Greece, lenders clinch deal on aid after 'toughest' review

Deal paves way for Greece to repay nearly €10 billion of bonds

The agreement is  a much-needed shot in the arm for prime minister Antonis Samaras
The agreement is a much-needed shot in the arm for prime minister Antonis Samaras

Greece and its international lenders struck a deal to unlock the next tranche of loans under its rescue package on Tuesday, ending six months of negotiations that Athens called its “toughest” review since being bailed out.

The deal paves the way for Greece to repay nearly €10 billion of bonds due in May and bolsters expectations it could soon return to the bond markets for the first time since its debt crisis escalated four years ago.

Athens and its European Union and IMF lenders had been haggling over the bailout review since September, making it the longest inspection of the country's finances since Greece was first rescued from bankruptcy by the creditors in 2010.

"This review was the toughest we've had so far," finance minister Yannis Stournaras told reporters after a week of marathon talks that ended in the early hours of Tuesday.

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“A difficult negotiation is over.”

The talks stumbled at various points over reforms to make the Greek economy more competitive, mass layoffs demanded by the lenders and the capital shortfall faced by battered Greek banks.

The agreement is also a much-needed shot in the arm for prime minister Antonis Samaras, who is under pressure to show light at the end of the tunnel to austerity-weary Greeks ahead of tough European and local elections in May.

He immediately promised voters that the deal with lenders came without any additional demands for austerity, and promised a €500 million windfall to poor, austerity-hit Greeks that will be funded out of the primary budget surplus Greece unexpectedly posted last year.

Mr Samaras, whose New Democracy party is trailing the rival, anti-bailout Syriza party in the polls, also said he would lower social security contributions and spend an additional €1 billion to settle government arrears to suppliers this year.

Greece has no pressing funding needs until May, when €9.3 billion of its bonds expire, the biggest refinancing hump the country will face in the next three decades. The next tranche of aid will be released by the end of April, allowing Greece to meet its May obligations, an EU diplomat said, on condition of anonymity.

After nearly going bankrupt and crashing out of the euro zone in 2012, Greece’s fortunes have revived sharply in recent months as a six-year recession shows signs of bottoming out and investor confidence in the country’s prospects is rising.

In the latest sign of optimism, Piraeus Bank, the country's second-biggest lender, became on Tuesday the first Greek lender to regain bond market access since 2009, when the country plunged into crisis.

The bank’s €500 million three-year unsecured bond issue attracted bids and was set to be priced at 5.125 per cent.

Also on Tuesday, Greece’s debt agency sold three-month treasury paper at the cheapest borrowing cost since its debt crisis escalated in early 2010, with foreign investors buying up half of the issue. Athens raised €1.3 billion, pricing the T-bills at a yield of 3.10 per cent.

Reuters