My Writings. My Thoughts.
Monday June 22, 2015
// June 22nd, 2015 // Comments Off on Monday June 22, 2015 // Daily News
Global markets soar on hopes of Greek deal
CNBC.com
Global markets cheered on Monday, as Greece made a last-ditch offer to its creditors in a desperate effort to avoid defaulting on its debt.
Concerns over Greece have plagued markets for months. The country has warned it would be unable to pay a 1.5-billion-euro ($1.7 billion) bill to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) at the end of the month without further financial aid – something its creditors have refused to release without a firm commitment to additional fiscal reforms.
Over the weekend, however, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras submitted new proposals ahead of crisis talks in Brussels on Monday with the heads of the bodies overseeing its bailout – the European Commission, European Central Bank and IMF.
Hopes of a deal between the two parties were high, with European equity markets sharply higher on Monday morning. Both the French CAC and German DAX were around 3 percent higher at 10.30 a.m. London time, with the pan-European Stoxx 600 index trading up 1.8 percent.
“The chances for a deal today with Greece look much improved from Friday,” the Societe Generale cross asset research team said in a note Monday. “Sure, any deal now will be quite imperfect, very conditional, short-term and flimsy. But that is the best that can be hoped for.”
Read MoreKey actors to take stake in Greek drama in week ahead
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the Athens stock exchange was the strongest performing index in Europe, trading over 7 percent higher on Monday.
Greek banks, which have been hit especially hard by massive outflows, were the big winners, with Alpha Bank 20 percent higher and Bank of Piraeus up 17 percent. Withdrawals remain in focus, however, after deposit outflows spiked to more than 4 billion euros ($4.5 billion) last week, according to Reuters, and an additional 1 billion euros is expected to be withdrawn on Monday.
Yields on euro zone government bonds also moved broadly lower, meanwhile. The yield on 10-year Greek sovereign debt had fallen from 12.5 percent to just over 11 percent by 10.30 a.m. London time.
Across the Atlantic, meanwhile, American investors also appeared to be in an optimistic mood. U.S. equity futures indicated a higher open, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average looking set to open over 130 points higher.
Today’s Inspiration
Don’t Let Your Emotions Vote
by Joyce Meyer – posted June 22, 2015
Do not be misled, my beloved brethren.
—James 1:16
If we desire to walk after the Spirit, all our actions must be governed by God’s principles. In the realm of the Spirit, there is a precise standard of right and wrong, and how we feel does not alter that standard.
If doing the right thing requires a “yes” from us, then it must be “yes” whether we feel excited or discouraged. If it is “no,” then it is “no.” A principled life is enormously different from an emotional life. When an emotional person feels thrilled or happy, he may undertake what he ordinarily would not do. But when he feels cold and emotionless or melancholy, he will not fulfill his duty, because his feelings refuse to cooperate.
All who desire to be truly spiritual must conduct themselves daily according to godly principles. A good sign to show you’re growing and maturing in Christ is when you consistently obey, even when you don’t feel like it.
Learn not to ask yourself how you feel about things, but instead ask yourself if doing or not doing something is right for you. You may know that you need to do something, but you don’t feel like doing it at all. You can wish you felt like it, but wishing does no good. You must live by principle and simply choose to do what you know is right. There may be a certain thing you want to do badly. It might be a purchase you want to make that you know is too expensive. Your feelings vote “yes,” but your heart says “no.” Tell your feelings they don’t get to vote. They are too immature to vote and will never vote for what is best for you in the long run.
We don’t allow people to vote in political elections until they are eighteen, because we assume they would be too immature to know what they are doing. Why not look at your emotions the same way?
They have always been a part of you, but they are very immature. They are without wisdom and cannot be trusted to do the right thing, so just don’t let them vote. We mature but our emotions don’t, and if they are left unchecked, our lives will be a series of unfinished and disappointing ventures.
Trust in Him Pray and ask God to help you trust Him more than you trust your emotions.
Friday June 19, 2015
// June 19th, 2015 // Comments Off on Friday June 19, 2015 // Daily News
Greece talks fail; emergency summit called
Holly Ellyatt | Julia Chatterley
CNBC.com
Euro zone leaders will hold an emergency summit on Monday after a the region’s finance ministers failed to agree a reform-and-aid deal with Greece, making it more likely the near-bankrupt country will default on its debt at the at the end of the month.
European political leaders and economists are now preparing for financial turmoil and potential capital controls in Greece on the back of a Reuters report that Greek savers had pulled about 2 billion euros out of banks over the past three days.
The large deposit outflows seen in Greece prompted the European Central Bank (ECB) to reportedly express doubts on whether Greek banks would open on Monday. The ECB is to hold a teleconference on Greece on Friday to discuss extending emergency liquidity to the country.
The emergency summit was called after the euro zone’s finance ministers – the so-called Eurogroup – failed to reach a deal on reforms with Greece when the group met in Luxembourg on Thursday.
The reforms would allow Greece to receive a last tranche of bailout aid worth 7.2 billion euros but sticking points remain over pension cuts. Without the money, Greece has said that it could not make a 1.54 billion euro ($1.74 billion) debt repayment to one of its senior creditors, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), on June 3
After five months of stalled talks over reforms, Greece now has just the weekend to come up with a last-ditch plan to present to creditors in order to stave off the ignominy of a default — and what its own central bank predicted the recently would be an “uncontrollable crisis” following such an event.
There was incredulity among some euro zone ministers emerging from Thursday’s meeting at Greece’s apparent lack of awareness of the gravity of the situation.
Finnish Finance Minister Alexander Stubb told CNBC that Greek bailout negotiations had hit a dead end. And Belgium Finance Minister Johan Van Overtveldt said he found it strange that while “there should be a sense of urgency” on the Greek side, the country had only come up with a “few, pretty vague ideas, fully aware of the fact that the Eurogroup always works through the three institutions [overseeing Greece’s bailout – the European Commission, ECB and IMF].”
Although Van Overtveldt emphasized that nobody in the Eurogroup wanted to see Greece leave the euro zone, he warned that if the Greek government “keeps saying the same things and keeps the same position it’s had for weeks, then there is a problem and we are obliged to look at alternative scenarios whether we like it or not.”
In addition, the President of the Eurogroup, Jeroen Djisselbloem, told CNBC that the group “hadn’t heard a full and credible plan tonight, that’s my side of the story.”
But Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis hit back at critics and what he called “disinformation” about his presentation to the Eurogroup by posting his “precise words” to the Eurogroup on Thursday on his blog site.
“I will not deny that our proposals have not instilled in you the trust that you need. And, at the same time, the institutions’ proposals that [European Commission President Jean-Claude] Juncker conveyed to Prime Minister Tsipras cannot engender the hope that our citizens need. Thus, we have come close to an impasse ,” he said.
“That Greece needs to adjust there is no doubt,” Varoufakis continued, adding: “The question, however, is not how much adjustment Greece needs to make. It is, rather, what kind of adjustment. If by ‘adjustment’ we mean fiscal consolidation, wage and pension cuts, and tax rate increases, it is clear we have done more of that than any other country in peacetime.”
Today’s Inspiration
No Longer a Victim
by Joyce Meyer – posted June 19, 2015
He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds [curing their pains and their sorrows].
Psalm 147:3
You may have been a victim at one point in your life, but you don’t have to remain one. You can be emotionally healthy and whole in your soul. The Word of God promises that God will heal your wounds. He will help you . . .He’s waiting to help you.
We all have painful issues from the past that we need to deal with. Many of them were not our fault, and it isn’t fair that we should suffer because of other people’s behavior. Perhaps you were teased mercilessly as a child and still feel insecure or sensitive because of that old pain. Maybe someone you loved left you without explanation, or you may have been abused in some way. Whatever the source of your pain, be thankful that God loves you and wants to heal you. You don’t have to spend your life as a victim; you can have victory and even help bring victory to others.
Prayer of Thanks Father, I thank You that You are a healer. You have not left me to suffer in the pain of the past—You are healing my wounds and giving me the strength to move forward. Today is a new day, and I am going to enjoy every minute of it!