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Sunday, June 28, 2015

GREEK BANK CEO: Greek banks will be closed on Monday (GREK)

Greek banks will be closed on Monday.  Headlines from Bloomberg on Sunday afternoon indicated that according to Anthimos Thomopoulos, the CEO of Piraeus Bank, Greek banks will be closed starting Monday.  Thomopoulos said banks will be closed "from Monday" according to Bloomberg, so it isn't clear when Greek banks would re-open.  Piraeus Bank is Greece's third-largest bank. Headlines from Reuters also indicated that the Athens Stock Exchange would remained closed on Monday. A report from Bloomberg earlier on Sunday said the European Central Bank believed Greece would need to impose a bank holiday in order to stop massive outflows from Greece's banking system. Bloomberg's Angela Cullen cited a personal familiar with the ECB's thinking on this report A bank holiday involves closing banks thereby limiting the ability for funds to be withdrawn. It is typically implemented to avoid a bank run.  The report out of Bloomberg follows an announcement from the ECB that it would maintain its emergency liquidity assistance — or ELA — to Greece at current levels. And so while the ECB is keeping its ELA program in place, the Financial Times notes that without an increase in the ELA, Greece will likely run out of cash before the July 5 referendum called by Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras on Friday. The ELA was first put in place back in February, and the amount available under the program has been steadily increased over the last few months. The program allowed Greek banks to post collateral other than Greek government debt — which the ECB said it would no longer accept — in exchange for receiving liquidity at elevated interest rates. Bloomberg notes that the ECB is currently limiting the amount of capital available under the ELA at around €89 billion.  Another alternative to a bank holiday is implementing capital controls, though these are tougher to repeal once put in place — Cyprus, for example, had capital controls put in place in 2013 and these conditions were just lifted in April — and capital controls is often seen as a last ditch effort to stem the rush of money from a banking system.  We earlier reported that analysts at Morgan Stanley see the scenario of capital controls as "highly likely." However, the first rule of capital controls is that you don't talk about them.  And so a "bank holiday," which is a closure of banks that can be implemented and later lifted much more easily than capital controls is almost certainly the preferable option in Greece, if only a temporary one.  In its announcement, the ECB said, "The Governing Council is closely monitoring the situation in financial markets and the potential implications for the monetary policy stance and for the balance of risks to price stability in the euro area. The Governing Council is determined to use all the instruments available within its mandate." The ECB added: "The Governing Council stands ready to reconsider its decision." And so as is, has been, and remains the case in Greece right now, this is subject to change. SEE ALSO: Greece is in a lose-lose situation Join the conversation about this story » NOW WATCH: Forget the Apple Watch — here's the new watch everyone on Wall Street wants


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