Shoe 1 dropping.
LONDON (MarketWatch) —
Bank stocks and government bonds tanked in Greece on Thursday, as investors fled the country’s assets after the European Central Bank restricted liquidity to Greek banks.
In a move seen as cranking up pressure on the new anti-austerity government to reach a debt deal with creditors, the ECB late Wednesday told Athens that Greek financial institutions can no longer use the country’s sovereign debt as collateral for ECB-provided liquidity.
That move has not been taken well by investors in bank stocks on Thursday morning: Piraeus Bank
TPEIR, -14.97% slid 16%, Attica Bank
TATT, -12.99% dropped 14%, National Bank of Greece
ETE, -12.31% slumped 15%, Eurobank Ergasias
EUROB, -9.70% lost 14%, and Alpha Bank
ALPHA, -2.09% gave up 10%. The banks weighed on the Athex Composite index
GD, -3.37% which sank 5.9% to 797.90.
In the bond markets, the yield on 10-year Greek government paper rose by 86 basis points to 10.542%, according to electronic trading platform Tradeweb.
The yield on 5-year bonds jumped 142 basis points, or more than a percentage point, to 14.137%.
“Any hopes of the new Greek government that the ECB might unilaterally buy it more time were dashed by the ECB yesterday, removing the rating waiver for Greek collateral,” said Christian Schulz, senior economist at Berenberg, in a note.
“Greece’s financial system and economy could collapse within weeks, if Greece turns down the lifeline thrown to it by Europe because the double-populist coalition in Athens rejects the strings attached,” he added.
The Alexis Tsipras-led Greek governing coalition is seeking to renegotiate strict bailout terms agreed with international lenders before the current program expires by the end of February. If no agreement is reached, Greece risks running out of money and defaulting on its loans. European parliament President Martin Schulz warned in an interview with Germany daily Handelsblatt that
Greece risks bankruptcy if it doesn’t stick to the commitments of the bailout.
“If Greece unilaterally changes the agreements, the other side is no longer obliged to stick to them,” Schulz said in the interview.
However, Greece has stuck to its stance on easing austerity measures. In an overnight statement issued by the Finance Ministry, the government said it remains “unwavering in the goals of its social salvation program, approved by the vote of the Greek people” with an aim of “coming up with a European policy that will definitively put an end to the now self-perpetuating crisis of the Greek social economy,” according to media reports.
Greece’s finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis, was meeting with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble in Berlin on Thursday in an attempt to win backing for a new debt plan.