Εκτενές άρθρο του Reuters αναφέρεται στη
σταδιακή επιστροφή χρημάτων στην Ελλάδα, καθώς εξανεμίζεται ο φόβος για έξοδο της
χώρας από το ευρώ. Όπως επισημαίνει το πρακτορείο, Έλληνες, που είχαν σπεύσει
να βγάλουν τα χρήματά τους εκτός Ελλάδας,
καθώς η οικονομία της χώρας κατέρρεε, εκδηλώνουν, τώρα, ενδιαφέρον για αγορά μετοχών και ακίνητης
περιουσίας, με κίνητρο τις χαμηλές τιμές και την πεποίθηση ότι η χώρα θα
παραμείνει τελικά στην Ευρωζώνη.
Το πρακτορείο υπογραμμίζει, επίσης, ότι η κυβέρνηση με Πρωθυπουργό τον Αντώνη
Σαμαρά έκανε από την αρχή καλή εντύπωση σε επενδυτές, καθώς δεσμεύτηκε να
πράξει ό,τι χρειάζεται, προκειμένου να διατηρήσει τη ροή των χρημάτων της
βοήθειας, με αποτέλεσμα να αμβλύνει το φόβο για χρεοκοπία και έξοδο από το
ευρώ.
ΑΚΟΥΛΟΥΘΕΙ ΤΟ ΑΡΘΡΟ ΤΟΥ REUTERS
Reuters--Money
edges back to Greece
as euro exit fear wanes
By Tom Bill and Chris Vellacott
LONDON, Oct 22 (Reuters) - After
scrambling to get their money out of Greece as the economy collapsed, Greeks
abroad are regaining an appetite for shares and property at home, spurred on by
bargain prices and a bet that their country will stay in the euro zone after
all.
Property investors and agents say
interest in real estate has jumped since the summer and there are tentative
signs the financial exodus is slowing, according to central bank, stock market
and investment flow data.
"There are deals that didn't make
sense but do now as the outside world takes the government more
seriously," said Kostas Kazolides, a London-based investor who has been
investing in and advising on property deals in Greece
and Cyprus
for 35 years.
"People are talking about going
back in and buying. There are villas in Mykonos
going at 30 percent of their value because sellers are feeling the pinch,"
he said. A 30 percent fall in
construction costs was another
attraction.
Fears that investments and bank
deposits would be redenominated in a rapidly devaluing new Greek currency if Greece
left the euro had put the brakes on international investors buying assets like
property and shares on the cheap in recent years.
But a coalition government led by
conservative Prime Minister Antonis Samaras that came to power in June has made
a positive initial impression on some investors by pledging to do everything
needed to keep bailout funds flowing, easing fears of bankruptcy and euro zone
exit.
There are signs European policymakers
are becoming more conciliatory towards Greece , including German Chancellor
Angela Merkel ruling out letting the country default on its debt, making the
country's exit from the single currency look less likely for now.
Analysts at U.S. bank Citigroup
changed their view earlier this month that Greece would almost certainly leave
the euro, lowering its probability of such an event to 60 percent from 90
percent, mainly due to a change of attitude by other euro zone governments.
[ID: nL5E8LCPE0]
Data from Lipper, a Thomson Reuters
company that tracks the funds industry, shows the amount of money flowing out
of Greek equity funds is slower in 2012 than previous years and turned positive
in August.
The net outflow from funds investing
in Greek equities during 2012 was 17 million euros at the end of August, out of
a total asset base of 690 million euros, which indicates a slowdown in
investors running for the exit from the 50 million euros of 2011 and 42 million
euros lost in 2010.
"You might see more inflows (in
future) because the rhetoric changed from the German side," said Georgios
Tsapouris, an investment strategist at British private bank Coutts. "At
some point you have to move before the market so there is going to have to be
some opportunity," he said.
Investors dabbling in the Greek stock
market have reaped rewards for their bravado in recent months, with the Athex
equity index up nearly 30 percent since early May, outperforming other asset
classes such as gold, emerging market equities, oil
and some government bonds.
Central bank data suggests sentiment
is stabilising after the country's banking system spent years suffering the
severe strain from capital flight as savers moved money abroad to protect it
from bank failures and possible currency devaluation.
Deposits held by businesses and
households climbed slightly during the summer from a five-year low of 150.58
billion euros in June to 153.89 billion euros a month later, the biggest
monthly jump in more than three years, before slipping by 0.33 percent in
August.
Despite some grounds for optimism,
there is still much to deter jittery investors, including a decision by the
country's biggest company, Coca Cola Hellenic, to relocate its headquarters to Switzerland and its shares to London this month, citing better access to
capital markets.
While Greeks abroad are more prepared
than others to invest in their country now, many pulled their money out as the
economy turned bad and their willingness to put it back in again still depends
on the circumstances being favourable.
"It's important not to
underestimate the emotional pull," said Chris Groves, a London-based
partner at law firm Withers who advises private clients.
He defended the motivation of
expatriate Greek investors.
"There's a sense of duty and it's
not right to say rich Greeks are purely motivated by greed. There are much more
complex motives," he said.
Property investors will become more
confident of paying a fair price as the Greek government begins selling state
assets including real estate as a condition of its bailout over the next
several months, said Dimitris Manoussakis, head of the Athens office of real
estate consultant Savills.
"After the August holidays there
was a change," he said, noting Greek investors had become more interested
in commercial property like hotels and retail schemes than before and that
demand was coming from countries including the US, South Africa and Australia.
"We are now taking emails and
calls to request information for property that's on the market. Six months ago
it was frozen and we weren't taking those calls."