Citigroup: Risk of Greek Exit From Euro Has Risen To 50%!
- There are two ways to conquer and enslave a nation. One is by the sword. The other is by debt. – John Adams, 1826
– - The political charade is getting a bit long and annoying. Weren’t the politician snakes supposed to have an agreement on the next Greek bailout many moons ago? Every other day, the Illuminist financial MSM has been touting an agreement any day now. Well, where is it?
– - Greece should default. The Greeks should not be made to pay odious and fraudulent debts amassed by their banks and Illuminist politicians. The so-called 2nd bailout (or is it 3rd) has nothing to do with saving Greece. It is the financial rape of the Greeks by Illuminist banksters! It is the destruction of Greek sovereignty. It is conquest via debt. You cannot solve a debt problem with even more debts.
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Citigroup: Risk of Greek Exit From Euro Has Risen to 50%!
By Matina Stevis, http://online.wsj.com/
Citigroup on Monday raised its estimate of the likelihood of a Greek exit from the euro area over the next 18 months to 50% from a prior range of 25% to 30%, according to the bank’s latest “Global Economics View” analysis by economists Willem Buiter and Ebrahim Rahbari.
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“This is mostly because we consider the willingness of [euro area] creditors to continue providing further support to Greece despite Greek non-compliance with programme conditionality to have fallen substantially,” the report writes.
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Buiter and Rahbari believe the cost of Greece leaving the 17-nation currency bloc would be “moderate” because policy makers would act to protect other weak euro-zone economies from further contagion following the unprecedented exit.
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They also expect that Greece’s long-negotiated private-debt restructuring will be done in an orderly, albeit coerced, manner. They also believe the European Central Bank will end up restructuring its holdings of Greek bonds, a proposal that has proved very controversial over the last few weeks.
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“We think that the Greek government will achieve an orderly but most likely coercive debt restructuring in its current negotiations with private creditors about private sector involvement and with the [European Union, ECB and International Monetary Fund] on ECB involvement,” the economists wrote.
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“Greece is therefore likely to avoid disorderly default when its next bond redemption is due (which is on March 20, but a seven-day grace period applies),” Buiter and Rahbari added, pointing out that in order for Greece to receive a second bailout from euro-area countries and the IMF, it will have to “a minimum degree of compliance with the fiscal and structural conditions of the bail-out programme. Alternatively, it could choose to temporarily cede authority over certain budgetary decisions to EU/EA representatives.”
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