Greece to extend bank recapitalization deadline: Central Bank chief, Reuters reports

YEREVAN, April 2. /ARKA/. Greece will extend a deadline for the recapitalization of its banks by a few weeks, possibly until the end of May, Greek central bank chief George Provopoulos said on Monday, Reuters reported.

Greek banks, which are being recapitalized with funds from the country’s latest EU/IMF bailout, have been lobbying for the terms of the recapitalization scheme to be sweetened and also sought an extension to an end-April deadline for the plan.

“There will be a small extension of a few weeks, it may be pushed to the end of May,” Provopoulos told state TV.

The scheme aims to restore the solvency of the country’s top four lenders, National Bank, Alpha bank (ACBr.AT ), Piraeus bank (BOPr.AT ) and Eurobank.

Provopoulos confirmed that Greece’s foreign lenders were concerned about National Bank’s takeover of Eurobank.

Bankers told Reuters on Saturday that the lenders had raised issues concerning the size of the merged entity relative to Greece’s gross domestic product (GDP) and the banking sector as a whole.
The combined NBG-Eurobank group would have assets of 170 billion euros, almost the size of Greece’s 190 billion GDP and 36 percent of total deposits in the country’s banks.

“They don’t like the idea that such a big lender will be created,” Provopoulos said. “There is concern that if private shareholders are not found, it will go under state control.”

However, asked if the merger should be undone, he replied: “No, it shouldn’t.”

Officials from the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund are due in Athens this week to resume an inspection visit and talks on key issues, including the bank recapitalization and public-sector layoffs.
Provopoulos reiterated that the Greek economy, which is in its sixth year of recession, is expected to shrink 4.5 percent this year – at the higher end of the targeted range – as the Cypriot crisis was expected to lower GDP by 0.35 percentage points.

A European Union rescue package to save Cyprus from bankruptcy imposed a hefty levy on deposits over 100,000 euros in Cypriot banks, an unprecedented move that sent jitters across the single currency euro zone.

Provopoulos said deposits in Greece were guaranteed. He added that Greek banks saw deposit inflows in March in spite of the crisis in Cyprus, and that more than 19 billion euros had returned to Greece since mid-June.

“Even in March, which was a turbulent month due to the developments in Cyprus, we had (deposit) inflows,” he said.—0-

spot_img

POPULAR

Martin Galstyan re-elected as Governor of the Central Bank of Armenia

Martin Galstyan was re-elected as Governor of the Central Bank of Armenia on Tuesday in a closed, secret ballot vote in the National Assembly.

The Power of One Dram to ‘’Vahe Meliksetyan’’ Foundation

The April beneficiary of ‘’The Power of One Dram’’ initiative was the “Davitbek Games” Foundation.

Euro, dollar, and ruble exchange rates against the Armenian dram continued to decline: Central Bank

The average market exchange rate for the US dollar to the Armenian dram, formed on the Armenian foreign exchange market as of May 5, 2026, decreased by 0.34 points compared to April 30, to 370.44 drams.

Central Bank of Armenia maintains the refinancing rate at 6.5%

At its meeting on Tuesday, the Central Bank's Board left the refinancing rate unchanged for the fourth consecutive time at 6.5%, the regulator's press service reported.

Central Bank is not observing capital outflow from Armenia amid regional uncertainty

The Central Bank of Armenia is not observing capital outflow from Armenia amid regional uncertainty, stated Deputy Chairman Hovhannes Khachatryan.

LATEST NEWS

spot_imgspot_imgspot_img