News Highlight
European governments are considering cutting interest rates on emergency loans to Greece and using
contributions from the European Central Bank to plug a new financing gap in the second bailout program for
Athens. Finance ministers wrangled over how to close the funding hole in a teleconference last night after
seeing estimates that Greece’s debt would fall to 129 percent of gross domestic product in 2020, missing a
target of 120 percent. Last year, the level was about 160 percent.
Germany wants euro ‐area finance chiefs to avoid splitting consideration of a 130 billion ‐euro ($171 billion)
Greek rescue and a bond swap to cut the nation’s debt load at a meeting next week, coalition lawmakers
were told by German government officials in a briefing. As long as Greece meets conditions for the aid, the
finance chiefs will probably approve the package along with the debt exchange, three German officials
involved in the telephone briefing yesterday said.
Builders broke ground on more homes than forecast in January, helped by warmer weather and adding to
signs the U.S. residential real estate market is stabilizing. Starts rose 1.5 percent to a 699,000 annual rate from
December’s 689,000 pace that was stronger than previously reported, Commerce Department figures showed
today in Washington.