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O Euro, que futuro?!

Espaço dedicado a todo o tipo de troca de impressões sobre os mercados financeiros e ao que possa condicionar o desempenho dos mesmos.

por Automech » 6/7/2012 11:27

Atenção que há outro tópico:
http://caldeiraodebolsa.jornaldenegocio ... hp?t=80230

O melhor é bloquear um deles.
No man is rich enough to buy back his past - Oscar Wilde
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por migluso » 6/7/2012 11:26

Se calhar armazenar euros não é a melhor ideia...

Há uns meses atrás não me passava pela cabeça que os países mais fortes optassem por ser eles a abandonar o euro.

Hoje, e com o louco do Hollande ao leme da França, tudo é possível.
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O Euro, que futuro?!

por PT_Trader » 6/7/2012 11:20

Já temos um candidato à saída...


The Telegraph
Finland could leave the eurozone rather than pay other nations' debts, says Jutta Urpilainen


Finland would consider leaving the eurozone rather than paying the debts of other countries in the currency bloc, Finnish Finance Minister Jutta Urpilainen has said.

"Finland is committed to being a member of the eurozone, and we think that the euro is useful for Finland," Ms Urpilainen told financial daily Kauppalehti, adding though that "Finland will not hang itself to the euro at any cost and we are prepared for all scenarios".
The finance minister stressed that Finland, one of only a few EU countries to still enjoy a triple-A credit rating, would not agree to an integration model in which countries were collectively responsible for member states' debts and risks.
She also insisted that a proposed banking union would not work if it were based on joint liability.
"Collective responsibility for other countries' debt, economics and risks; this is not what we should be prepared for," Ms Urpilainen said.
Ms Urpilainen acknowledged in an interview with the Helsingin Sanomat daily that Finland "represents a tough line" when it comes to the eurozone bailouts.

"We are constructive and want to solve the crisis, but not on any terms," she said.
As part of its tough stance, Finland has said that it will begin negotiations with Spain next week in order to obtain collateral in exchange for taking part in a bailout for ailing Spanish banks.
Finland has also voiced concern about an agreement reached at an EU summit in Brussels last week to use the European Stability Mechanism to buy bonds to ease the unbearable borrowing costs that are squeezing Spain and other vulnerable eurozone economies.
And last year, Finland created a significant stumbling block for the eurozone's second rescue package for Greece, agreeing to take part only after striking a collateral deal with Athens in October 2011.
 
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