A critical task for the Greek economy enters a new phase
Greek banks have begun to reduce their enormous pile of bad loans
OF THE €57.7bn ($68.2bn) of loans that Piraeus Bank, one of Greece’s four dominant lenders, had on its books at the end of March, €20.5bn were more than 90 days overdue. A further €11.7bn were also deemed unlikely to be repaid. In all, at the end of 2017 Greek banks carried €95.7bn of such non-performing exposures (NPEs)—at 43.1% of loans, the heaviest burden in Europe. Still, the pile was €13bn smaller than at its peak in March 2016. The banks plan to reduce it by €30bn this year and next.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Rebuilding the ruins”
Finance & economics June 2nd 2018
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