by Rebecca
ChristieCorina Ruhe, Jonathan Stearns
(Bloomberg)
-- European finance ministers piled pressure on Greece to open its books and
follow through with pledges agreed to in its rescue package, as the country
tries to avoid running out of cash as soon as this month.
As Greek
officials struggle to meet the euro area’s demands, the government’s cash
supplies are running low. One official from the currency bloc, who spoke on the
condition of anonymity, said on Monday that Greece’s funding might last for
one, two or three weeks, though it was difficult to be precise.
European
Central Bank President Mario Draghi took a personal hand in persuading Greece to allow
new visits from technical experts, according to two officials familiar with
Monday’s talks. After the meeting, Varoufakis -- who described Draghi as “a
very skilled central banker” -- said he was confident negotiations would resume
in good faith.
“I believe
that we are doing our job properly and they will do their job,” Varoufakis told
reporters in Brussels .
“Our job is to start the process which is necessary for the European Central
Bank to have confidence.”
Recent
debate about who would meet where and when had been “a complete waste of time,”
Dijsselbloem said.
“If there
is time pressure for financing needs that should be helpful for getting the
package back on track,” he added.
Concerns
about the pace of talks helped send the Greek ASE stock index down 4.2 percent
in Athens , its
lowest level in more than three weeks, with Piraeus Bank SA down more than 12
percent. Greek three-year yields rose 191 basis points, or 1.91 percentage
points, to 15.95 percent at 4:52 p.m. New
York time.
Financing
Issues
The
euro-area finance ministers reprimanded Greece
for dragging its heels during the two weeks since they reached an agreement to
extend Greece ’s
bailout. Tsipras, whose anti-austerity government was elected in January on a
promise to renegotiate terms of Greece ’s
240 billion euro ($260 billion) bailouts, now has through June to reach a
broader agreement on further support.
Euro-area
creditors are willing to help solve Greece ’s financing issues once
talks resume, a Greek government official said in an e-mail to reporters. Greece will add
to its list of proposed reforms and sees progress in the most recent talks, the
official said, asking not to be named in line with policy.
Varoufakis
declined to comment on Greece ’s
cash position, saying instead that the country liquidity would be guaranteed by
the government with the EU institutions.
Back in Athens
Euro-area
finance ministers welcomed the decision to allow technical teams back to Greece for more
research. “Most discussions will take place in Brussels ,
but supporting people will go to Athens
to find the right number so that there is no misunderstanding on that,”
Dijsselbloem said.
While the
negotiations continue, the ECB is effectively financing the Greek private
sector because of its support for its banks. In a bid to raise the pressure on Greece to reach
a deal with authorities, ECB officials will increase the scrutiny on the Emergency
Liquidity Assistance extended to Greek lenders with an extraordinary review
this week, two officials familiar with the matter said.
As long as Greece remains
unlikely to regain market access soon, the ECB probably won’t allow its banks
to post more T-bills as collateral because that would effectively be monetary
financing, another euro-area official said. Monetary financing is banned under
European law.
German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said that while Greece
wasn’t the main focus of Monday’s meetings -- which also discussed national
budget plans -- Greece
must work with the euro-area institutions and not on its own.
Time to
Implement
“The Greeks
must implement now what they promised to do and must especially refrain from
taking one-sided measures,” Schaeuble told reporters.
The
country’s ability to win over its euro-area counterparts will depend on whether
it can produce budget data and a clearer understanding of the country’s
financial situation, French Finance Minister Michel Sapin said.
“The time
comes when what’s needed is not declarations of intention or slogans, but
figures and verifiable data,” Sapin said.
To contact
the reporters on this story: Rebecca Christie in Brussels
at rchristie4@bloomberg.net; Corina Ruhe in Brussels
at cruhe@bloomberg.net; Jonathan Stearns in Brussels at jstearns2@bloomberg.net
To contact
the editors responsible for this story: Andrew J. Barden at
barden@bloomberg.net Ben Sills, Gail DeGeorge
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-09/euro-area-pushes-greece-to-open-books-as-talks-resume
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