Greek debt talks break down

Talks between private creditors and Greece on a voluntary restructuring of government debt appeared to break down Friday, with negotiators representing the private sector citing the lack of a ��constructive, consolidated response by all parties.��

A deal on a proposed 50% writedown on the value of Greek debt held by the private sector is a prerequisite for Athens to receive further rescue funds from the International Monetary Fund and the European Union secured as part of a second bailout agreement reached last October.

Alongside reports that ratings firm Standard & Poor��s is set to downgrade the ratings of several euro-zone countries, including triple-A-rated France, the developments sent the euro skidding to a 16-month low versus the dollar.

The currency EURUSD ?remains down 1.1% at $1.2679.

��Under the circumstances, discussions with Greece and the official sector are paused for reflection on the benefits of a voluntary approach,�� said Charles Dallara, head of the Institute for International Finance and Jean Lemierre of the Institute of International Finance, a global lobbying group representing private bondholders in the discussions.

��We very much hope, however, that Greece, with the support of the euro area, will be in a position to reengage constructively with the private sector with a view to finalizing a mutually acceptable agreement on a voluntary debt exchange consistent with the [October] agreement, in the best interest of both Greece and the euro area,�� they said.

Dallara and Lemierre held talks Thursday and Friday with Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos and Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos. Earli! er, a go vernment official had told reporters that talks would likely resume on Wednesday, news reports said. Dallara and Lemierre offered no date for a resumption of talks.

European leaders in October agreed to a second bailout plan for Greece but required private bondholders to bear part of the burden by agreeing to a restructuring that would write down the value of their Greek debt holdings by half. The restructuring is intended to cut Greece��s debt load by 100 billion euros ($127.7 billion).

The lack of agreement also triggers fears that Greece could move to impose a forced restructuring on bondholders, creating an official ��credit event�� that would require banks and other institutions to pay out on credit default swaps, derivatives used to insure against debt nonpayment,�� said Michael Hewson, analyst at CMC Markets in London.

That scenario raises the specter of a potential disorderly default that could spark contagion across the region, analysts have warned.

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel, speaking alongside French President Nicolas Sarkozy, made clear earlier this week that Greece won��t get its next tranche of rescue funding, which is set for release in March, unless there is a deal.

��It is essential in order to finalize the voluntary PSI [private-sector involvement] agreement that support be given by all official parties in the days ahead,�� said Charles Dallara and Jea! n Lemier re, co-chairs of the Steering Committee of the Private Creditor-Investor Committee for Greece, in a statement Thursday.

��As Chancellor Merkel and President Sarkozy stressed in their Berlin press conference earlier this week, it is important that Greece reach agreement with the private sector on a voluntary debt exchange as soon as possible,�� they said.

A government spokesman said Greece is planning legislation that could force reluctant bond holders to participate in an involuntary debt exchange if a majority of private creditors agree to a voluntary plan, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Greece��s so-called troika of international lenders �� the European Union, International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank �� previously delayed the release of Greece��s next aid tranche to March. Under the original schedule, Greece would have been able to meet a 14 billion euro ($17.9 billion) bond redemption in March after receiving a total of �15 billion of aid payments in two separate tranches, noted Gustavo Bagattini, European economist at RBC Capital Markets.

��The delay would mean this would no longer be feasible, meaning agreements on the PSI and the second bailout are required to avoid a default on the repayment,�� he said.

Meanwhile, high-profile lawmakers from Merkel��s Christian Democratic Union party have stepped up pressure on Athens by describing the possibility of Greece��s exit from the shared currency as manageable.

Measures put in place since 2010 to fight the spread of the crisis make contagion less likely in the event of a Greek euro exit, Michael Meister and Michael Fuchs, who are both deputy parliamentary caucus leaders in the CDU, told Bloomberg. Merkel and Sarkozy, in contrast, have insisted ! no count ry will exit the shared currency.

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