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Thread: European debt crisis: Round 2

  1. #1
    Senior Member Amerillo's Avatar
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    European debt crisis: Round 2

    Sun Mar 25, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti expressed concern about Spain's public
    finances on Saturday and said it would not take much to reignite the euro zone
    debt crisis and revive the risk of it spreading to Italy.

    Speaking at a conference by Lake Como where he was discussing the
    Italian government's new labour reforms, Monti praised Spain's efforts
    to reform its jobs market but said it had fallen behind on budget control.
    Spain shocked markets last month when it said it had missed its 2011 budget
    deficit target and a few days later set itself a softer goal for 2012.

    "It (Spain) certainly made profound reform of the labour market but it did
    not pay the same attention to public finances," Monti said. "
    This is causing us big concern because their yields are rising and it
    wouldn't take much to recreate trends that could spread to us through
    contagion," Monti said.

    He added that any fresh eruption of the euro zone debt crisis could cancel
    out the progress made in Italy and "take us back months."
    Monti passed a 33 billion-euro austerity plan in December, and is sticking to
    a target to balance Italy's budget in 2013. Meanwhile, Spain has revised its
    deficit target to 5.3 percent of GDP in 2012, softer than originally agreed
    under the euro zone's austerity drive.

    An injection of European Central Bank funds into the euro zone's banking
    system eased financial stress late last year after Italy's bond yields surged
    above 7 percent, beyond which debt costs are widely deemed
    unaffordable.Spanish and Italian borrowing costs fell steadily early in 2012, with
    investors flush with ECB cash and increasingly confident new governments in both
    countries would enact reforms to tackle their financial problems.

    But since Spain revealed its budget slippage, investors have been ditching
    Spanish bonds for Italian, in a sign that the epicentre of the crisis is
    shifting. Spanish 10-year bonds yield about 5.4 percent, 40 basis points more than
    their Italian counterparts, and 80 bps above last month's lows. In November,
    before the ECB's first massive cash injection, they yielded almost 2 percentage
    points less than Italy at 6.7 percent.

    Source: Reuters

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    Fred Steeves (25th March 2012), Jenci (25th March 2012), sandy (25th March 2012)

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    Senior Member Fred Steeves's Avatar
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    Re: European debt crisis: Round 2

    Isn't the new Italian Prime Minister one of the recently "installed" Goldman Sachs boys, along with the new guy in Greece?

    ALL IS WELL

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    Senior Member Amerillo's Avatar
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    Re: European debt crisis: Round 2

    Yep, remember this guy?



    Last edited by Amerillo; 25th March 2012 at 18:42.

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