[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Dr. David Martin discusses a proposed bioweapons attack scheduled for July 2025.

MSNBC horribly suggests the genocide against the SA refugees is justified.

Cheap Tomatoes (And Immigration)

SOTT Earth Changes Summary - April 2025: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval,

Turmeric Lowers Blood Pressure-How To Get the Most Out Of It

Magistrate Judge Issues Warning to US Attorney Alina Habba and ICE After Arrest of Newark Mayor

UK PM Starmer Slammed For Daring To Suggest Immigrants Should "Speak English"

How $21 TRILLION Went Missing From U.S. Tax Payers! -Catherine Austin Fitts

Diddy’s Collapse Was No Accident – Whitney Webb Connects the Dots!

CANADIAN Soldiers Spill Hard Truth about Russia Ukraine War

10 Russian weapons used in Ukraine that worry NATO

CAF It Looks Like Crypto Is Going to Be the Trigger for the Next Crisis—and Massive Plunder

Jimmy Dore NYC Mayor Race Just Got CRAZY! !

US Treasury Shocks With Second Biggest Budget Surplus In History

Democrats have reached peaked stupidity.

The Forgotten History of Neurological Vaccine Injuries

Israel to take full control of land registry in West Bank's Area C, cementing annexation

Trump discusses end to Gaza war with Saudi crown prince

ew numbers from the Bureau of Labor and Statistics show 800,000 jobs from last year never existed.

Hamas releases Israeli-American captive Edan Alexander after direct talks with U.S.

Despite Mainstream Panic, US Consumer Price Inflation Tumbles To Lowest In Over 4 Years

Big Pharma Whistleblower Found Dead After Confirming Ivermectin Cures Cancer

Store nothing in plastic

Black Nurse Claims She Kills White Patients on Facebook

BOOM…😂😂😂

Eric Church - Drink In My Hand

Lower Bloood Pressure

Dozens of Afrikaners arrive to Dulles with refugee status, sparking outrage

"Absurd Conspiracy": French Media Rushes To Quash Claims Macron, Merz & Starmer Caught Hiding Cocaine On Kiev-Bound Train

Mark Dice: Blsck Fatigue


Business/Finance
See other Business/Finance Articles

Title: ALMOST CASHLESS, INDUSTRIES ARE SHUTTING DOWN -
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/ ... serves-as-economy-crashes.html
Published: Jul 2, 2015
Author: By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, in Athens
Post Date: 2015-07-02 22:12:31 by HAPPY2BME-4UM
Keywords: GREECE, CRISIS, MONETARY CRISIS, DEFAULT
Views: 167
Comments: 6

Greek banks down to €500m in cash reserves as economy crashes

The daily allowance of cash from many ATM machines has already dropped from €60 to €50, purportedly because €20 notes are running out

Greece is sliding into a full-blown national crisis as the final cash reserves of the banking system evaporate by the hour and swathes of industry start to shut down, precipitating the near disintegration of the ruling coalition.

Business leaders have been locked in talks with the Bank of Greece, pleading for the immediate release of emergency liquidity funds (ELA) to cover food imports and pharmaceutical goods before the tourist sector hits a brick wall.

Officials say the central bank will release the funds as soon as Friday, but this is a stop-gap measure at best. "We are on a war footing in this country," said Yanis Varoufakis, the Greek finance minister.

The daily allowance of cash from many ATM machines has already dropped from €60 to €50, purportedly because €20 notes are running out. Large numbers are empty. The financial contagion is spreading fast as petrol stations and small businesses stop accepting credit cards.

Constantine Michalos, head of the Hellenic Chambers of Commerce, said lenders are simply running out of money. "We are reliably informed that the cash reserves of the banks are down to €500m. Anybody who thinks they are going to open again on Tuesday is day-dreaming. The cash would not last an hour," he said.

"We are in an extremely dangerous situation. Greek companies have been excluded from the electronic transfers of Europe's Target2 system. The entire Greek business community is unable to import anything, and without raw materials they can't produce anything," he said.

A banner reading 'no to austerity and fear' atop Lycabettus hill in Athens

Pavlos Deas, owner of an olive processing factory in Chalkidiki, told The Telegraph that he may have to shut down a plant employing 250 people within days.

"We can't send any money abroad to our suppliers. Three of our containers have been stopped at customs control because the banks can't give a bill of landing. One is full of Spanish almonds, the others full of Chinese garlic," he said.

"We don't know how we are going to execute and export an order of 60 containers for the US. We don't even have enough gas. We asked for 10,000 litres but they are only letting us have 2,000. It's being rationed by the day. Factories are closing around us in a domino effect and we're all going to lose everything if this goes on," he said.

The fast-moving events come amid signs of deep dissension within the coalition over the wisdom of the country's referendum this Sunday. The vote was originally intended to secure a stronger negotiating mandate for a showdown with Europe's creditor powers, but it is rapidly turning into an "in-or-out" decision on euro membership and the survival of the Syriza government.

Four members of the nationalist Independent Greeks party (Anel) - the junior partners - said they would break ranks and vote "Yes" to creditor demands - though no offer is now on the table - admitting that they were aghast by the closure of the banking system and the drastic events of recent days.

The party's hardline chief and defence minister, Panos Kammenos, dismissed them contemptuously. "We are at war and there will be no backing down. Whoever does not have the stomach for war, be gone," he said.

Yanis Varoufakis, Greece's finance minister, said he would resign is the Greek people voted "yes" on Sunday

Mr Varoufakis vowed to resign if the Greek people voted yes. "I prefer to cut off my own arm rather than sign an agreement without debt restructuring," he told Bloomberg TV.

He said there is not a "smidgeon of an iota of possibility" that the terms on offer can lift the Greek economy out of a deflationary tailspin, insisting that the talks broke down because the creditors refused to face up to the fact that Greece's debt is unpayable.

The International Monetary Fund has tacitly endorsed his claims, admitting that the country needs large-scale debt relief and €50bn of fresh funds over the next three years to give the economy time to recover.

Mr Varoufakis said acceptance of the creditors's proposals would merely mean another bruising fight in a few months' time and a permanent cycle of hostility.

The mood within the Syriza movement is increasingly bitter and polarized. One MP appeared to have lost confidence in the party leadership. "We have had months of childish tactics. They thought they could blackmail Europe into making concessions instead of going to the root of the problem facing this country and accepting that we have to break free altogether. They don't know what they are doing," he told The Telegraph.

Private citizens have requested an injunction from Greece's top court to halt the referendum, claiming it is unconstitutional. Yiorgos Kaminis, the mayor of Athens, said the vote on a creditor package that no longer even exists - and with a question that nobody understands - reduces the country to ridicule.

"We are facing a national catastrophe, it is so self-evident. If Greece votes 'no' we will be obliged to go back to the drachma immediately, and sooner of later we may be forced to leave the EU as well. I don't want my children to be part of North Africa," he said.

The mayor said the whole structure of the Greek state was falling apart as the political crisis grinds on into its sixth month. "Nobody is paying any taxes any longer. The state has no money. We're facing a disaster," he said.

Mr Kaminis, a law professor and an independent politician, is widely-deemed more credible than politicians from the establishment parties and has emerged as the preferred figurehead of the "yes" movement.

Yet he admitted having "no contact" so far with the other groups in favour of a deal, a power structure known as the "inner Troika" in the demonology of the Greek Left. It is a sign of how fractured the "yes" camp still is with just two days left to put out their message, and polls showing the vote too close to call.

"We have to explain in a very determined way what is at stake. People seem to think that it was the EU that closed our banks," he said.

Mr Michalos, from the Hellenic Chambers, said a five-man committee at the Greek treasury is rationing foreign funds for companies on a top priority basis but it is entirely overwhelmed. "They can't possibly deal with thousands of requests," he said. The net effect is total paralysis.

His own two companies are still hanging on but the danger is mounting. One produces latex for kitchen gloves and the teats on baby bottles. "If I can't import gum from Malaysia I am going to have a serious problem. I have four weeks' inventory," he said.

His other company imports meat for supermarkets and restaurants. That is in dire straits already.

"I can't import anything. Restaurants are starting to close down because they can't obtain food and we are going straight into the peak tourist season. It is going to be utterly horrendous if this goes on," he said.

(4 images)

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 2.

#1. To: All (#0)

It will begin to get really interesting when those Greek riot police stop getting a paycheck.

HAPPY2BME-4UM  posted on  2015-07-02   22:17:57 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: HAPPY2BME-4UM (#1)

The sick thing is, Greece is nowhere as indebted as US.

Buckle up.

Lod  posted on  2015-07-02   22:27:14 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 2.

#3. To: Lod (#2)

Buckle up.

HOW THE SHEEP KNOW THEY'VE BEEN SHEARED - 22 Quotes That Lay Out The Elite’s Agenda

HAPPY2BME-4UM  posted on  2015-07-02 22:29:11 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Lod (#2)

I thought this headline was about the US, but you know, my local Ace hardware is running on fumes -- emps haven't been paid in weeks.

NeoconsNailed  posted on  2015-07-03 03:07:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 2.

TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]