Robeco: Griechenland beendet Gespräche mit Institutionen
Beamte des Internationalen Währungsfonds bezeichnen Griechenland als am wenigsten hilfreiches Land der Eurozone, nachdem das Land technische Gespräche mit den Institutionen beendete.23.03.2015 | 09:54 Uhr
Peripheral markets had a setback this week, despite the ECB buying program. This was mainly due to renewed tensions over Greece, which has not made any progress with the agreed reforms. A very large amount of long dated Italian issuance and uncertainty over Fed policy fueled the correction of the strong performance of the previous few weeks. Portuguese bonds have returned 6.9% this year, Italian bonds 5.4%, Spanish bonds 3.7% and Irish bonds 3.0%.
EU Summit
On Thursday night a ‘mini-summit’ took place between Greek leader Tsipras and part of the European creditors, among whom Merkel, Hollande, Draghi and Juncker, to calm the tensions between the two groups. Although no firm agreements were made, Greece will come up with a new list of reforms, likely to be discussed next Monday when Tsipras visits Berlin.
Greece
IMF officials branded Greece the most unhelpful country the organization has dealt with in its 70-year history, after Greece had halted technical talks with ‘the institutions’. According to recent polls, a majority of Greeks support a compromise to be made with the creditors.
Italy
On Tuesday Italy launched a new 15-year bond. Investors signed up for a total of EUR 16.5 billion, expecting to get only a 30% allocation. But the Italian debt agent decided to issue a total size of EUR 8 billion, much larger than was expected. With the blackout period, in which the ECB doesn’t buy bonds around issuance, investors were stuck with their overly large holdings.
Portugal
The Portuguese government made an early repayment of EUR 6.6 bln to the IMF, representing 25% of total debt owed to the IMF. Besides the cut in interest expenses, the government wants to demonstrate the regained market access and the improvement of its fiscal position.
Robeco Euro Government Bonds
We remain positive on peripheral bond markets as fundamentals are improving and the ECB has clearly shown its determination to do ‘whatever it takes’. Peripheral bonds remain attractive in this environment. The fund has a preference for longer-dated peripheral bonds. Greek problems will continue to cause volatility, but in the end the effect of ECB buying will be more important.