NPL&REO News

Greece: Political storm, NPLs delay issue

Greece’sFinance Ministry is putting off the issue of a five-year bond, which is all set-in technical terms, until the domestic political dust settles and the effort to reduce the credit sector’s bad-loan stock results in a breakthrough.

The anticipated conclusion of the parliamentary process over the Prespes agreement will remove one of the two main obstacles blocking Greece’s return to the money markets, but the issue of the nonperforming loans still needs to be resolved before a new bond issue.

The milestone that Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos has set for the process to start in the markets is the submission to the European Commission’s Directorate General for Competition (DG Comp) of the plan for the reduction of banks’ NPLs processed by the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund and presented by the minister to the creditors’ mission chiefs this week.

The government expects that to give the markets a strong signal that the process of bringing NPLs down to a more manageable level is under way.

The government hopes to have the plan submitted before the end of February, as Brussels’s approval will formally open the way for the implementation of the HFSF blueprint, granting political points to the ruling party ahead of the general election. As Fitch stressed this week, the NPL reduction plan could be a game changer for the sector, decisively helping toward the restoration of confidence.

The planning of the Public Debt Management Agency provides for the issue of a five-year paper whose value will not exceed 2-3 billion euros. Analysts estimate that the interest rate could come to 3.5-3.75%, noting the favourable climate in the markets that the government should make the most of.

As Swiss daily Neue Zuericher Zeitung noted, the hunt for yields has resumed internationally, and the next one to benefit from that could be Greece, following the recent issues by Italy, Ireland, Portugal and Spain. After all, the secondary market rate of Greece’s five-year bond has dropped to six-month lows in the last 10 days.

Original Story:Ekathimerini |Eleftheria Kourtali
Photo: FreeImages.com/Takis Kolokotronis
Edition:Prime Yield

National Bank of Greece ready to sell-off €3 bn NPL portfolio

The National Bank of Greece (NBG) is ready to sell-off roughly €3 bn worth of non-performing loans (NPL), from which about €2 bn correspond to loans granted to companies and the other €1 bn to consumer loans.

The first tranche, known in the local market as the “Symbol Project”, includes collateral of approximately 5,000 commercial properties.

NBG is expected to hold an “investment day” in London in March, where, among others, it will announce new targets for reduction of NPLs and NPEs, along with the sale of subsidiaries, efforts to reduce operating costs and what the oldest Greek commercial bank calls its presence in the post-bailout period.

Original Story:Naftemporiki
Photo: National Bank of Greece
Edition: Prime Yield

More NPL portfolios go up for sale in Greece

National, Piraeus, Alpha and Eurobank, Greece’s four systemic banks, want to speed up the sale of NPL portfolios in 2019. So far, between them, these banks have sold bad loans with a gross book value (GBV) of €9bn. A value that should be largely surpassed in 2019.

National and Piraeus will be the first to make new sales in 2019, conceding four new portfoliosadding up to €3 bn.

Alpha leads the pack in loan sales, having already completed the concession of four portfolios with a total nominal value of €3.5 bn. National has sold a major portfolio of €2 bn, Piraeus two portfolios totaling €1.8 bn and Eurobank another two packages worth €1.6 bn.

Now National will concede NPLs from small and medium-sized enterprises totaling €1.6 bn in the portfolio “Symbol,” as well as a package of consumer loans – without collateral – worth €700 Mn. Both sales are expected to be completed within the first half of the year.

Piraeus will also put up for grabs a package of consumer loans without collateral with a nominal value of €400 Mn, named “Iris,” along with a portfolio of a similar size containing shipping loans and named “Nemo.”

Interest from international investors appears to be strong, as reflected by the prices achieved during previous sales and by the entry of strong players in the Greek market.

Original Story: Ekathimerini | Evgenia Tzortzi
Photo: FreeImages.com/Takis Kolokotronis
Edition: Prime Yield

Greek economy and banks committed to ambitious NPL reduction by 2021

Hellenic Bank Association is ready to agree with the government on a new framework to protect first home that will not create any side-effects, Nikos Karamouzis, president of the association announced on Monday, according to ANA.

Speaking to reporters, Karamouzis admitted that non-performing loans are a big challenge for the society, the economy and banks have committed to an ambitious programme of NPL reduction by 2021. He added that home protection should cover lower incomes that will be able to meet their obligations with the support of the state and pointed out that an existing legislation has frozen borrowers’ obligations worth 18 billion euros.

Original Story: Tornos News
Photo:

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