Ausländer können weiter unbegrenzt Geld abheben..
Trotz der ab Montag geltenden Kapitalverkehrskontrollen in Griechenland sollen ausländische Besucher weiter unbegrenzt Geld an Automaten abheben können.
Die Einschränkungen würden nicht für Besucher aus dem Ausland gelten, wenn diese „mit einer in ihrem Herkunftsland ausgestellten Kreditkarte Transaktionen und Abhebungen“ vornehmen wollten, teilte die Regierung in Athen in der Nacht zum Montag mit.
welt.de
29/6/15
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The announcement was made in a decree published in the official government gazette and entitled "Bank Holiday break" in the small hours of the day.
The decree on capital controls, signed by both President Prokopis Pavlopoulos and Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, lists the measures imposed on financial institutions lasting from June 28 to July 6.
It said "the extremely urgent and unforeseen need to protect the Greek financial system and the Greek economy due to the lack of liquidity caused by the Eurogroup's decision on June 27 to refuse the extension of the loan agreement with Greece".
Banks will reopen on July 7, while ATMs, will "operate normally again by Monday noon (July 6) at the latest," said a government statement.
As depositors have rushed to make withdrawals from cash machines over the weekend, many ATMs are empty.
Xinhua - china.org.cn
29/6/15
Trotz der ab Montag geltenden Kapitalverkehrskontrollen in Griechenland sollen ausländische Besucher weiter unbegrenzt Geld an Automaten abheben können.
Die Einschränkungen würden nicht für Besucher aus dem Ausland gelten, wenn diese „mit einer in ihrem Herkunftsland ausgestellten Kreditkarte Transaktionen und Abhebungen“ vornehmen wollten, teilte die Regierung in Athen in der Nacht zum Montag mit.
welt.de
29/6/15
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- Greek banks will stay closed before July 6, one day after a planned referendum on bailout proposals, and ATM withdrawals will be limited to 60 euros (65 U.S. dollars) a day per bank card in the same period, the government said early Monday.
The announcement was made in a decree published in the official government gazette and entitled "Bank Holiday break" in the small hours of the day.
The decree on capital controls, signed by both President Prokopis Pavlopoulos and Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, lists the measures imposed on financial institutions lasting from June 28 to July 6.
It said "the extremely urgent and unforeseen need to protect the Greek financial system and the Greek economy due to the lack of liquidity caused by the Eurogroup's decision on June 27 to refuse the extension of the loan agreement with Greece".
Banks will reopen on July 7, while ATMs, will "operate normally again by Monday noon (July 6) at the latest," said a government statement.
As depositors have rushed to make withdrawals from cash machines over the weekend, many ATMs are empty.
- According the statement, pension payments will be exempt from the bank transaction restrictions, while there will be "no problem for wages paid electronically into bank accounts."
Xinhua - china.org.cn
29/6/15
Asien und der Grexit: Sorgen, aber noch keine Angst...
ReplyDeleteErst kracht der Nikkei ein, dann erholt sich der Index wieder. Es stellt sich relative Gelassenheit ein. Die asiatischen Länder scheinen besser vorbereitet zu sein - mit mehr Währungsreserven als Puffer........handelsblatt.com
29/6/15
Τα μέτρα περιορισμού στην κίνηση κεφαλαίων δεν επηρεάζουν τους τουρίστες...
ReplyDeleteΌσοι επισκέπτονται ή πρόκειται να επισκεφτούν την Ελλάδα ότι τα μέτρα περιορισμού στην κίνηση κεφαλαίων που επέβαλε η ελληνική κυβέρνηση δεν αφορούν όσους επιθυμούν να κάνουν συναλλαγές ή αναλήψεις μέσω ΑΤΜ κάνοντας χρήση χρεωστικών ή πιστωτικών καρτών που έχουν εκδοθεί στη χώρα τους, αναφέρει σε άτυπη ενημέρωση το Μέγαρο Μαξίμου.
huffingtonpost.gr
29/6/15
Stock markets in Europe and Asia have seen big falls after Greece closed its banks and imposed capital controls...
ReplyDeleteThe moves by the Greek authorities came after the European Central Bank decided not to extend emergency funding.
London's FTSE 100 index fell 2% in early trade. Earlier in Asia, Japan's Nikkei index fell nearly 3%.
On the currency markets, the euro had fallen to $1.0953 at one point in Asian trading from $1.1165 on Friday, but it then recovered some ground.
Elsewhere in Europe, Germany's Dax share index and France's Cac 40 were both down more than 3%. The Athens Stock Exchange and Greek banks are closed all week.....BBC