Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:22 pm

OrlandoR escribió:
admin escribió:Se perdono $132 billones de deuda a Grecia. Ojala sirva de algo.


Admin, tienes algún artículodonde expliquen cómo fue el canje de deuda y que porcentaje llegó a ser?

Saludos


Fue mas del 95%, creo que 95.7% voy a buscar. Aunque ya puse varios articulos al respecto.
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:25 pm

Aqui esta: fue el 95.7% de participacion. (forzado)

Greece Pushes Bondholders Into Record Debt Swap
By Maria Petrakis and Rebecca Christie - Mar 9, 2012 9:09 AM ET

Play Greece Forces Losses on Bondholders
Greece pushed through the biggest sovereign restructuring in history after cajoling private investors to forgive more than 100 billion euros ($132 billion) of debt, opening the way for a second bailout.

Euro-region finance ministers agreed on a conference call that the swap meant Greece had met the terms to proceed with a 130 billion-euro rescue package designed to prevent a collapse of the Greek economy. Ministers freed up 35.5 billion euros in public sweeteners and interest now, with a decision on the balance to be made at a March 12 meeting in Brussels.


QMarch 9 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Erik Schatzker, Sara Eisen, Stephanie Ruhle and Scarlet Fu report that investors with 95.7 percent of Greece's privately held bonds will participate in the biggest sovereign debt restructuring in history after the government said it will trigger an option forcing them to take part. They speak on Bloomberg Television's "Inside Track." (Source: Bloomberg)

“The very strong and positive result provides a major opportunity now for Greece to move ahead with its economic reform program,” Josef Ackermann, chairman of the Institute of International Finance who is also chief executive officer of Deutsche Bank AG, said in an e-mailed statement.

“The very strong and positive result provides a major opportunity now for Greece to move ahead with its economic reform program,” Josef Ackermann, chairman of the Institute of International Finance who is also chief executive officer of Deutsche Bank AG, said in an e-mailed statement. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg
.“It would be a big mistake to think we are out of the woods,” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told reporters in Berlin after the call today. “We have a chance of making it. And we have to seize that opportunity.”

Stocks rose while the euro fell after the government in Athens said it will trigger an option forcing some investors to take part in the exchange. Officials from the International Swaps and Derivatives Association called a meeting today to consider a “potential credit event” relating to Greece.

Participation Rate
Investors with 95.7 percent of Greece’s privately held bonds will participate in the swap after so-called collective action clauses are triggered, the Finance Ministry said. Bondholders tendered 152 billion euros of Greek-law bonds, or 85.8 percent, and 20 billion euros of foreign-law debt. Greece extended its offer to holders of non-Greek law bonds to March 23, after which sweeteners will no longer be available.

The result was “very strong and positive,” said Josef Ackermann, chairman of the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, which led negotiations with the Greek government on behalf of private bondholders. “These are important steps towards resolving the Greek debt crisis, addressing the overall fiscal and sovereign debt problems in the euro area, and restoring financial stability.”

Even with steps taken toward the goal of the exchange, to reduce the 206 billion euros of privately held Greek debt by 53.5 percent, Greece faces hurdles ahead. Europe’s most indebted nation will be saddled with a debt level of 120.5 percent of gross domestic product by 2020 under current targets. The Greek government must continue to meet the terms laid down by its international creditors to receive aid payments at three-monthly intervals. Elections due in April or May might still upend adherence to the measures demanded.

CDS Contracts
With Greece now in a fifth year of recession, Prime Minister Lucas Papademos’s government had said that it was ready to force holders of Greek-law bonds into the swap. The use of collective action clauses may trigger $3 billion of insurance payouts under rules governing credit-default swap contracts.

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said that participation “surpassed expectations” and he would recommend to Cabinet the authority to activate collective action clauses.

“This is a dangerous precedent that has been set,” John Wraith, fixed-income strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown” with Linzie Janis and Owen Thomas. For Greece, “yes, it is probably necessary, but it is just another hurdle crossed rather than some sort of solution.”

The euro weakened for the first time in three days, dropping 0.9 percent to $1.3156 as of 2:45 p.m. in Berlin. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index gained 0.6 percent to 265.61.

‘Mild Negative’
“There was a small possibility that for whatever reason, the participation would be so high that the CACs may not need to get triggered,” Pawan Malik, managing director of Navigant Capital, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “For the markets this may be a mild negative today.”

The writedown is a key element in European leaders’ efforts to turn the tide against the crisis that first emerged in Greece in late 2009, then forced Ireland and Portugal to follow Greece in requiring bailouts.

Germany and France, Europe’s two biggest economies that have steered the euro-area’s response to the crisis, welcomed the debt-swap take-up. The swap was a “great success” and “good news,” and “hits all the objectives we set ourselves,” French Finance Minister Francois Baroin said on RTL Radio.

Merkel ‘Pleased’
Chancellor Angela Merkel is “pleased” about the “high level of participation of private creditors,” Steffen Seibert, her chief spokesman, said in Berlin. It is “an encouraging result that will help put Greece on a path to stability. What’s important now is for Greece to seize the opportunity offered by this debt swap, meaning it implements the agreed programs.”

Greece’s largest banks, most of the country’s pension funds and more than 30 European banks and insurers including BNP Paribas SA and Commerzbank AG (CBK), had said they would agree to the offer before it closed yesterday at 10 p.m. Athens time.

In the exchange, investors will receive new bonds with a face value of 31.5 percent of the old ones together with notes from the European Financial Stability Facility. The new debt is governed by English law and comes with warrants that will provide extra income in years when Greek economic growth exceeds thresholds. The net present value loss for investors is more than 70 percent.

“Despite all the justified happiness about this issue we have to note that Greece is only buying time,” Michael Kemmer, general manager of the BdB Association of German banks, said in an interview with Deutschlandfunk radio. “This is an important step -- the private sector showed solidarity. That’s good, but the work has only just begun.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Maria Petrakis
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:25 pm

Aqui esta: fue el 95.7% de participacion. (forzado)

Greece Pushes Bondholders Into Record Debt Swap
By Maria Petrakis and Rebecca Christie - Mar 9, 2012 9:09 AM ET

Play Greece Forces Losses on Bondholders
Greece pushed through the biggest sovereign restructuring in history after cajoling private investors to forgive more than 100 billion euros ($132 billion) of debt, opening the way for a second bailout.

Euro-region finance ministers agreed on a conference call that the swap meant Greece had met the terms to proceed with a 130 billion-euro rescue package designed to prevent a collapse of the Greek economy. Ministers freed up 35.5 billion euros in public sweeteners and interest now, with a decision on the balance to be made at a March 12 meeting in Brussels.


QMarch 9 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Erik Schatzker, Sara Eisen, Stephanie Ruhle and Scarlet Fu report that investors with 95.7 percent of Greece's privately held bonds will participate in the biggest sovereign debt restructuring in history after the government said it will trigger an option forcing them to take part. They speak on Bloomberg Television's "Inside Track." (Source: Bloomberg)

“The very strong and positive result provides a major opportunity now for Greece to move ahead with its economic reform program,” Josef Ackermann, chairman of the Institute of International Finance who is also chief executive officer of Deutsche Bank AG, said in an e-mailed statement.

“The very strong and positive result provides a major opportunity now for Greece to move ahead with its economic reform program,” Josef Ackermann, chairman of the Institute of International Finance who is also chief executive officer of Deutsche Bank AG, said in an e-mailed statement. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg
.“It would be a big mistake to think we are out of the woods,” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told reporters in Berlin after the call today. “We have a chance of making it. And we have to seize that opportunity.”

Stocks rose while the euro fell after the government in Athens said it will trigger an option forcing some investors to take part in the exchange. Officials from the International Swaps and Derivatives Association called a meeting today to consider a “potential credit event” relating to Greece.

Participation Rate
Investors with 95.7 percent of Greece’s privately held bonds will participate in the swap after so-called collective action clauses are triggered, the Finance Ministry said. Bondholders tendered 152 billion euros of Greek-law bonds, or 85.8 percent, and 20 billion euros of foreign-law debt. Greece extended its offer to holders of non-Greek law bonds to March 23, after which sweeteners will no longer be available.

The result was “very strong and positive,” said Josef Ackermann, chairman of the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, which led negotiations with the Greek government on behalf of private bondholders. “These are important steps towards resolving the Greek debt crisis, addressing the overall fiscal and sovereign debt problems in the euro area, and restoring financial stability.”

Even with steps taken toward the goal of the exchange, to reduce the 206 billion euros of privately held Greek debt by 53.5 percent, Greece faces hurdles ahead. Europe’s most indebted nation will be saddled with a debt level of 120.5 percent of gross domestic product by 2020 under current targets. The Greek government must continue to meet the terms laid down by its international creditors to receive aid payments at three-monthly intervals. Elections due in April or May might still upend adherence to the measures demanded.

CDS Contracts
With Greece now in a fifth year of recession, Prime Minister Lucas Papademos’s government had said that it was ready to force holders of Greek-law bonds into the swap. The use of collective action clauses may trigger $3 billion of insurance payouts under rules governing credit-default swap contracts.

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said that participation “surpassed expectations” and he would recommend to Cabinet the authority to activate collective action clauses.

“This is a dangerous precedent that has been set,” John Wraith, fixed-income strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown” with Linzie Janis and Owen Thomas. For Greece, “yes, it is probably necessary, but it is just another hurdle crossed rather than some sort of solution.”

The euro weakened for the first time in three days, dropping 0.9 percent to $1.3156 as of 2:45 p.m. in Berlin. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index gained 0.6 percent to 265.61.

‘Mild Negative’
“There was a small possibility that for whatever reason, the participation would be so high that the CACs may not need to get triggered,” Pawan Malik, managing director of Navigant Capital, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “For the markets this may be a mild negative today.”

The writedown is a key element in European leaders’ efforts to turn the tide against the crisis that first emerged in Greece in late 2009, then forced Ireland and Portugal to follow Greece in requiring bailouts.

Germany and France, Europe’s two biggest economies that have steered the euro-area’s response to the crisis, welcomed the debt-swap take-up. The swap was a “great success” and “good news,” and “hits all the objectives we set ourselves,” French Finance Minister Francois Baroin said on RTL Radio.

Merkel ‘Pleased’
Chancellor Angela Merkel is “pleased” about the “high level of participation of private creditors,” Steffen Seibert, her chief spokesman, said in Berlin. It is “an encouraging result that will help put Greece on a path to stability. What’s important now is for Greece to seize the opportunity offered by this debt swap, meaning it implements the agreed programs.”

Greece’s largest banks, most of the country’s pension funds and more than 30 European banks and insurers including BNP Paribas SA and Commerzbank AG (CBK), had said they would agree to the offer before it closed yesterday at 10 p.m. Athens time.

In the exchange, investors will receive new bonds with a face value of 31.5 percent of the old ones together with notes from the European Financial Stability Facility. The new debt is governed by English law and comes with warrants that will provide extra income in years when Greek economic growth exceeds thresholds. The net present value loss for investors is more than 70 percent.

“Despite all the justified happiness about this issue we have to note that Greece is only buying time,” Michael Kemmer, general manager of the BdB Association of German banks, said in an interview with Deutschlandfunk radio. “This is an important step -- the private sector showed solidarity. That’s good, but the work has only just begun.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Maria Petrakis
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor OrlandoR » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:25 pm

admin escribió:
OrlandoR escribió:
admin escribió:Se perdono $132 billones de deuda a Grecia. Ojala sirva de algo.


Admin, tienes algún artículodonde expliquen cómo fue el canje de deuda y que porcentaje llegó a ser?

Saludos


Fue mas del 95%, creo que 95.7% voy a buscar. Aunque ya puse varios articulos al respecto.


Sí, si los vi. Gracias

Pero lo que entendí fue que el 95.7% de los bonos fueron canjeados. Pero lo que quiero saber es qué porcentaje de la deuda fue perdonada. No encuentro esa información

Saludos
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:26 pm

Aqui esta: fue el 95.7% de participacion. (forzado)

Greece Pushes Bondholders Into Record Debt Swap
By Maria Petrakis and Rebecca Christie - Mar 9, 2012 9:09 AM ET

Play Greece Forces Losses on Bondholders
Greece pushed through the biggest sovereign restructuring in history after cajoling private investors to forgive more than 100 billion euros ($132 billion) of debt, opening the way for a second bailout.

Euro-region finance ministers agreed on a conference call that the swap meant Greece had met the terms to proceed with a 130 billion-euro rescue package designed to prevent a collapse of the Greek economy. Ministers freed up 35.5 billion euros in public sweeteners and interest now, with a decision on the balance to be made at a March 12 meeting in Brussels.


QMarch 9 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Erik Schatzker, Sara Eisen, Stephanie Ruhle and Scarlet Fu report that investors with 95.7 percent of Greece's privately held bonds will participate in the biggest sovereign debt restructuring in history after the government said it will trigger an option forcing them to take part. They speak on Bloomberg Television's "Inside Track." (Source: Bloomberg)

“The very strong and positive result provides a major opportunity now for Greece to move ahead with its economic reform program,” Josef Ackermann, chairman of the Institute of International Finance who is also chief executive officer of Deutsche Bank AG, said in an e-mailed statement.

“The very strong and positive result provides a major opportunity now for Greece to move ahead with its economic reform program,” Josef Ackermann, chairman of the Institute of International Finance who is also chief executive officer of Deutsche Bank AG, said in an e-mailed statement. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg
.“It would be a big mistake to think we are out of the woods,” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told reporters in Berlin after the call today. “We have a chance of making it. And we have to seize that opportunity.”

Stocks rose while the euro fell after the government in Athens said it will trigger an option forcing some investors to take part in the exchange. Officials from the International Swaps and Derivatives Association called a meeting today to consider a “potential credit event” relating to Greece.

Participation Rate
Investors with 95.7 percent of Greece’s privately held bonds will participate in the swap after so-called collective action clauses are triggered, the Finance Ministry said. Bondholders tendered 152 billion euros of Greek-law bonds, or 85.8 percent, and 20 billion euros of foreign-law debt. Greece extended its offer to holders of non-Greek law bonds to March 23, after which sweeteners will no longer be available.

The result was “very strong and positive,” said Josef Ackermann, chairman of the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, which led negotiations with the Greek government on behalf of private bondholders. “These are important steps towards resolving the Greek debt crisis, addressing the overall fiscal and sovereign debt problems in the euro area, and restoring financial stability.”

Even with steps taken toward the goal of the exchange, to reduce the 206 billion euros of privately held Greek debt by 53.5 percent, Greece faces hurdles ahead. Europe’s most indebted nation will be saddled with a debt level of 120.5 percent of gross domestic product by 2020 under current targets. The Greek government must continue to meet the terms laid down by its international creditors to receive aid payments at three-monthly intervals. Elections due in April or May might still upend adherence to the measures demanded.

CDS Contracts
With Greece now in a fifth year of recession, Prime Minister Lucas Papademos’s government had said that it was ready to force holders of Greek-law bonds into the swap. The use of collective action clauses may trigger $3 billion of insurance payouts under rules governing credit-default swap contracts.

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said that participation “surpassed expectations” and he would recommend to Cabinet the authority to activate collective action clauses.

“This is a dangerous precedent that has been set,” John Wraith, fixed-income strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown” with Linzie Janis and Owen Thomas. For Greece, “yes, it is probably necessary, but it is just another hurdle crossed rather than some sort of solution.”

The euro weakened for the first time in three days, dropping 0.9 percent to $1.3156 as of 2:45 p.m. in Berlin. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index gained 0.6 percent to 265.61.

‘Mild Negative’
“There was a small possibility that for whatever reason, the participation would be so high that the CACs may not need to get triggered,” Pawan Malik, managing director of Navigant Capital, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “For the markets this may be a mild negative today.”

The writedown is a key element in European leaders’ efforts to turn the tide against the crisis that first emerged in Greece in late 2009, then forced Ireland and Portugal to follow Greece in requiring bailouts.

Germany and France, Europe’s two biggest economies that have steered the euro-area’s response to the crisis, welcomed the debt-swap take-up. The swap was a “great success” and “good news,” and “hits all the objectives we set ourselves,” French Finance Minister Francois Baroin said on RTL Radio.

Merkel ‘Pleased’
Chancellor Angela Merkel is “pleased” about the “high level of participation of private creditors,” Steffen Seibert, her chief spokesman, said in Berlin. It is “an encouraging result that will help put Greece on a path to stability. What’s important now is for Greece to seize the opportunity offered by this debt swap, meaning it implements the agreed programs.”

Greece’s largest banks, most of the country’s pension funds and more than 30 European banks and insurers including BNP Paribas SA and Commerzbank AG (CBK), had said they would agree to the offer before it closed yesterday at 10 p.m. Athens time.

In the exchange, investors will receive new bonds with a face value of 31.5 percent of the old ones together with notes from the European Financial Stability Facility. The new debt is governed by English law and comes with warrants that will provide extra income in years when Greek economic growth exceeds thresholds. The net present value loss for investors is more than 70 percent.

“Despite all the justified happiness about this issue we have to note that Greece is only buying time,” Michael Kemmer, general manager of the BdB Association of German banks, said in an interview with Deutschlandfunk radio. “This is an important step -- the private sector showed solidarity. That’s good, but the work has only just begun.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Maria Petrakis
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:27 pm

Ya lo puse tambien.
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:29 pm

admin escribió:Se perdono $132 billones de deuda a Grecia. Ojala sirva de algo.


Se perdono $132 billones de deuda.
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:30 pm

OrlandoR escribió:
admin escribió:China muestra menor inflacion, menor venta de propiedades y menor produccion industrial.


Posible QE chino?


Donde andas?

China ya esta aplicando medidas, estan dando mas prestamos, rebajaron el requerimiento de reservas de la banca. Otras medidas vendran.
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:31 pm

Si yo me tomo el trabajo de ponerles las noticias, en la mayoria de los casis digeridas. Tomense el trabajo de leerlas, hagan preguntas cuando las pongo si no entienden. Please.
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:31 pm

Yields up 2.05%
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor goodprofit1 » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:33 pm

admin escribió:
OrlandoR escribió:
admin escribió:China muestra menor inflacion, menor venta de propiedades y menor produccion industrial.


Posible QE chino?


Donde andas?

China ya esta aplicando medidas, estan dando mas prestamos, rebajaron el requerimiento de reservas de la banca. Otras medidas vendran.

entonces se espera que los comodities suban?
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:35 pm

Los commodities ya estan subiendo.
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor admin » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:36 pm

Orlando

Van a canjear 206 billones de euros por solo 100 billones de euros. Divide las cifras y tienes el porcentaje, es una minucia.

Greece had proposed €206 billion ($273 billion) in bonds for the exchange. Just over €100 billion will be sliced from the amount Greece owes.
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor OrlandoR » Vie Mar 09, 2012 12:41 pm

admin escribió:Orlando

Van a canjear 206 billones de euros por solo 100 billones de euros. Divide las cifras y tienes el porcentaje, es una minucia.

Greece had proposed €206 billion ($273 billion) in bonds for the exchange. Just over €100 billion will be sliced from the amount Greece owes.


Gracias Admin, la verdad no entendía muy bien cómo se hace el canje.
Además supongo que como cambian los plazos y las tasas la comparación se hace con el Valor Presente verdad?

Lo de China si no lo sabía, ultimamente no he podido leerme todo el foro como la hacía antes.

Saludos
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Re: Viernes 03/09/12 Reporte del empleo

Notapor RCHF » Vie Mar 09, 2012 1:56 pm

Economía crece a ritmo de 5.3% en enero y febrero, estima BBVA Research


Lima, mar. 09 (ANDINA). La economía peruana habría crecido a un ritmo de 5.3 por ciento mensual en enero y febrero, mostrando una tendencia de crecimiento que tiende a estabilizarse en alrededor del cinco por ciento, señaló hoy el BBVA Research.


La entidad consideró, en su informe denominado Perú Flash, que este ritmo corresponde a un contexto de condiciones externas menos complicadas.

“Los indicadores de actividad económica disponibles para febrero, como el aumento de la producción eléctrica (7.9 por ciento) y la inversión pública (35 por ciento), son compatibles con tasas de crecimiento del producto similares a las del primer mes del año”, señala el documento.

Detalla que en las últimas semanas, los riesgos asociados por el lado externo se han moderado ligeramente, lo que se ha reflejado en una disminución de las tensiones financieras en Europa y en indicadores de actividad que han mejorado en algunos países industrializados.

“No obstante, esperamos que el elevado grado de incertidumbre proveniente del contexto internacional se mantenga en los siguientes meses”, anotó finalmente.
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