Is the the long-dreaded and long-awaited correction? We’ll know by Thursday or Friday
The markets are clearly down but investors won’t know whether or not this goes from being a reaction to worries over the Greek debt swap to a true correction of 8% to 10% or so until Thursday and Friday of this week.
What are the odds that the Greek debt swap could still fail? Even the question sets the markets churning
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...The Greek debt crisis keeps on giving–on Thursday we’ll find out if the latest package triggers payouts in the credit default swaps market
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...Germany’s Bundestag passes Greek rescue deal but opposition continues to climb
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...Europe told to put up more cash itself before looking for more contributions to IMF
At the recently concluded Mexico City meeting of the G20 group of the world’s largest economies Germany led a EuroZone effort to raise new money for the International Monetary Fund. And the United States led a successful push to delay any new contributions until EuroZone countries coughed up more money themselves.
Trick or trend: Does the Greek rescue plan include a built-in way to kill the plan in six months?
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...EuroZone’s slide toward a wider crisis speeds up a bit with Greek deal
The fear was that once Greece struck a deal to reduce its debt load everybody—Portugal, Ireland, Spain, and Italy—would want to do it. We haven’t quite come to that but so far, in the four days since the Greek deal was announced, both Portugal and Spain have asked—more or less—for a better deal from the EuroZone.
Could the rescue package still push Greece into a default (whatever that term actually means)?
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...Why the markets are so unimpressed by the Greek debt deal
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...It’s been a stunning rally but now what? Fine-tuning a strategy for 2012
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...European finance ministers reach 2nd Greek rescue deal
Reuters is reporting tonight that European finance ministers have reached a deal on a second 130 billion euro Greek rescue package. The deal, Reuters reports, would cut Greece’s debt to 121% of GDP by 2020. That’s close to the original goal of 120%.