Facing
cash crunch, Greece set to tap into bank rescue fund -
sources
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[March 10, 2015]
By George Georgiopoulos
ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece is set to tap
into more than half a billion euros of funds sitting in the country's
bank rescue fund as it scrambles to find money this month amid a cash
crunch, banking and government sources told Reuters on Tuesday.
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Shut out of debt markets and with aid from lenders on hold, Athens
risks running out of cash in the coming weeks after a steep fall in
state revenues.
The government faces a 1.5 billion euro ($1.6 billion) loan
repayment to the International Monetary Fund this month and has to
refinance some 3.2 billion euros of maturing short-term treasury
paper.
To help ease the looming crisis, the government plans to take 555
million euros sitting at the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund (HFSF)
-- the bank rescue vehicle that was used in 2012 to recapitalize its
main lenders.
Greece's four top banks -- National, Piraeus, Eurobank and Piraeus
-- handed over this money in commissions following their
recapitalization.
"This is money for which there is no other claim, it is available
for the government," a senior banker with direct knowledge of the
matter told Reuters, declining to be named.
"The HFSF has discussed this with the European Stability Mechanism
over the weekend and there is no issue," the banker added, referring
to the euro zone rescue fund. He said it was up to the government to
decide when it withdraws the cash.
The HFSF, funded from the country's EU/IMF bailout with 50 billion
euros, recapitalized lenders with European Financial Stability
Facility (EFSF) bonds, which banks can still use as collateral for
direct funding from the European Central Bank.
Greece has been also looking to tap into the cash reserves of
pension funds and public sector entities through repo transactions
to cover part of its funding needs in March.
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In such transactions, pension funds and other state entities sitting
on cash lend the money to the country's debt agency through a
short-term repurchase agreement for up to 15 days, debt agency
officials have told Reuters.
Greece is due to resume talks with its creditors in Brussels on
Wednesday, with the aim of unlocking desperately needed funding for
the heavily indebted state.
($1 = 0.9316 euros)
(Reporting by George Georgiopoulos, additional reporting by Lefteris
Papadimas, Editing by Crispian Balmer)
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