the plight of a people worn down by five
years of recession.
(Reuters) -
Inspectors from Greece's
international lenders will leave Athens
after making substantial progress on talks to unlock aid for the near-bankrupt
country but without agreement on crucial labor reforms, officials said on
Wednesday.
(Reuters) -
A Greek exit from the euro zone could trigger a global economic crisis of dire
proportions and must be avoided at all costs, a respected German think tank
said in a study published on Wednesday.
(Reuters) -
Greece's
labor minister and international lenders briefly suspended talks on austerity
cuts on Tuesday to confer with their leaders on the thorny issue of labor
reforms, which raised objections among government coalition partners.
(Reuters) -
Greece
plans to launch tenders to sell or lease a string of state assets, including
its biggest refiner and two largest ports, as it battles to pay down debt and
meet the terms of an international bailout.
By Johan
Carlstrom and Josiane Kremer on October 13, 2012
As European
Union leaders prepare for a summit next week devoted to saving the euro,
Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg said Greece may quit the common currency
within the next six months.
Michael
Snyder: It turns out that the poster child for the European debt crisis is not
actually poor at all. In fact, the truth
is that the nation of Greece
is sitting on absolutely massive untapped reserves of gold, oil and natural
gas. If the Greeks were to fully exploit
the natural resources that are literally right under their feet, they would no
longer have any debt problems.
FXstreet.com
(San Francisco) - "It is difficult to reach
an agreement by the EU Summit" said Greece's Finance Minister Giannis
Stournaras on Monday after meeting with Troika's officials. "There is
still the issue of the debt sustainability and the financing gap,"
Stournaras added and pointed that "all show that we are heading towards an
emergency Eurogroup" meeting.
(Reuters) -
Chancellor Angela Merkel has ruled out letting Greece
default on its debt, in the latest sign Berlin
is softening its stance towards Athens
ahead of an eagerly awaited report on its reform progress from the
"troika" of international lenders.
(Reuters) -
Germany held firm on Friday
in insisting it was too soon to say Greece deserved more time to meet
its budget-cutting goals even as the head of the IMF laid out the case for
leniency.
Oct 11
(Reuters) - Coca Cola Hellenic, Greece's biggest company by market value, said
on Thursday it would switch its main bourse listing to London, where it hopes
to tap more liquidity from investors.
By Sandrine
Rastello - Oct 11, 2012 7:36 AM GMT+0300
Oct. 11
(Bloomberg) --International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde
said Greece
should get two years to meet fiscal targets and suggested debt reductions are
needed before a 130 billion-euro ($167 billion) bailout can proceed.
For three
years, Steve Sharpe’s company prodded Greek officials for permission to drill
for gold. Before approval was finally granted this year, European Goldfields
Ltd.’s battered share price attracted a takeover bid.
The
International Monetary Fund urged European policymakers to deepen the financial
and fiscal ties within the euro area with some urgency to restore sagging
confidence in the global financial system.
(Reuters) -
A French and an American scientist won the Nobel Prize in physics on Tuesday
for finding ways to measure quantum particles without destroying them, which
could make it possible to build a new kind of computer far more powerful than
any seen before.