Euro area weighs $60bn Greek loan buy to win IMF support

epa05314344 European commissioner in charge of Economic and Financial Affairs Pierre Moscovici and Valdis Dombrovskis (L)  European Commission Vice-President in charge of the Euro and Social Dialogue give a press conference in Brussels, Belgium, 18 May 2016. European Commission today proposes its 2016 country-specific recommendations (CSRs), setting out its economic policy guidance for individual Member States for the next 12 to 18 months. The College of Commissioners also discussed the current situation concerning the Rule of law in Poland  EPA/OLIVIER HOSLET

 

Bloomberg

Euro-area officials are weighing a proposal to purchase loans that member states made to Greece in a move that would ease the nation’s debt burden, a precondition for the International Monetary Fund’s involvement in a bailout program.
Senior finance ministry officials from the currency bloc held a conference call on Wednesday evening to discuss ways to make Greece’s €321 billion ($360 billion) of obligations sustainable, according to two people with knowledge of the talks. One option would be for the European Stability Mechanism, the euro-area’s financial backstop, to purchase the first loans nations made to Greece and reduce the interest payments, the people said, asking not to be named because the discussions are private. About €52.9 billion of bilateral loans were made to Greece in 2010 and 2011.
Greece’s creditors are struggling to complete a review of the nation’s third bailout, which would pave the way for the disbursal of a much-needed aid tranche. The IMF has made its participation in the program contingent upon debt relief, a prospect euro-area finance ministers began discussing last week during an emergency meeting meant to resolve the impasse in unlocking the funds. Nations including Germany have said that the IMF needs to be involved in the Greek bailout program, while resisting the fund’s calls for a deeper debt restructuring.
“I’m not discussing in detail the measures we’ll discuss, and hopefully pass, next week in Brussels,” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told reporters on Thursday in Sendai, Japan. “But you know that we made quite some progress two weeks ago in Brussels. We’re finalizing what we have agreed unanimously two weeks ago in the
Eurogroup.”
The ESM is also considering purchasing the IMF’s loans as a way to give Greece a financial boost since its debt terms are more lenient than those of the Washington-based fund, according to a sustainability report prepared by the European institutions. Buying back the IMF loans “amounts to debt relief,” European Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis said in remarks in Brussels on Wednesday at a Politico conference.
The officials considered three debt-relief options during the call: have the ESM purchase bilateral loans made to Greece from individual countries in the so-called Greek Loan Facility; have the ESM purchase the IMF’s obligations; and extending the maturities of Greece’s debt and reducing the interest rates, one of the people said.
Nations that joined the euro area after the first bailout expressed reservations about the ESM purchasing the bilateral loans because it would increase their exposure to Greek debt that was created before they became members of the currency union, one of the people said. If Greece were to default on its loans, euro-area states, which are shareholders of the crisis fund, would be on the hook for the losses.
The discussion on Wednesday was a technical exchange of views and no decisions were made, the person said. Finance ministry deputies will debate available options before their ministers meet on May 24.

Contingency Mechanism
The IMF and its European counterparts including the European Central Bank and the European Commission disagree on the prospects for Greece’s finances and hence on their outlook about the nation’s debt trajectory. They have asked Greece to legislate automatic spending cuts which would kick in if the country misses certain budget targets as a way to reconcile their different outlooks. The Greek parliament will vote on additional belt-tightening equal to about 1 percent of gross domestic product ahead of next week’s meeting of finance ministers. In addition to lifting restrictions for the sale of bank loans to distressed debt funds, and raising sales, consumption, fuel, tobacco, and gambling taxes, the bill also lays out automatic spending cuts of as much as 2% of GDP in the event budget projections fall short.
Greece’s creditors are trying to avoid a repeat of last year’s negotiations that nearly pushed the country out of the 19-nation common currency and roiled international markets.

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