Tuesday, July 7, 2015

EU to Greece: Make deal by Sunday or face bankruptcy

EU to Greece: Make deal by Sunday or face bankruptcy

USA TODAY - ‎25 minutes ago‎
European leaders gave Greece a stark ultimatum Tuesday night: reach a new bailout agreement with its creditors by Sunday or face bankruptcy and expulsion from the euro currency system.
Greece debt crisis: Eurozone sets deadline for new plan
Greece Gets Until Sunday for Proposals to Stave off Collapse
Greeks reject the rule of Europe's gods of austerity
Europe gives Greece 5 days to avoid bankruptcy
Alexis Tsipras

EU to Greece: Make deal by Sunday or face bankruptcy


July 7 -- Bloomberg's Joe Weisenthal updates the latest news on life in Greece during the Greek debt crisis. He speaks on "Bloomberg Markets." Bloomberg
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European leaders gave Greece a stark ultimatum Tuesday night: Reach a new bailout agreement with its creditors by Sunday or face bankruptcy and expulsion from the euro currency system.
The leaders gave Greece until Thursday to submit new economic reform proposals to justify fresh lending by international creditors, and they said the group would meet again Sunday to make a final decision on whether to approve another bailout for the distressed nation.
"If this does not happen, it will mean an end of the negotiations with all the possible consequences, including the worst-case scenario, where all of us will lose," European Council President Donald Tusk said in a statement.
"Our inability to find agreement may lead to the bankruptcy of Greece and the insolvency of its banking system," Tusk added.
"Tonight I have to say loud and clear that the final deadline ends this week," Tusk said.
His last-ditch ultimatum came after eurozone finance ministers expressed deep frustration over the latest proposal Greece brought to a meeting in Brussels on Tuesday.
On Sunday, Greek voters soundly rejected an earlier bailout proposal by creditors — the European Central Bank, International Monetary Fund and the European Commission — as too onerous. Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras thought the results would provide him more leverage to soften the bailout terms.
Instead, eurozone officials were dismayed that Tsipras didn't come to Tuesday's gathering with a detailed written proposal.
"I'm extremely somber about this summit,"Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said, according to the Associated Press. "I'm also somber about the question of whether Greece really wants to come up with proposals, with a solution."
German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned Tsipras: "We are no longer talking about weeks but very few days," AP said.
The dramatic negotiations come as Greece's banking system and economy face collapse without a new lifeline. Greece failed to make a $1.8 billion debt payment by June 30 and is due to make another $3.9 billion payment by July 20.
Banks have been closed for a week, with strict limits on daily ATM withdrawals, and will stay closed Tuesday and Wednesday amid fears the banking system may soon run out of cash.
On Monday, the ECB said it would not increase the amount of emergency credit that it provides to Greek banks.
A Greek exit from the euro would be an unprecedented move with unforeseen consequences for the 19-nation bloc that uses the currency. European leaders were preparing a plan in the event of a "Grexit."
In Washington on Tuesday, President Obama spoke by phone with Tsipras and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, urging a deal on the Greek debt crisis, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. Merkel has been demanding that Greece tighten its belt in return for new loans.
After Sunday's vote, Tsipras replaced combative finance minister Yanis Varoufakis with his deputy, Euclid Tsakalotos in an effort to smooth the path to an agreement.
U.S. and European stocks initially tumbled as the standoff over Greece's debt crisis became more uncertain but U.S. stocks largely recovered by early afternoon. The Dow Jones industrial average closed up 93 points after earlier tumbling as much as 200 points.
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EU to Greece: Make deal by Sunday or face bankruptcy

With or without a deal Greece is already bankrupt. So, I'm not sure this threat actually means much at all if you think about it a little.


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