Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Ireland is âvery unlikelyâ to experience a financial crisis as severe as the one that forced Greece to seek an international bailout earlier this year, said Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
âA repeat of the Greek debt turmoil in Ireland is very unlikely,â Michael Vaknin, a senior fixed-income strategist at Goldman in London, said in an e-mailed note. âWith Irish spreads already at all-time highs, we would argue that refinancing risks in the Irish debt market is aggressively priced-in already.â
The extra yield that investors demand to hold Irish bonds over German bunds has surged to a record as investors fret about the countryâs ability to cap the cost of its bank bailout and cut the budget deficit. The spread today widened 12 basis points to 430 basis points and has swelled 112 basis points in the past month.
http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aB0GsklZKgiw&pos=4
At least one thing is for sure : strong sell for Irish stocks.
âA repeat of the Greek debt turmoil in Ireland is very unlikely,â Michael Vaknin, a senior fixed-income strategist at Goldman in London, said in an e-mailed note. âWith Irish spreads already at all-time highs, we would argue that refinancing risks in the Irish debt market is aggressively priced-in already.â
The extra yield that investors demand to hold Irish bonds over German bunds has surged to a record as investors fret about the countryâs ability to cap the cost of its bank bailout and cut the budget deficit. The spread today widened 12 basis points to 430 basis points and has swelled 112 basis points in the past month.
http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aB0GsklZKgiw&pos=4
At least one thing is for sure : strong sell for Irish stocks.