Greece is planning a gradual return to international debt markets next year, a senior Greek official said on Thursday.
Greek Deputy Minister of Finance Giorgos Houliarakis said the decision would hinge on a return to economic growth next year — as forecast by the EU — and a continued drop in sovereign borrowing rates.
Greece has been locked out of debt markets since 2010, with a brief return two years ago.
Photo: Reuters
Interest rates on Greek government bonds have eased after Athens and eurozone rescue lenders ended months of delays in reviewing the nation’s bailout program.
“Regarding our return to the markets, it’s our view that as soon as the economy is stabilized and begins to recover ... it will occur slowly in 2017,” Houliarakis said.
“Our aim is not to return quickly, but to build trust. We don’t want to rush back in just so we can celebrate,” he said.
European lenders on Wednesday agreed to unfreeze more rescue loans and to consider debt relief, days after Greece’s left-wing government passed a massive new round of austerity measures that include across-the-board tax hikes.
Hours after agreement was reached, Fitch ratings agency said the disbursement of 10.3 billion euros meant that Greece would not face difficulties in debt repayment over the summer.
“The agreement ... reduces the risk of another Greek liquidity crisis this summer, and incentivizes the country to complete its third bailout program,” Fitch said.
“However, with little debt relief offered upfront, the Greek government may find it progressively more difficult to continue with politically controversial measures required to meet ambitious program commitments,” it said.
Greece has continued to sell short-term debt since receiving its first bailout loans in 2010, but interest rates on government bonds have remained astronomically high.
The previous conservative government raised 3 billion euros in April 2014, with a one-off sale of five-year bonds. However, the auction was followed by months of political uncertainty that saw the Greek economy return to the brink of collapse last year.
Interest on 10-year government bonds has dropped to its lowest level this year at 7.2 percent, down from 11.6 percent in February.
Nissan Motor Co has agreed to sell its global headquarters in Yokohama for ¥97 billion (US$630 million) to a group sponsored by Taiwanese autoparts maker Minth Group (敏實集團), as the struggling automaker seeks to shore up its financial position. The acquisition is led by a special purchase company managed by KJR Management Ltd, a Japanese real-estate unit of private equity giant KKR & Co, people familiar with the matter said. KJR said it would act as asset manager together with Mizuho Real Estate Management Co. Nissan is undergoing a broad cost-cutting campaign by eliminating jobs and shuttering plants as it grapples
TEMPORARY TRUCE: China has made concessions to ease rare earth trade controls, among others, while Washington holds fire on a 100% tariff on all Chinese goods China is effectively suspending implementation of additional export controls on rare earth metals and terminating investigations targeting US companies in the semiconductor supply chain, the White House announced. The White House on Saturday issued a fact sheet outlining some details of the trade pact agreed to earlier in the week by US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) that aimed to ease tensions between the world’s two largest economies. Under the deal, China is to issue general licenses valid for exports of rare earths, gallium, germanium, antimony and graphite “for the benefit of US end users and their suppliers
PERSISTENT RUMORS: Nvidia’s CEO said the firm is not in talks to sell AI chips to China, but he would welcome a change in US policy barring the activity Nvidia Corp CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) said his company is not in discussions to sell its Blackwell artificial intelligence (AI) chips to Chinese firms, waving off speculation it is trying to engineer a return to the world’s largest semiconductor market. Huang, who arrived in Taiwan yesterday ahead of meetings with longtime partner Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), took the opportunity to clarify recent comments about the US-China AI race. The Nvidia head caused a stir in an interview this week with the Financial Times, in which he was quoted as saying “China will win” the AI race. Huang yesterday said
Dutch chipmaker Nexperia BV’s China unit yesterday said that it had established sufficient inventories of finished goods and works-in-progress, and that its supply chain remained secure and stable after its parent halted wafer supplies. The Dutch company suspended supplies of wafers to its Chinese assembly plant a week ago, calling it “a direct consequence of the local management’s recent failure to comply with the agreed contractual payment terms,” Reuters reported on Friday last week. Its China unit called Nexperia’s suspension “unilateral” and “extremely irresponsible,” adding that the Dutch parent’s claim about contractual payment was “misleading and highly deceptive,” according to a statement