Monday, February 24, 2014

Εντοπίσθηκαν ταμειακά διαθέσιμα ύψους 3 δισ. ευρώ στον δημόσιο τομέα

ΣΩΤΗΡΗΣ ΝΙΚΑΣ
Καθημερινή


«Λευκή» τρύπα 3 δισ. ευρώ έχει εντοπίσει το υπουργείο Οικονομικών στον αχανή δημόσιο τομέα. Τα κεφάλαια αυτά μπορούν να αξιοποιηθούν ως «ρεζέρβες» για τα κρατικά ταμεία, με το οικονομικό επιτελείο να κινείται προς αυτήν την κατεύθυνση για να καλύπτει –όποτε αυτό απαιτηθεί– κενά στο χρηματοδοτικό πρόγραμμα της χώρας.

Billionaire Soros considers investing in European banks: paper

FRANKFURT Sun Feb 23, 2014 7:27am EST
(Reuters) - George Soros wants to invest in Europe's financial sector, according to a German magazine's interview with the billionaire investor on Sunday.

"I believe in the euro," weekly Der Spiegel quoted him as saying.

"Therefore my investment team is looking forward to make a lot of money soon in Europe by, for example, pumping money in banks which urgently need capital," he added, noting the euro zone needs this kind of private investment right now.

Greece resumes protracted bailout talks with lenders

BY HARRY PAPACHRISTOU AND LEFTERIS PAPADIMAS
ATHENS Mon Feb 24, 2014 3:02am EST
(Reuters) - Greece resumes bailout talks with its international lenders on Monday, hoping to end six months of wrangling over the release of new rescue loans it needs to avoid default.

At stake is the disbursement of funds to repay 9.3 billion of bonds maturing in May, the biggest single debt redemption Greece faces in the next three decades, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon data.

The review by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund has dragged on since September, with disagreements about the extent of savings and reforms Athens must make to comply with the terms of its bailout.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Stocks slip as Fed rate talk spooks some investors


By Associated Press, Thursday, February 20, 2:04 AM
NEW YORK — Stocks fell Wednesday as investors were left uneasy by news that some Federal Reserve policymakers were willing to start raising short-term interest rates sooner than previously expected.

The market was mixed most of the day, then turned lower after 2 p.m., when the Fed released the minutes from its January policy meeting.
The minutes revealed that some policymakers “raised the possibility that it might be appropriate to increase the federal funds rate relatively soon.”

China training for ‘short sharp war’ with Japan, Navy official says


The Washington Times
Capt. James Fannell, the chief of intelligence of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, believes that China is training for war with Japan.
A recent training exercise by the Chinese military included an amphibious invasion geared toward securing Japanese resources in the East China Sea, the U.S. Naval Institute News reported.

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Fed Closes a Loophole for Banks Overseas

By PETER EAVIS
The New York Times

Updated, 8:51 p.m. | Foreign banks with a major presence on Wall Street will no longer be allowed to avoid many of the tougher rules that the United States introduced after the financial crisis to prevent banking failures and bailouts.

The Federal Reserve, a leading bank regulator, approved a final rule on Tuesday that will force the American operations of foreign banks to follow many of the same rules as American banks. In doing so, the Fed closed a gaping loophole that roughly half the big firms on Wall Street were able to exploit simply because their headquarters were overseas.

Πλεόνασμα 1,2 δισ. στο ισοζύγιο τρεχουσών συναλλαγών το 2013

Για πρώτη φορά από το 1948
Τετάρτη, 19 Φεβρουαρίου 2014 11:20
Η Ναυτεμπορική

Πλεόνασμα ύψους 1,2 δισ. ευρώ παρουσίασε το ισοζύγιο τρεχουσών συναλλαγών το 2013, έναντι ελλείμματος 4,6 δισ. ευρώ το 2012, σύμφωνα με στοιχεία που έδωσε στη δημοσιότητα η Τράπεζα της Ελλάδος .
Πρόκειται για την πρώτη φορά από το 1948 που η χώρα εμφανίζει πλεονασματικό ισοζύγιο τρεχουσών συναλλαγών, σε ετήσια βάση.
Στην εξέλιξη αυτή συνέβαλε κατά κύριο λόγο η σημαντική μείωση του εμπορικού ελλείμματος κατά 2,4 δισ. ευρώ καθώς και η αύξηση των πλεονασμάτων των ισοζυγίων τρεχουσών μεταβιβάσεων κατά 3 δισ. ευρώ και υπηρεσιών κατά 1,7 δισ. ευρώ. Αντιθέτως, αυξήθηκε το έλλειμμα του ισοζυγίου εισοδημάτων.

Fed adopts tough capital rules for foreign banks

Tue, Feb 18 2014
By Douwe Miedema
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve on Tuesday adopted tight new rules for foreign banks to shield the U.S. taxpayer from costly bailouts, ceding only minor concessions despite pressure from abroad to weaken the rule.
Foreign banks with sizable operations on Wall Street such as Deutsche Bank and Barclays had pushed back hard against the plan because it means they will need to transfer costly capital from Europe.
The Fed, which oversees foreign banks, gave them a year longer to meet the standards, and applied it to fewer banks than in a first draft, but the rule was largely unchanged from when it was first proposed in December 2012.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

A Test Europe’s Banks Mustn’t Fail

By FRANCESCO GIAVAZZI and ANIL K. KASHYAPFEB. 17, 2014
The New York Times
Europe is lurching toward an overhaul of its banking system. Later this year, the European Central Bank is set to assume the authority to supervise the 130 largest banks in the euro zone — a momentous process of centralizing financial regulation in Frankfurt aimed at preventing another round of the bank failures that contributed to the 2007-8 global financial crisis.

In preparation for the handoff, the E.C.B. will conduct a “stress test” to gauge how the banks would fare if economic conditions deteriorated. But the central bank’s point person for these efforts, Danièle Nouy, appears to have misdiagnosed the problem, suggesting that “insufficient transparency regarding the balance sheets of the European banks” is the critical problem.

Monday, February 17, 2014

Laser-sparked fusion power passes key milestone

NEWSCIENTIST
12 February 2014 by Jacob Aron
CLEAN energy inspired by the stars is the dream of scientists pursuing nuclear fusion, in which atomic nuclei fuse together and release energy. In a first for laser-driven fusion, scientists at a US lab say they have reached a key milestone called fuel gain: they are producing more energy than the fuel absorbed to start the reaction.

But the National Ignition Facility (NIF) in Livermore, California, is still a long way from sparking a self-sustaining fusion reaction with an overall gain in energy – a process called ignition. Currently, the reactor as a whole needs more energy to operate than the amount that is produced.

A workable euro zone fitness regime

February 17, 2014 @ 9:42 am

By Hugo Dixon
Reuters
The euro zone has gone from the emergency room to rehab. As often with patients, the question is how to maintain a stiff exercise regime now the immediate danger is over.

Germany has an idea. At December’s summit, it got the rest of the zone to agree in principle to what are called “partnerships for growth, jobs and competitiveness”. The idea is that governments will sign contracts committing them to do things like reform their labour markets, liberalise product markets and improve the efficiency of their public sectors. Countries such as Greece and Cyprus, which are already in bailout programmes, wouldn’t be covered.

France and Germany Lead Euro Zone to Higher Growth

By DAVID JOLLYFEB. 14, 2014
The New York Times
PARIS — The euro zone economy grew slightly faster than expected in the last three months of 2013, an official report showed on Friday, bringing welcome news for the global economy amid signs of slowing in the United States and China.

Although growth in the 18-nation currency union is still weak, at a 1.1 percent annualized rate, it was the euro zone’s third straight quarter in positive territory, indicating that the bloc is well beyond the year-and-a-half recession that ended in mid-2013.

Regling: euro-zone banks in good shape before stress test: newspaper

BERLIN Sun Feb 16, 2014 5:55pm EST
(Reuters) - The head of the euro zone's bailout funds, Klaus Regling, said that he believes banks in Spain, Portugal, Cyprus, Greece and Ireland are in good shape and that there will not be any surprises in European Central Bank stress tests due later in 2014.

Friday, February 14, 2014

Banks in London Devise Way Around Europe’s Bonus Rules

FEBRUARY 13, 2014, 7:32 PM
The New York Times
By JENNY ANDERSON and PETER EAVIS
A battle over banker bonuses is building in this financial capital.
Since the 2008 crisis, regulators around the world have tried to rein in bonuses, worried that big payouts encourage excessive risk-taking by bankers and traders. The European Union has gone further than most, limiting bankers to bonuses equal to one or two times their salaries.

But the bank giants operating in London — including Goldman Sachs, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Barclays — are seeking to outflank the new restrictions. Responding to the law, they are structuring new pay packages that try to satisfy both their emboldened regulators and their very expensive employees.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

It's The Euro, Stupid

Frances Coppola, Contributor
I write about banking, finance and economics.
FORBES
A few days ago the German constitutional court referred the question of the legality of the ECB’s Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) to the European Court of Justice (ECJ), claiming that the ECB was straying into fiscal policy that was beyond its mandate and that OMT breached EU treaty directives outlawing monetary financing of governments.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Eurozone watchdog says some banks should go under: FT

FRANKFURT/LINKOPING, Sweden Mon Feb 10, 2014 2:04pm EST
(Reuters) - Some of the euro zone's lenders have no future and should be allowed to go under if they fail a health check, the bloc's new banking supervisor told the Financial Times, underscoring a tougher approach to banking oversight.

Daniele Nouy told the newspaper that if any of the region's participating banks fail the European Central Bank's comprehensive assessment then they could be wound down, and that merging them in order to save them was not an option.

River Thames Bursts Banks, Flooding Homes Near London

Flooding Follows Wettest January Since 1776
The Wall Street Journal
By NICHOLAS WINNING
Updated Feb. 10, 2014 7:46 p.m. ET
LONDON—Hundreds of homes have flooded and hundreds more are at risk to the west of London after the River Thames burst its banks on Monday as England continued to suffer from one of the wettest winters in more than two centuries, authorities said.

With waters predicted to rise further this week, Prime Minister David Cameron said the government would do all it could to assist those affected as he visited flood-hit areas in the southwest of England.

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Berlin: George Clooney Tells U.K. to Return Art Treasures to Greece

At the press conference for his film "The Monuments Men," Clooney said Greece had "a very good case" in demanding Britain return treasures such as the Elgin Marbles.

George Clooney has called on the U.K. to act as real “Monuments Men” and return historic Greek art  held in British museums.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

EU Said to Weigh Extending Greek Loans to 50 Years

By Nikos Chrysoloras and Rebecca Christie  Feb 5, 2014 5:44 PM GMT+0200
Bloomberg
The next handout to Greece may include extending the maturity on rescue loans to 50 years and cutting the interest rate on some previous aid by 50 basis points, according to two officials with knowledge of discussions being held by European autorities.

The plan, which will be considered by policy makers by May or June, may also include a loan for a package worth between 13 billion euros ($17.6 billion) and 15 billion euros, another official said. Greece, which got 240 billion euros in two bailouts, has previously had its terms eased by the euro zone and International Monetary Fund amid a six-year recession.

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

UPDATE 1-Greece's 2014 fiscal gap issue largely resolved with lenders-sources

Tue, Feb 4 2014
By Karolina Tagaris , Lefteris Papadimas and Jan Strupczewski
ATHENS/BRUSSELS, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Greece and its foreign lenders have largely bridged differences over a potential fiscal gap this year, removing a key sticking point holding up talks to release more bailout funds, two sources directly involved in the talks said on Tuesday.
The latest review of Greece's progress under its European Union/International Monetary Fund bailout has dragged on since September in large part due to wrangling over how Athens would plug a gap in this year's budget, which had been estimated at 1 billion euros.