Cyprus
rescue package may equal half its economy
Cyprus,
the fifth euro zone country to seek emergency funding from Europe,
may need a bailout of up to 10 billion euros, over half the size of
its economy, officials said on Tuesday.
26
June, 2012
The
Mediterranean island, with a banking sector heavily exposed to
debt-crippled Greece, said on Monday it was formally applying for
help from the European Union's rescue funds.
Cyprus
is the euro zone's third smallest economy but it joins Greece,
Ireland, Portugal and Spain in seeking EU rescue funds to try and
stay afloat, and is the latest sign that policymakers have failed to
stop the debt crisis spreading.
European
leaders will meet at a summit on Thursday and Friday but they are not
expected to come up with a lasting solution to the region's problems
that have also sent Italy's borrowing costs soaring.
Two
euro zone officials said that a package of up to 10 billion euros was
being considered for the 17.3 billion euro Cyrpriot economy.
"The
exact number has not been decided yet. It was to be 6 billion for the
state financing and 2 billion for the banks but that is optimistic -
it is more likely to be seven and three - up to 10 billion euros in
total," one euro zone official said.
A
second official confirmed the amount was likely to be up to 10
billion euros, a massive bill for Cyprus.
Cyprus
needs to plug a 1.8 billion euro regulatory capital shortfall in its
second largest lender by June 30. Potential aid could be more
comprehensive to cover fiscal requirements, Finance Minister Vassos
Shiarly told Reuters.
Cyprus
is thought to have applied to the EU for aid after exhausting
attempts to secure loans from either China or Russia. Those efforts,
however, will be ongoing.
"We
will continue efforts to secure a bilateral loan, which can be used
accordingly," government spokesman Stefanos Stefanou said.
Cyprus
has been shut out of international capital markets for more than a
year, with yields on its 10 year benchmark bond over 16 percent on
Tuesday. Sidestepping EU aid earlier, it secured a 2.5 billion euro
loan from Russia in late 2011.
The
loan amount is expected to cover needs in 2012, but not in 2013, when
Cyprus has 2.25 billion euros in refinancing, including a euro medium
term note (EMTN) redemption.
President
Demetris Christofias, whose administration has been slammed by
opposition for dragging its feet in both applying to the EU and
taking measures earlier to shore up the island's flagging economy,
was to brief politicians later on Tuesday.
Christofias
has been accused by the opposition of being out of touch with reality
and ignoring warning signs that the economy was in trouble,
suggestions the government strongly denies.
The
bailout request comes as Cyprus prepares to assume the rotating EU
presidency on July 1.
"It
is a tragic coincidence," Cyprus Parliamentary speaker Yiannakis
Omirou told state radio.
From
the Wall Street Journal
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