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Three things to watch out for in today's Greek elections
PoliticsGreek Politicspollsters indicate that SYRIZA’s support could even exceed 35 percent, which is much higher than its
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Moody's explains why it sees SYRIZA win as credit negative
Economy16 billion relate to payments to the official sector creditors. Less than half of the latter (7
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First signs from new Greek government point to awkward meetings with lenders
EconomyProgrammethan 700 euros per month. He added that the government would abolish the zero-deficit clause
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Greek economic sentiment down in January but consumer confidence rises
EconomyMacroeconomyin January from -53.9 in December. The increase in January more than offset a drop of 4 points posted
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Greek deposits down 4.2 bln in Dec for highest outflows since June 2012
EconomyMacroeconomyfigure for December outflows is higher than the 3 billion rumoured in the local media and reflects
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Greek retail turnover index down 1.6 pct in November
EconomyMacroeconomythe sharp drop in household disposable income by more than 28 percent on heightened unemployment
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Parliament's budget office warns government to move quickly
EconomyMacroeconomyunderlines that despite the 2014 primary surplus, the new government starts from a worse position than
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Greek shares rebound after calming comments from PM and finance minister
Economyin the banking sector, which made up more than half of the total turnover. Bonds Unlike domestic
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The state of play with Greek banks' liquidity
Economyafter elections, they were much lower than those in the pre-election period. T-Bills The next
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Less is more: The Greek government needs a chisel, not a sledgehammer
Agoraof these early days after the electoral victory may come to haunt the victors sooner than they would like
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