compromise.
Germany and other euro zone countries were standing firm on their insistence that there can be no roll-back of reforms already implemented under the bailout and that Greece will have to repay all it has borrowed, they said.
Greek bond yields fell sharply and shares rallied after government spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis confirmed Athens would send a formal application on Wednesday.
“Let’s wait today for the request for an extension of the loan agreement to be submitted by Finance Minister (Yanis) Varoufakis,” he told Antenna TV, adding: “We will not back down on certain points that we consider red lines. The (bailout) memorandum died on Jan 25.”
That was the day Greek voters elected a government led by Tsipras’s hard left Syriza party, which had promised to scrap the 240 billion euro bailout, reverse austerity measures and end cooperation with the hated “troika” of inspectors from the Commission, the European Central Bank and the IMF.
Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker was quoted by a German magazine as saying he was collaborating with the head of the Eurogroup to find a solution.
“I am working together with Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem to achieve an extension of the existing programme, in order to bridge the time until summer,” he told WirtschaftsWoche in an interview published on Wednesday.
The ECB’s governing council will meet later on Wednesday (1500 GMT) in Frankfurt to decide whether to continue and possibly increase emergency lending assistance to Greece’s banks, plagued by deposit withdrawals.
The ECB is not expected to pull the plug this week but Germany’s Bundesbank is leading opposition to any increase in the funding by the Greek central bank, people familiar with the situation told Reuters.
Without added liquidity, the banks face a tightening squeeze as savers withdraw money that could force Greece to introduce capital controls if there is no deal.
A source close to the Greek government said the loan request would be based on a text drawn up earlier this week by EU Economics Commissioner Pierre Moscovici, which was discarded by euro zone finance ministers when they met on Monday.