Greek pension funds will not take part in a debt buyback that is a key part of the country’s international bailout, Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras said in a newspaper interview.
Greece must conduct the deal by Dec. 13, before it receives more than 30 billion euros (US$39 billion) in bailout payments from the eurozone and the IMF. Athens has said it is vital the buyback is successful, but it must attract interest from bondholders, who need to decide whether to participate in the process, to ensure the country’s debt is deemed viable in the coming decade.
“The debt buyback does not concern the pension funds,” Samaras was quoted as saying in an interview with yesterday’s Proto Thema newspaper.
“We wouldn’t erase the debt even if we took the funds’ bonds. These are seen as arrears of the state to itself,” he said.
Greek pension funds hold more than 8 billion euros out of a total 63 billion euros of Greek bonds held by private investors. Greek banks are estimated to hold nearly 17 billion euros.
Most of their capital has already been wiped out by a debt cut in March and they must be recapitalized with more than 40 billion euros in bailout funds.
The government is expected to unveil the terms of the deal today before a meeting of eurozone finance ministers. So far, international lenders have agreed the bonds would not be purchased for more than the closing price on Nov. 23.
On the secondary market, Greek bonds eligible under the buyback ranged from 25.15 to 34.41 cents in the euro at trading’s close on that date, according to Reuters data.
Greece aims to cut its debt by spending about 10 billion euros from its rescue package on the buyback scheme. Samaras said that Greek banks would benefit from the voluntary debt buyback deal, since they held Greek bonds at lower prices on their books.
“The banks won’t lose out because [the bonds] on their books are down at a lower price,” he said. “They won’t lose any of their capital, but will end up with more liquidity.”
A senior Greek banker told reporters last week that some of the country’s banks held Greek bonds at 22 to 23 euro cents on their books. However, the banks together were likely to forego about 3 billion to 4 billion euros in interest payments over the next 10 years if they participated.
The deal is seen as a golden opportunity for hedge funds which have bought the bonds at rock bottom prices.
In an interview in yesterday’s Ethnos newspaper, Greek Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras said many bondholders would profit from the deal and reiterated that Athens would make every effort to attract wide participation.
“This program must succeed,” he said.
“There is a big part of bondholders who bought them recently, at very low prices, and will possibly estimate that their participation in the buyback programme will be profitable,” he said.
When Lika Megreladze was a child, life in her native western Georgian region of Guria revolved around tea. Her mother worked for decades as a scientist at the Soviet Union’s Institute of Tea and Subtropical Crops in the village of Anaseuli, Georgia, perfecting cultivation methods for a Georgian tea industry that supplied the bulk of the vast communist state’s brews. “When I was a child, this was only my mum’s workplace. Only later I realized that it was something big,” she said. Now, the institute lies abandoned. Yellowed papers are strewn around its decaying corridors, and a statue of Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin
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