ECB raises emergency liquidity for Greek banks


The European Central Bank (ECB) on Friday raised the level of emergency funding for Greek banks by an unspecified amount following a request from the Bank of Greece, a Greek bank source said. "There was no problem with the financing of Greek banks," the source said, adding that bank governors were expecting a "positive result" at an emergency eurozone leaders' summit on Greece on Monday. According to state agency ANA, the funding cap was increased by 3.3 billion euros.

The Bank of Greece had earlier insisted that the country's banking system was stable amid a rush of deposit withdrawals this week fueled by fresh deadlock in Greece's loan talks with its European Union-International Monetary Fund (IMF) creditors. "The governor of the Bank of Greece has confirmed the stability of the banking system, which is fully safeguarded by the joint actions of the Bank of Greece and the European Central Bank," Greece's central bank said. Bank of Greece governor Yannis Stournaras had earlier met with the top Greek negotiator in EU-IMF talks, Deputy Foreign Minister Euclid Tsakalotos. A billion euros were withdrawn from Greek banks on Thursday, following another 1.6 billion euros over the two previous days, financial website euro2day reported.

Greece on Friday insisted a last-ditch deal on its debt was possible and dismissed "terror scenarios" of a default that is looking increasingly likely unless an accord is concluded. EU President Donald Tusk has called an emergency summit of leaders of the 19 eurozone countries in Brussels on Monday, after finance ministers failed Thursday to break the five-month deadlock between the anti-austerity government in Athens and its international creditors.