Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Successful Bond Raising Dispels The Greek Debt Crisis Myth

Greece successfully raised funding on the debt markets on an oversubscribed basis.

This from the Timesonline,

``Concerns over a possible debt crisis in Greece eased yesterday after huge demand for the Greek Government’s first bond issue of this year.

``Greece had planned to sell €5 billion (£4.4 billion) of new five-year bonds to investors, but, after about €25 billion of demand emerged, it decided to issue €8 billion.

``The auction had been seen as a key test of investors’ appetite for Greek government debt and was heralded as a triumph by the authorities in Athens. “There was a lot of interest,” Spyros Papanikolaou, head of Greece’s public debt management agency, said. “This proves the trust [that] investors have in Greece’s economy. Greece [has] proved [that] it can raise the funds it needs for 2010 without a problem.”

The Greece Athex Composite rallied 2.8% as shown below from Bloomberg, in spite of the sustained pressures on the European and Asian markets.

While the uncertainty over Greece's debt problems haven't been entirely resolved, the successful bond issuance serves to validate our thesis that the PIIGS problem isn't the likely cause of the current stock market pressures, as discussed in When Politics Ruled The Market: A Week Of Market Jitters.

For the mainstream, it's more about the available bias or seeking of any available event that could be imputable to market action.

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