  France Portugal slips into default territory (karma: 1)
en>fr fr>en By VAVD Comments: 2682, member since Wed Nov 25, 2009On Wed Jan 18, 2012 11:47 AM
Yet another victory in the "American war against the Euro". Next target: France
Portugal is trading in default territory after investors offloaded the country’s bonds this week amid rising fears of contagion, hurting a government debt auction on Wednesday. Worries are mounting that the private sector and Greece will fail to agree a restructuring package for Athens’ debt.
Portuguese 10-year bond yields, which have an inverse relationship with prices, jumped to a new euro-era high of 14.40 per cent in London on Wednesday. Before the S&P two-notch downgrade late on Friday, yields were trading at 12.45 per cent.
Portugal on Wednesday sold €1.25bn of 11-month bills, €754m of six-month notes and €496m of three-month notes, lower than the €2bn to €2.5bn targeted by the government debt agency.
Portugal does not have a bond maturing until June, when €10bn is due for repayment. Its borrowing needs are also modest at €17.5bn. However, investors worry about Portugal’s painfully slow growth, which could impact on its ability to service its debts.
Many investors were forced to sell Portuguese bonds after Standard & Poor’s downgraded the country to junk on Friday. Other funds sold Portuguese debt after Lisbon was removed from Citigroup’s European Bond Index, which these investors track, because of its fall to junk status.
All three main credit rating agencies, S&P, Moody’s, and Fitch, rate Portugal as junk, below investment grade. 3 Replies to Portugal slips into default territory |
re: Portugal slips into default territory (karma: 1)
en>fr fr>en By Armonteutmaronne Comments: 8877, member since Sun May 20, 2007On Wed Jan 18, 2012 12:13 PM
VAVD wrote:
Portugal is trading in default territory after investors offloaded the country’s bonds this week amid rising fears of contagion, hurting a government debt auction on Wednesday. Worries are mounting that the private sector and Greece will fail to agree a restructuring package for Athens’ debt.
Portuguese 10-year bond yields, which have an inverse relationship with prices, jumped to a new euro-era high of 14.40 per cent in London on Wednesday. Before the S&P two-notch downgrade late on Friday, yields were trading at 12.45 per cent.
Portugal on Wednesday sold €1.25bn of 11-month bills, €754m of six-month notes and €496m of three-month notes, lower than the €2bn to €2.5bn targeted by the government debt agency.
Portugal does not have a bond maturing until June, when €10bn is due for repayment. Its borrowing needs are also modest at €17.5bn. However, investors worry about Portugal’s painfully slow growth, which could impact on its ability to service its debts.
Many investors were forced to sell Portuguese bonds after Standard & Poor’s downgraded the country to junk on Friday. Other funds sold Portuguese debt after Lisbon was removed from Citigroup’s European Bond Index, which these investors track, because of its fall to junk status.
All three main credit rating agencies, S&P, Moody’s, and Fitch, rate Portugal as junk, below investment grade.
Mister "comic", does you like Portuguese dried cod ? |
re: Portugal slips into default territory (karma: 1)
en>fr fr>en By MowerMan Comments: 323, member since Tue Mar 08, 2011On Wed Jan 18, 2012 12:39 PM
 The best way for Europe to deal with this is to create a union of Default, and get it over with. |
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re: Portugal slips into default territory en>fr fr>en By OldLyme Comments: 35685, member since Fri Jun 04, 2004On Wed Jan 18, 2012 06:08 PM
I liked the Algarve when it was just fishing villages. |