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Thursday, November 04, 2010

Will Ireland need to use the EFSF?

by Calculated Risk on 11/04/2010 12:24:00 PM

The yield on the Ireland 10-year bond surged again today to 7.68%. The Portugal 10-year yield is near a record at 6.57%.

At what point does it make sense for Ireland to use the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF)?

Wolfgang Münchau at the Financial Times worked through the details in September and estimated the EFSF borrowing costs would be around 8%: Could any country risk a eurozone bail-out?

It is not all that hard to conceive of a situation in which the borrower would end up paying a total interest rate of 8 per cent ... Three issues arise from this set-up. The first is that no country would ever want to borrow from the EFSF, unless it was absolutely unavoidable. The typical situation where an EFSF loan would be useful would be a case of egregious market failure. If the borrower is insolvent, the EFSF cannot help.
excerpt with permission
So probably at around 8%. Ireland apparently will not need to borrow until sometime in 2011 - and they will do everything possible to avoid the EFSF, still the yields are getting close for the EFSF to make sense ...

And it appears Russia has stopped investing in bonds of Ireland and Portugal - via Tracy Alloway at the Financial Times Alphaville: The world backs away from Ireland, Spain, Portugal
There’s something missing from the Russian Finance Ministry’s website.
No mention of Ireland, Portugal or even Spain.