european-commission

Huffington Post…

LISBON – Portugal is close to reaching an agreement with the European Union and IMF on a bailout for the debt-laden country and there are no disagreements between the donors, the European Commission and the IMF said on Tuesday. Portugal’s caretaker Prime Minister Jose Socrates was set to make a statement at 1930 GMT, his office said. Officials from the European Commission, the International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank have been in Lisbon for almost a month to hammer out an agreement with Portugal on a bailout expected to reach about 80 billion euros ($120 billion). An agreement could come any day, officials have said, but local media have reported that it could be delayed because of disagreements between the European Commission and IMF on the terms of the loan. EC spokesman Amadeu Altafaj, who is in Lisbon, denied any rifts. “There has been progress in talks, and we can expect a deal soon. My feeling is that we are getting close to a deal … There are no divergences among members of the troika,” he said. “Discussions are currently going on and there is good progress, we are getting closer to a staff agreement and we keep a constructive dialogue with the political parties too,” he added. An IMF spokesperson also said there were no divergences between the EC, ECB and the IMF and a deal was close. Portugal became the third country in the euro zone, after Greece and Ireland, to seek a bailout after its government collapsed in late March and borrowing costs soared. Officials said the agreement would be presented to Portugal’s opposition Social Democrats and the caretaker government soon so that they can commit to the terms of the deal ahead of a snap June 5 general election. Social Democrat leader Pedro Passos Coelho said he stood ready to meet with the lenders. The deal is expected to be approved at a meeting of eurozone finance ministers in mid-May, in time for the EU rescue fund to raise money for Portugal by June 15, when the country needs to meet a bond redemption of 4.9 billion euros. Portuguese media have said the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund diverged over whether Portugal should be given more time to meet its budget deficit targets, as well as on the size of the aid package, which Brussels initially put at around 80 billion euros. Diario Economico newspaper said earlier Portugal may need over 100 billion euros in EU/IMF loans, including up to 10 billion euros for its banks, but there were doubts whether Brussels will allow the bailout to exceed its initial target. SIC television said, without citing its sources, the bailout could reach 105 billion euros. (Reporting by Andrei Khalip; Writing by Axel Bugge; Editing by Louise Ireland) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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EU And IMF Near Agreement On Portugal Bailout

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European Commission proposes new budget rules

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European Commission proposes new budget rules

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Video: Barroso Says Ireland Taking Right Measures Against Debt: Video

September 21, 2010

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) — European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso talked with Bloomberg’s Sarah Eisen about the sovereign debt crisis in Ireland and Greece. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Sheldon Filger: Are European Banks on the Verge of Destruction?

June 30, 2010

In February 2009, my blog referred to a story that appeared in The Daily Telegraph, a leading UK newspaper, headlined, “European bank bail-out could push EU into crisis.” The essence of the story was that The Daily Telegraph was shown a top-secret document, leaked from the European Commission, the executive body that oversees the 27-nation European Union, which warned that the EU’s banking system was contaminated by an ocean of toxic assets. Though the story was ignored by the rest of mainstream media, for the most part, I think it is timely to look again at this secret EU document in the light of the current European debt crisis and growing rumors regarding the insolvency of many leading banks across the continent. The confidential 17-page European Commission document warned that the European banking system could be holding as much as 18.6 trillion euros in toxic assets. Furthermore, in the wake of the European bank bailout that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the document warned that the cost of a second Eurozone and U.K. bank bailout would exceed the financial capacity of the European Union. In other words, if Europe’s banking system enters a meltdown in the face of the sovereign debt crisis now plaguing European economies, the EU will be powerless to stop the implosion of the European banking and financial system. Reviewing what the European Commission warned about more than a year ago, it appears that the document’s authors had an impressively prescient ability to forecast the current European sovereign debt and fiscal crisis. In stark terms, the EU document warned that, “It is essential that government support through asset relief should not be on a scale that raises concern about over-indebtedness or financing problems … Such considerations are particularly important in the current context of widening budget deficits, rising public debt levels and challenges in sovereign bond issuance.” With Greece essentially insolvent, Spain in the grips of its own sovereign debt crisis and the U.K. and Italy teetering on the edge, not to mention Ireland, Portugal and Eastern Europe, it seems to me that the worst case scenario hinted at in the leaked document more than a year ago is no longer a speculative possibility, but unfortunately a chillingly realistic forecast of what may very soon be the next great global banking crisis.

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Greece Debt Crisis: Germany Holding Up European Union Bailout

March 19, 2010

BRUSSELS — The European Commission urged Germany and other eurozone governments Friday to put up a package of government-to-government loans to ease Greece’s financial plight and end weeks of financial turmoil and speculation. European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said European aid is necessary because “we cannot prolong any further the current situation.” He spoke of “coordinated bilateral loans” that would not have to be paid out immediately. Even as a standby gesture, Barroso said, the availability of aid from Greece’s partners would show financial markets that EU nations are united to defend their single currency and the stability of the eurozone, the area of 16 EU nations that share the euro as their currency. Speaking to reporters, Barroso urged EU leaders to agree on “coordinated bilateral loans” at a two-day summit opening Thursday in Brussels. He did not elaborate on loan or participation conditions or other details. In Athens, Greek government spokesman George Petalotis called Barroso’s appeal a “positive development.” “We would like a clear declaration of this so that we can borrow money at a reasonable rate,” Petalotis told The Associated Press in Athens. EU sources have estimated that Greece needs a financial injection of about euro20 billion euros ($27 billion). Barroso’s proposal came as Germany and the EU head office were at loggerheads after German officials said Berlin can’t rule out financial aid for Greece from the International Monetary Fund. EU officials prefer to resolve the Greek financial crisis through European aid. But Barroso said he “did not want to speculate if there will be a financial contribution from the IMF.” Germany – Europe’s biggest economy – has been reluctant to pledge direct financial aid because German public opinion takes a dim view of the shoddy statistics-keeping that have long hidden the true size of Greek deficits and debts. On Thursday, Greece warned it would be forced to turn to the IMF for help – which would be an embarrassment for the single currency bloc – if the EU fails to extend any concrete support package to help reduce its market borrowing rates. A European or IMF backstop would be aimed at reassuring markets and bringing down the high rates demanded from Greece as it seeks to borrow some euro54 billion ($73 billion) this year to plug its budget gap. “We haven’t ruled out IMF financial assistance,” Ulrich Wilhelm, a spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel, told reporters. EU sources, speaking privately due to the sensitive nature of the issue, said Germany would have to take part in a loan package, or “the deal would not be credible.” The European Commission would oversee the loan program. Lending would be available at interest rates below those charged by commercial banks, these sources said. Greece hasn’t asked for any financial support. A Greek default would be a serious blow to the euro, but Germany in particular has resisted putting up money to bail Greece out after years of overspending. Earlier Friday, the European Commission was at pains to point out that Merkel committed to a “European” solution to the Greek financial crisis only last month. It noted that she and the other 26 EU leaders agreed in a Feb. 11 statement to “take determined and coordinated action, if needed, to safeguard financial stability in the euro area as a whole.” EU officials said privately the Commission fears Germany’s talk of a possible IMF bailout could encourage Austria, Finland and the Netherlands, which already prefer an IMF solution. Merkel’s finance minister, Wolfgang Schaeuble, has argued that the eurozone should be able to resolve its own problems without calling in outside help and – with Merkel’s backing – has advocated the creation of a European Monetary Fund that could provide aid in future crises. “From this fundamental conviction you can certainly conclude that, in the case of Greece, he would be very reticent toward financial aid from the IMF,” said Schaeuble’s spokesman, Michael Offer. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou has said he expects EU leaders to decide at the March 25-26 summit on a blueprint of aid from the 16 eurozone countries. “Our clear priority is for Greece’s problems to be solved within the framework of the eurozone,” he added. “That is very clear.” Papandreou has said that going to the IMF, which imposes austerity measures on governments in return for financial aid, wouldn’t hurt Greece because it already has followed IMF advice and made painful spending cuts. ___ Associated Press writers Geir Moulson in Berlin and Derek Gatopoulos in Athens contributed to this report.

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Poland’s TP faces European Commission sanctions

March 2, 2010

Poland’s TP faces European Commission sanctions

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European Commission creates two new Directorates-General for Energy

February 17, 2010

European Commission creates two new Directorates-General for Energy

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EC Aims To Mandate Hedge Fund Pay Deferral

November 15, 2009

The European Commission is reportedly set to mandate that hedge fund managers should have 40 of variable remuneration spread over at least three years sources told The Telegraph

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European Commission offers $745m loan for Ukraine

November 1, 2009

European Commission offers $745m loan for Ukraine

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Swedish Government Seeks EU Approval for Saab Auto’s Sale Guarantee Terms

October 6, 2009

By Niklas Magnusson and Johan Carlstrom Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) — General Motors Co. ’s Saab Automobile division moved closer to receiving state backing for its sale to Koenigsegg Group after Sweden sought European Union approval for terms of a proposed loan guarantee. The government sent an application on Oct. 2 to the European Commission, the EU’s antitrust regulator, to gain an opinion before deciding whether to support the Saab transaction, Haakan Lind , a spokesman at the Stockholm-based Ministry of Enterprise, Energy and Communications, said today by phone. Saab’s sale to sports-car maker Koenigsegg Automotive AB and Beijing Automotive Industry Holding Co. depends in part on the division receiving a $600 million European Investment Bank loan backed by the government. Talks are continuing with the Swedish National Debt Office about the guarantee, Eric Geers , a spokesman at Trollhaettan, Sweden-based Saab, said yesterday. “This is an important milestone for us” now that Sweden has sought EU clearance for the borrowing plan, Geers said. “We are delivering step by step.” The European Commission oversees whether state aid that the EU’s 27 countries provide to companies distorts competition. The EIB, the EU’s lending arm, aims to discuss Saab’s loan application at a board meeting Oct. 21, Eva Srejber , a vice president at the Luxembourg-based bank, said two weeks ago. ‘Time Pressure’ “We want the commission to evaluate the conditions that we’re discussing,” ministry spokesman Lind said. “Everyone is aware that all this is happening under time pressure.” Jonathan Todd , a European Commission spokesman in Brussels, didn’t immediately reply to an e-mail and telephone call seeking comment today. Saab has been unprofitable for most of the 20 years it has been owned by Detroit-based GM. The division filed for bankruptcy protection in February after the U.S. carmaker , struggling with losses worldwide, said it would cut ties. Questions over Saab’s future contributed to its 58 percent sales plunge in Europe in the first half, the biggest decline among all automakers in the region, according to the European Automobile Manufacturers Association . Koenigsegg Group has also received private-financing pledges of 3 billion kronor ($428 million) for Saab’s takeover, helped by Beijing Automotive, China’s fastest-growing carmaker, joining the bidding partnership in early September. To contact the reporter on this story: Niklas Magnusson in Stockholm at nmagnusson1@bloomberg.net ; Johan Carlstrom in Stockholm at jcarlstrom@bloomberg.net .

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