Greece Prepares For Second Bailout Vote Today
The Greek parliament is preparing for another vote on the final bailout negotiations on Wednesday as Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras seeks to close the third bailout deal that will offer up to EUR 86 billion debt, after Greece repaid money due to the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank. The Greek government expects the final bailout deal by August 20, which is the deadline for a EUR 3.6 billion debt due to the ECB ahead of the EUR 1.5 billion due to IMF in September. On Monday, the crisis struck country repaid the money due to the IMF, the ECB and the Greek central bank, worth EUR 6.8 billion in total with the European Commission's EUR 7.16 billion bridge-loan. In addition, Greek banks reopened partially on Monday, helped by ECB raising the emergency lending assistance by 900 million euros for a week. Nevertheless, Greek stock and bond markets are reportedly to remain closed through Wednesday. Meanwhile, on Tuesday, Standard & Poor's Ratings Services upgraded Greece's long-term sovereign credit rating to 'CCC+' from 'CCC-' on the view that the Greek default on its stock of commercial debt is no longer inevitable in the next 6 to 12 months. S&P's affirmed short-term credit rating at 'C' with a stable outlook. S&P's analyst Frank Gil expects the possibility of Greece leaving the eurozone has declined to less than 50 percent within his forecast horizon to 2018. But he projects that the risk of an exit is still high if the Greek government does not implement the bailout program. Gil expects the new bailout program negotiations to take at least a month and projects the Greek economy to shrink by 3 percent this year. He doesn't expect capital controls to be lifted until institutions close review of banks' capital requirements late this year or in early 2016. On the other hand, on Monday, Moody's Capital Markets Research cut Greek Sovereign Expected Default Frequency metrics, which measures the expected probability of default over a year, to 3.17 percent from over 20 percent, due to positive developments over the past week. Moody's said Greece's probability of default is elevated at 3.17 percent as uncertainty remains over upcoming negotiations on a full bailout program, which are expected to last at least a month. "Even if the planned new Greek bailout is quickly and smoothly implemented, the economy looks set to remain in a deep and prolonged recession. We expect the Greek economy to contract by about 3 percent this year and possibly by much more, with little improvement in 2016," said Jonathan Loynes, Chief European Economist at Capital Economics.
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