Greek two year bonds fall to lowest level this year

Drop follows Athens’ approval of a series of reforms needed to unlock bailout cash

Greek two-year government bond yields fell to their lowest level this year on Monday as investors welcomed Athens’ approval of a series of reforms needed to unlock bailout cash. (Photograph: ADASTRE REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis)
Greek two-year government bond yields fell to their lowest level this year on Monday as investors welcomed Athens’ approval of a series of reforms needed to unlock bailout cash. (Photograph: ADASTRE REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis)

Greek two-year government bond yields fell to their lowest level this year on Monday as investors welcomed Athens’ approval of a series of reforms needed to unlock bailout cash. Parliamentary approval of the reform bill late on Friday keeps Greece on track to secure the next €3 billion instalment of its aid programme as well as funds to recapitalise its ailing banks, and negotiations on debt relief. It was also seen as a demonstration of strength by Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who held on to power in an election last month despite a split within his party.

“Investors are simply digesting the vote ... on the so-called preconditions for the third bailout package,” said Christian Lenk, rate strategist at DZ Bank. “There is some relief that Tsipras finds enough support among his ranks to pass these reforms.”

Mission chiefs of Greece’s international lenders will visit on Oct. 20 to be informed on the pace of reforms, a Greek government official said on Monday. The first review of Greece’s €86-billion bailout is due to start later this month. Greek debt was the best performing in the euro zone on Monday, with two-year yields down more than 80 basis points at a 2015 low of 8.23 per cent, according to Tradeweb.

The gap between Greek and German two-year yields was also at its narrowest this year. Short-dated yields remain higher than those on longer-term bonds, however, in a sign that investors still fear the country could be heading towards default. Ten-year yields were down 25 bps to 7.64 per cent. Owen Callan, a senior analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald, expects this distortion to fade once Athens passes the review, which he said should in turn prompt the European Central Bank to start buying Greek bonds under its quantitative easing scheme.

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There was little reaction to the news in stock markets. Athens’ benchmark ATG index was down 0.1 per cent, lagging a 0.4 per cent rise on the pan-European FTSEurofirst. Some Greek bank shares were up as much as 5 per cent . Other euro zone bond yields were flat to a touch higher after Chinese growth data beat expectations and a top ECB policymaker struck a note of caution about an extension to Europe’s QE scheme.

Reuters