Once the outcast of European bond markets, Greece appears steadily on the road to redemption, Reuters notes in the following report:
Following years of austerity, the expiry of an 86 billion euro ($100 billion) bailout in August will mark the end of an era in which Greece defaulted, 10-year yields topped 40 percent and the country came perilously close to being kicked out of the euro.
Now, as Greece follows fellow financial crisis victims Ireland, Spain, Portugal and Cyprus back into the fold, it needs to lure long-term investors into its bond market so the country can fund itself independently after the bailout cash runs out.
That could happen with a new bond issue to tap into positive sentiment around the end of the country’s third bailout, inclusion in European Central Bank bond purchases or further credit upgrades for its debt which is still rated as junk.
An important milestone would be for the European Central Bank (ECB) to include Greek bonds in its massive quantitative easing (QE) stimulus scheme once the bailout ends.
As Greece is rated below investment grade, it has only had access to cheap central bank cash because it is part of a bailout programme. The ECB has made clear that once Greece leaves the program its waiver will be revoked.
To be included in QE, Greece would need first to pass an ECB debt sustainability analysis and that is unlikely to happen until the country has implemented reforms agreed in June with Eurogroup creditors to ease its debt profile.
Read more at ekathimerini.com
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