April 22 (Bloomberg) -- Greece is likely to cut or delay payments to bond investors even as the country negotiates a bailout package with the European Commission and International Monetary Fund, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
âLook out for signs that the government might offer a voluntary debt-restructuring arrangement sometime over the next few months,â Erik F. Nielsen, chief European economist at Goldman Sachs in London, wrote in a report. âA large multi-year official rescue package combined with a voluntary debt restructuring would create a much longer breathing space for the government to undertake the necessary reforms.â
Greek 10-year bonds dropped for the eighth day today as Prime Minister George Papandreouâs government began a second day of talks in Athens with euro-region and IMF officials on a 45 billion-euro ($60 billion) aid package for the country. The yield premium investors demand to hold the debt instead of benchmark German bunds exceeded 5 percentage points for the first time yesterday.
âMarkets are in the process of pricing in some kind of rescheduling or exchange,â said Robin Marshall, who helps oversee about $20 billion as director of fixed income at Smith & Williamson Investment Management in London. âThe protracted nature of the resolution of this is not helping sentiment.â
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aUMHiIj6fFNY&pos=1
âLook out for signs that the government might offer a voluntary debt-restructuring arrangement sometime over the next few months,â Erik F. Nielsen, chief European economist at Goldman Sachs in London, wrote in a report. âA large multi-year official rescue package combined with a voluntary debt restructuring would create a much longer breathing space for the government to undertake the necessary reforms.â
Greek 10-year bonds dropped for the eighth day today as Prime Minister George Papandreouâs government began a second day of talks in Athens with euro-region and IMF officials on a 45 billion-euro ($60 billion) aid package for the country. The yield premium investors demand to hold the debt instead of benchmark German bunds exceeded 5 percentage points for the first time yesterday.
âMarkets are in the process of pricing in some kind of rescheduling or exchange,â said Robin Marshall, who helps oversee about $20 billion as director of fixed income at Smith & Williamson Investment Management in London. âThe protracted nature of the resolution of this is not helping sentiment.â
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aUMHiIj6fFNY&pos=1

