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Tuesday 7 July 2015

Euro Bonds Hammered After Greece 2015 Decision, & More


Bond yields climb in Southern Europe after Greece rejects bailout terms



Borrowing costs in Italy, Spain and Portugal climbed on Monday after Greeks decisively rejected the terms of a rescue package proposed by its international lenders. The no to the lenders' bailout demands triggered concerns the debt-laden country will leave the eurozone, sending shivers through the region's financial markets. The yield on 10-year Portuguese bondsTMBMKPT-10Y, +7.70% rose 11 basis points to 3.04%, according to electronic trading platform Tradeweb. Financing costs for 10-year Spanish debtTMBMKES-10Y, +4.06% added 8 basis points to 2.30%, while yields on 10-year Italian government paper TMBMKIT-10Y, +5.98% rose 8 basis points to 2.32%. 


Greece asked to make 'credible' proposals for debt deal


Germany and France have asked Greece to make detailed proposals to revive bailout talks, a day after Greek voters decisively rejected creditors' demands for further austerity, plunging Europe into crisis.

"The door is open to discussions," said French President Francois Hollande after crisis talks in Paris with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
"It is now up to the government of Alexis Tsipras to make serious, credible proposals so that this willingness to stay in the eurozone can translate into a lasting programme."


Robert J. Samuelson: Massive debt and little growth create a global debt trap


WASHINGTON — We have the Greeks to thank for an elementary tutorial in what ails the world economy. Greece's central problem is that it has too much debt and too little economic growth (none actually) to service the debt. The country is caught in an economic cul de sac. It can't seem to generate growth without spending more or taxing less, which makes the debt worse, while its creditors demand that it control its debt by spending less and taxing more, which undermines growth.



Fitch says Japan fiscal discipline plan unlikely to lower debt burden


Japan's public debt burden is likely to remain high under a new fiscal framework approved last month as the government's structural reforms will not boost economic growth and tax revenue significantly, Fitch Ratings said on Monday.
Japan's fiscal plan relies almost entirely on achieving high economic growth to increase tax revenue, but there is little room for the economy to accelerate as it is already near its potential growth rate, Fitch said in a statement.


A lack of binding spending targets in the government's plan also leaves room for spending to rise further, the ratings agency said.

Rival ratings agency Moody's Investors Service also expressed concern that structural reforms could take longer to boost growth than the government expects.


TIMELINE: China’s Efforts to Stem $3.2 Trillion Stock Rout



China’s policy makers are coming up with new tactics almost every day to stem a rout that’s wiped $3.2 trillion off the world’s second-biggest stock market.
Saturday June 27: *PBOC CUT: After the Shanghai Composite Index posted a 19 percent, two-week plunge, the central bank cut its benchmark lending rate and deposit rate, while also reducing required reserve ratios for some lenders
Monday June 29: Shanghai Composite rises 2.3 percent at the open before reversing course and plunging as much as 7.6 percent. Closes 3.3 percent lower.


Greek banks to stay closed for two further days - video




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