La semana que viene va a estar movidita tanto en Grecia como en Bruselas. Parece que hay preparativos para un feriado bancario en Grecia, señal que muchos interpretan como la preparación a un default. Caras cansadas las de los griegos estos días. Suerte, chicos.
Título: "Bank Holiday" Preparations Begin In
Greece, Lines Form At Athens ATMs
Texto: The writing has been on the wall for quite
sometime. Deposit flight from Greece's ailing banking sector has been running
north of €500 million per day this week as the threat of capital controls casts
a pall over the Greek government's efforts to reassure the public and head off
a terminal bank run.
Sparking a panic has been the most powerful tool at
the troika's disposal to bring PM Alexis Tsipras to the negotiating table and
forcing Syriza to either concede to pension cuts and a VAT hike or risk social
and political upheaval in the face of dark ATMs and public protests - we said
this first in February and finally even the Greek government realized
just what game Europe is playing.
Until now, Greeks had taken the barrage of headlines
in stride with a stoic fortitude that would impress Marcus Aurelius but now, it
appears as though the 'institutions' might have finally broken their spirits.
Earlier today, the ECB agreed to lift the ELA cap by
just €1.8 billion, far less than Greek banking officials had requested and
probably just barely enough to cover Friday's withdrawals. And so, as Europe's
"Lehman Weekend" may finally be kicking off, the ATM lines are
officially forming as Greeks prepare to be 'Cyprus'd' and as the country stares
into "template" oblivion.
What is perhaps more shocking is that anyone still had
money in Greek banks at all...
And in yet another sign that the next week may be the
beginning of the end, Cyrpus is preparing for a bank "holiday"
in Greece:
Bank of Cyprus, Cyprus’s largest lender, is preparing
for an extended bank holiday in Greece as continuing deposits outflows may
force authorities to take this type of step and impose capital controls.
“We are preparing to facilitate our customers with
operations in Greece with additional liquidity,” a Bank of Cyprus source with
knowledge of the situation said on condition of anonymity. “This is something
we don’t want to see happening”.
The source said that in recent days the bank saw an
increase in deposits inflows, both from Cypriot and Greek depositors, amounting
“hundreds of million euros”.
Reuters reported on Thursday that European Central
Bank Executive Board member Benoit Coeure told euro area’s finance ministers
that he was not sure whether Greek bank will be able to open on Monday.
The Bank of Cyprus source also said that the bank
cannot be ruled out that a bank holiday in Greece could also affect the Cypriot
banking system via the units of Greek banks operating on the island in the form
of deposits outflows.
The source was not in position to name the amount in
additional liquidity the bank will need in the case of a bank holiday in Greece
nor the number of its customers that would be affected.
“In that case, a bank holiday in Greece could also
prompt Cypriot authorities to also impose a bank holiday in Cyprus,” the Bank
of Cyprus source said.
Finance minister Harris Georgiades who was talking on
state radio CyBC today said that the units of Greek banks operating in Cyprus
are not affected by what is happening in the cash-strapped country.
“There are in Cyprus banks of Greek ownership,” he
said in reference to ?lpha Bank Cyprus Ltd, Eurobank Cyprus Ltd, National Bank
of Greece (Cyprus) Ltd and Piraeus Bank (Cyprus) Ltd.
“I want to clarify that they are Cypriot banks with a
Cypriot licence, their own capital and capital adequacy, important liquidity
with no exposure to Greece or to the Greek government or banks,” he said. “The
fact that the shareholder is a Greek bank is not making any difference. What
makes a difference in a positive way is the stability in and the confidence to
Cyprus and its financial system which is internationally acknowledged”.
Interestingly, it appears someone got a hard tap on
the shoulder because the above has now been removed. Here's a
link to the cached version which was also captured by another local
publication.
And the swissy is bid.
The only remaining question is whether today's deposit
bleed will be dramatic enough to force Brussels - or Athens for that matter
under pressure by the local banks - into implementing capital controls over the
weekend.
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