What’s In Store For Greece

With focus on a May 6 interest repayment to the International Monetary Fund and the next Eurogroup meeting on May 11 in Brussels, Greece has a number of funding hurdles to clear before then and beyond.

From Monday through to the end of the month, the government needs to pay pensions and salaries to civil servants and retirees. The country’s alternate finance minister, Dimitris Mardas said Wednesday there’s not enough cash in state coffers to meet these obligations, unless local authorities comply with a decree ordering them to transfer reserves to the Bank of Greece for short-term financing of the central government.

A public holiday on May 1 will give the government a brief stay over payment of about 200 million euros interest payment to the IMF. As the deadline coincides with the holiday, followed by a weekend, the payment can be delayed until May 6, two days after it receives payment notification, a person familiar with the matter said.

The European Central Bank’s Governing Council will also hold its weekly reviews of the liquidity situation of Greek lenders, where additional Emergency Liquidity Assistance is approved. At the last meeting on April 22, it increased the available pool by 1.5 billion euros to 75.5 billion euros, indicating the standoff continues to aggravate deposit flight.

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