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Aandeel ING Groep AEX:INGA.NL, NL0011821202

  • 16,532 21 mei 2024 14:58
  • -0,034 (-0,21%) Dagrange 16,480 - 16,594
  • 2.286.578 Gem. (3M) 10,5M

ING 10 Juli 2012

183 Posts
Pagina: «« 1 ... 3 4 5 6 7 ... 10 »» | Laatste | Omlaag ↓
  1. [verwijderd] 10 juli 2012 13:33
    quote:

    Eurowin schreef:

    Dat zeg jij, waar jij je druk om maakt is dat de koers UP moet en dat gaat niet gebeuren ja even, dat zie je toch hoop ik wel, komt het bij 5,18 dan dumpen de Rakkers...aan Piet en Truus...
    Pffff ik maak me nergens druk om.... Up is goed. Down ook. Put and opties....
    Beleggen is een Hobby.. dusssss Ik druk Hahaha
  2. daaromdaarom 10 juli 2012 14:04
    ING nog EUR 0,84 omhoog deze week en we zitten op schema, graag even de EUR 6 weer eens aantikken, en nog beter, weer omhoog naar de EUR 10,-
    Melding over aflossing staatsschuld en mogelijk dividend, zou zo maar komende twee weken kunnen, en we gaan weer minimaal een euro omhoog in die week.

    Succes allemaal, vanmiddag zeker over de 5,20! Positieve, optimistische geluiden
  3. [verwijderd] 10 juli 2012 14:59
    ATHENE (AFN) - Klanten van banken in Griekenland storten weer geld terug op hun rekeningen. Dit heeft de gouverneur van de Griekse centrale bank, George Provopoulos, dinsdag gezegd.

    Hij zei dat sinds er een nieuwe coalitieregering is gevormd, ,,geld terugstroomt met hoeveelheden die tot tevredenheid stemmen''. Volgens een medewerker van de centrale bank gaat het om ongeveer 6 miljard euro sinds de verkiezingen van 17 juni.

    In april en mei vond een uittocht plaats van tegoeden. Naar schatting 6,8 miljard euro werd toen van Griekse rekeningen gehaald in de aanloop naar de verkiezingen van 6 mei die enkel tot nieuwe verkiezingen leidden.
  4. [verwijderd] 10 juli 2012 15:00
    BRUSSEL (Dow Jones)--Griekenland krijgt tot september geen nieuw geld uit het steunpakket van EUR130 miljard voor het land en verwacht ook niet meer tijd te krijgen voor de afgesproken begrotingshervormingen, zegt de Griekse minister van financien Yiannis Stournaras dinsdag.

    De ministers van financien van de eurozone kwamen maandag overeen dat het land "in de komende weken" nog zo'n EUR3 miljard aan bezuinigingen moet aanwijzen om in 2012 te voldoen aan de "strenge voorwaarden" van het IMF en de EU, zegt de minister naar aanleiding van de Eurogroep-vergadering van maandag over de Griekse situatie.

    De nieuwe Griekse coalitieregering hoopte uitstel te krijgen voor de reeks hervormingen die het land moet doorvoeren om zo'n EUR11,5 miljard te bezuinigen voor eind 2014. Volgens Stournaras is de kans op uitstel echter klein.

    "Het probleem is dat opschuiven van de doelstellingen naar een latere datum betekent dat Europa extra financiering moet verstrekken en daarvoor is parlementaire goedkeuring nodig, aldus de Griekse minister. "Ik denk dat dit moeilijk te accepteren is [voor andere lidstaten] maar we zullen het aan de orde blijven stellen omdat we denken dat het gerechtvaardigd is".

    Er werd maandag wel toegezegd dat Griekenland in de zomer een soort tussenlening ontvangt, waarmee het land een lening van EUR3,1 miljoen kan aflossen die is verstrekt door de Europese Centrale Bank en die afloopt op 20 augustus, verklaart Stournaras.

    De minister kon echter niet zeggen of Griekenland daarnaast nog extra geld krijgt om te kunnen voldoen aan zijn financieringsbehoeften. Het land zal naar verwachting eind juli zonder geld komen te zitten.

    Door Matina Stevis; vertaald en bewerkt door Marleen Groen; Dow Jones Nieuwsdienst; +31 20 5715 200; marleen.groen@dowjones.com

    (END) Dow Jones Newswires
  5. longshort 10 juli 2012 15:25
    quote:

    Eurowin schreef:

    De ministers van financien van de eurozone kwamen maandag overeen dat het land "in de komende weken" nog zo'n EUR3 miljard aan bezuinigingen moet aanwijzen om in 2012 te voldoen aan de "strenge voorwaarden" van het IMF en de EU,

    Stop er toch mee dwazen, dit komt tot niets...
    niet zo negatief jij, ik zit LONG ING........lol
  6. forum rang 6 €d_Modus Vivendi 10 juli 2012 15:32
    BRUSSELS--European officials clashed Tuesday over a new European Union directive aimed at eliminating the problem of banks that are "too big to fail," an essential element in the euro zone's attempts to create a banking union to mirror its currency union.
    Discussing for the first time a European Commission Directive on Bank Recovery and Resolution, European Central Bank Vice-President Vitor Constancio warned against the commission's plan to give bank-resolution funds, which have the job of winding up failed banks, powers to borrow from the ECB.
    The idea that bank-resolution funds might receive loans from central banks "could not be applied" in the euro area, Mr. Constancio said in an open session of an EU finance ministers' meeting.
    "More generally, it goes against the spirit of the treaty, which separates central banks from the financing of governments," he said. Mr. Constancio's view echoes that of Germany's government and central bank, which have repeatedly rejected using central bank funds to finance governments.
    Constancio also pointed to "difficulties" in plans for a cross-border deposit-guarantee program, a core element of the directive that aims to ensure a certain level of support from countries with strong banking systems for those with weak ones.
    Under the directive, each state would be required to establish analogous national deposit-guarantee funds that would be compelled to make up to half of their resources available to other member states. That suggestion, aimed at spreading the shock of a major bank failure across the EU, has caused member states to divide along familiar lines of likely net contributors to any such plan, such as Germany and the Netherlands, and likely net beneficiaries, such as Spain.
    German banks have been visceral in their criticism of the draft, claiming it exposes German savers' money to the risk of bailing out insolvent banks. The commission rejects such arguments and was supported Tuesday by Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, who said the provisions didn't go far enough, leaving too much leeway for member states to undermine the program and its credibility.
    "The current draft still builds on a decentralized approach to resolution and funding arrangements," Monti said. "This approach is not ambitious enough."
    Spanish Finance Minister Luis De Guindos also warned that the commission's plans to allow regulators to apportion losses among creditors in the event of a bank failure risked causing market instability.
    The commission has tried and failed before to create a regional system of deposit insurance, only to founder on the resistance of member states. However, euro-zone leaders two weeks ago emphatically declared it imperative to create a system of greater collective financial security, breaking the link between the finances of national governments and their local banking systems. That has lent Brussels a new impetus in its efforts to create a region-wide backstop mechanism.
    One of the biggest issues for the commission with the draft is its need to allow the 17 members of the euro zone to agree on a single backstop mechanism without prejudice to the other 10 members of the EU's single market.
    "We have to assure ourselves that our proposals keep the integrity of the single markets and don't lead to a fragmentation of the European Union," Barnier said in his introductory remarks. "But if they are necessary at the level of 27, then these proposals are indispensable for the members of the euro zone."
    Barnier conceded that the plans of the euro zone to set up a new supervisory agency, either reporting to or even within the ECB, to police its banking union will inevitably raise questions about the future purpose of the London-based European Banking Authority.
    "We are still reflecting on how to reconcile the reinforced role of the ECB with the EBA," Barnier said, adding that the latter would, however, keep its responsibility for developing a single rule book for banks across the EU, as well as its role in developing common technical standards and in mediating between national regulators.
  7. forum rang 6 €d_Modus Vivendi 10 juli 2012 15:33
    LONDON--Spanish and Italian government bond yields slipped in early trading Tuesday, but yields on Spanish debt remained at near record levels as investors said a meeting of euro-zone finance ministers this week left many questions unanswered.
    Adding to the uncertainty Tuesday, the German constitutional court will consider whether the transfer of sovereignty associated with the European Stability Mechanism and fiscal pact is against the German constitution.
    "In absence of noteworthy data points today, the oral proceedings of the German Constitutional Court on the ESM and fiscal compact should take centre stage," Commerzbank analysts wrote in a research note. "However, we do not expect an immediate ruling -- a vote should rather be announced at the end of this week, at the earliest."
    At 0905 GMT the yield on Spain's benchmark 10-year bond was 15 basis points lower at 6.85%. The yield on Italy's 10-year bond was also 15 basis points lower, at 5.95%, according to data from Tradeweb.
    In a statement Monday, euro-zone finance ministers agreed to give Spain an extra year to bring its budget deficit back in line with agreed levels and promised to make EUR30 billion ($37 billion) available to the country's lenders by the end of July.
    The issue of who will back-stop the loans to Spain's banks is one of the questions that remains unanswered, analysts said.
    "Relatively little has come out of this meeting that we were not already aware of and we expect the contradictory statements by euro-zone politicians with regards to the ultimate liability behind the Spanish bank bailout to continue," noted analysts at Rabobank.
    The growing differential between the yields on Spanish, Italian and other peripheral country bonds on the one hand, and core countries, led by German, on the other, has widened.
    German, French and Dutch one-year treasury bills are all offered at a negative yield, while comparable t-bills from Spain and Italy are offered at around 3.9% and 2.8%, respectively.
    A test of investor sentiment will come later this week, when the Italian Tesoro is scheduled to sell up to EUR7.5 billion of one-year paper in the primary market Thursday.
    ING analysts wrote in a research note that the Netherlands, France and Austria are expected to make about EUR53 billion in bond redemption and coupon payments this week and next.
    This "avalanche of redemption cash" is most likely to be used to buy more bonds of those countries, as investors shun risk and put their money in the safest investments they can find. The demand for havens is likely may drive the yields on debt of core euro-zone nations even lower.
183 Posts
Pagina: «« 1 ... 3 4 5 6 7 ... 10 »» | Laatste |Omhoog ↑

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