By Jan Lopatka and Ingrid Melander
The parliament of tiny Slovakia stalled the expansion of a
bailout fund to rescue the euro zone from its debt crisis on Tuesday, but
international lenders said they were likely to grant a loan to Greece next
month, buying time for a broader response.
European Central Bank chief
Jean-Claude Trichet said the debt crisis had become systemic and must be
tackled decisively.
Slovakia is the only country
in the 17-member currency zone that has yet to approve giving
new powers to the European Financial Stability Fund. The expansion was agreed
by euro zone leaders in July but must be ratified by each country.
The EFSF is Europe's main
weapon to respond to a debt crisis that threatens the European common currency,
the region's banks and potentially the global financial system.
The government of Slovak Prime
Minister Iveta Radicova fell on Tuesday after a small party in her ruling
coalition refused to back the plans. The outgoing government still expects to
be able to enact the measure as a caretaker administration by the end of this
week with support from an opposition party.
"There is an assumption
that the EFSF, one way or the other, will be approved by the end of the
week," Finance Minister Ivan Miklos told parliament ahead of the vote.
The failure in the Slovak
parliament underlines the difficulty of forging a united response to the worsening
debt crisis in a currency zone where all 17 member states must act in concert,
and voters are increasingly angry at the growing costs.
Leaders are struggling to find
a response that would protect euro
zone banks if Greece
defaults on its debts.
For now, Athens needs an
immediate infusion of cash within weeks just to meet state payrolls. A loan
programme has been held up while the European Union and IMF assess whether
Greece is doing enough to get its finances in order.
After a weeks-long review of
Greece's finances, inspectors from the European Union, IMF and European Central
Bank, known as the troika, said an 8 billion euro loan tranche should be paid
in early November. It still requires approval by euro zone finance ministers
and the IMF.
MORE REFORMS NEEDED
The troika warned that Greece
had made only patchy progress in meeting the terms of a bailout agreed in May
last year.
"It is essential that
the authorities put more emphasis on structural reforms in the public sector
and the economy more
broadly," the troika said in a statement.
It said additional measures
were likely to be needed to meet debt targets in 2013 and 2014, and a
privatization drive and structural reforms were falling short.
Germany, the euro zone's biggest economy,
said a decision on whether to make the aid payment was still open.
A German Finance Ministry
spokesman said the troika's verdict showed "both light and shadows":
"We'll wait and look at
the report, analyze it and then decide what will happen with the sixth
tranche."
That money would anyway only
buy Greece and its euro zone partners a small amount of time.
Germany and France, the leading powers in the 17-nation
euro zone, have promised to propose a comprehensive strategy to fight the debt
crisis at an EU summit delayed until October 23.
After Athens admitted it would
not meet its deficit target this year, there is a growing acceptance that a
second Greek bailout agreed in July with private bondholders' participation may
need to be renegotiated. A rush is now on to beef up the currency bloc's rescue
fund and bolster its banks.
Europe's top financial
watchdog warned that the euro zone's sovereign debt crisis threatened global
economic stability.
Trichet issued the dramatic
warning as chairman of the European Systemic Risk Board, created to avoid a
repeat of the 2008 financial crisis, amid growing fears that Greece will default
on its massive debt.
"The crisis is systemic
and must be tackled decisively," Trichet told a European Parliament
committee in his final appearance before retiring at the end of the month.
"The high
interconnectedness in the EU financial system has led to a rapidly rising risk
of significant contagion. It threatens financial stability in the EU as a whole
and adversely impacts the real economy in Europe and beyond."
NEW BANK DATA SOUGHT
European banking regulators
meanwhile asked banks across the continent to provide updated data on their
capital position and sovereign debt exposures to help reassess their need for
recapitalization.
European Commission President
Jose Manuel Barroso said the EU executive would present proposals for bank
recapitalization and other aspects of the crisis response on Wednesday.
Industry sources said the EU
banking regulator had demanded lenders achieve a core capital ratio of at least
7 percent in a new round of internal stress tests, and banks that failed to
reach that mark would be asked to bolster their capital.
That would mean some 48 banks
would be required to raise a total of 99 billion euros in capital, according to
a Reuters Breakingviews calculator using data from previous stress tests. Greek
banks would need nearly a third of the total.
For a comprehensive deal to
come together, the bloc's leaders must resolve differences over how to
recapitalize banks, whether to force a Greek debt restructuring or stick to the
existing voluntary deal with private bondholders, and how to use the euro
zone's rescue fund.
Europe's inability to draw a
line under the crisis has caused growing international alarm, withJapan weighing
in on Tuesday after the United States and Britain pressed EU leaders to take
decisive action.
Tokyo said it would consult
with Washington before it considers buying more euro zone bonds. Finance Minister Jun Azumi urged
Europe to restore market confidence in the run-up to a Group of 20 finance
leaders' meeting in Paris this week.
Interbank lending rates in
Europe continued to rise amid growing concern over European banks' ability to
operate, despite the prospect of massive ECB liquidity support.
Some European banks voiced
concern at the prospect of being forced by governments to raise additional
capital that some say they do not need, possibly by taking public money. One
senior banker said that could lead to legal challenges in Germany.
Germany's BDB banking
association said Europe should look at recapitalization on a case-by-case basis
rather than taking a blanket approach apparently envisaged by Berlin and Paris.
The director of the
association, Michael Kemmer, also told ARD television that politicians should
stick to a July agreement on private bondholder involvement in a rescue plan
for Greece, which called for a 21 percent writedown.
German Finance Minister
Wolfgang Schaeuble and the chairman of euro group finance ministers,
Jean-Claude Juncker, have said that figure may no longer be sufficient and the
talks may have to be reopened.
Speaking on Austrian
television late on Monday, Juncker refused to rule out a mandatory debt
restructuring for Greece, which many market analysts and economists say is
bound to happen in the coming months. Many analysts see the rush to
recapitalize European banks as a prelude to an enforced write-down of 50
percent or more on their Greek debt holdings.
(Additional reporting by Michael Winfrey and Martin Santa in Bratislava, Paul Carrel, Jonathan Gould, Philipp Halstrick, Edward Taylor and Sakari Suoninen in Frankfurt, and Huw Jones in
London; Writing by Paul Taylor, Mike Peacock and Peter Graff)
Source : Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment