A crucial meeting of eurozone finance ministers over the future of Greece's bailout broke down in acrimony after Athens angrily rejected the bloc's insistence that it agree to complete its current €172bn rescue as "absurd" and "unacceptable".
It is the second time in five days that negotiations between the new anti-austerity Greek government and its eurozone creditors have collapsed and it means Athens, whose public finances are deteriorating fast, could soon be left with no European financial backstop.
The eurozone gave Athens until Wednesday night to reverse course and seek an extension of the current programme, which is due to expire at the end of next week.
Market reaction to the breakdown of the meeting was cautious in early trading on Tuesday. After initial see-saws, the euro was largely flat against tthe dollar at $1.136. The Greek 10-year yield jumped 15 basis points to 9.46 per cent, while the three-year yield has climbed 65 bp to 17.91 per cent.
Jeroen Dijsselbloem, chairman of the eurogroup of finance ministers, said on Monday the time available for a Greek request was almost up: "We can use this week, but that's about it," he said. "There was a very strong opinion across the whole eurogroup that the next step has to come from the Greek authorities."
Monday's talks collapsed when Yanis Varoufakis, the Greek finance minister, strongly objected to a draft statement requiring Athens to prolong the bailout and implement the economic reform requirements that are included in the programme.
Speaking after the meeting, Mr Varoufakis for the first time said publicly he had been prepared to agree an extension of the existing programme, but under different conditions than the eurogroup ultimately demanded.
He said an earlier plan presented to him by Pierre Moscovici, the European Commission's economic chief, for a four-month prolongation was in line with Greek thinking and he had been ready to sign it before it was changed. "I have no doubt there is going to be an agreement in the end," he added.
Eurozone officials had viewed Monday's meeting as a make-or-break session, with time running out for any bailout extension to be approved in national parliaments.
Although officials said they could still get an extension approved if a request comes before the end of the week, Monday's impasse suggests further talks may be futile.
Without an EU backstop in place, eurozone officials are concerned market turmoil could begin anew and are particularly worried that it could spark a bank run in Greece.
Athens has insisted that it has enough funding to keep the government running for several months but some eurozone officials believe it could run short of cash next month.
The draft statement (below) that precipitated the collapse of the talks, obtained by the Financial Times, said that Greece would agree to a six-month "technical extension" giving time for "work on a follow-up arrangement".
"The Greek authorities gave their firm commitment to refrain from unilateral action and will work in close agreement with its European and international partners, especially in the field of tax policy, privatisation, labour market reforms, financial sector and pensions," it added.
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>EU officials said Mr Moscovici's plan was presented after a midday phone call between his boss, European Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker, and Alexis Tsipras, the Greek prime minister.
According to an official briefed on the talks, the two men agreed to an outline that included several commitments from Athens during the extension period: Greece would pay all its creditors, not to roll back any of the economic reforms, maintain a budget surplus, and abide by a debt relief agreement reached in November 2012.
In exchange, the eurozone would refrain from forcing Athens to adopt measures it believed would damage the economy and the Greece's three international creditors - the commission, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank - would begin work on a "new deal for Greece", essentially a third bailout.
Eurozone officials said they did not believe Mr Juncker's proposal was substantively different to the communique rejected by Mr Varoufakis, but EU officials acknowledged that the later statement did not contain many of the elements Mr Tsipras had negotiated with Mr Juncker.
Mr Dijsselbloem said the eurogroup was prepared to meet again on Friday but only if Athens specifically requested an extension and committed to completing the terms of the current bailout.
"There should also be a commitment from the Greek authorities to successfully conclude the programme," Mr Dijsselbloem said. "We should have assurance that is the intention."
That insistence appeared to be where the talks broke down, and could be a rift that is impossible to bridge. Mr Varoufakis said Athens would continue to refuse to implement the existing bailout: "We do not believe it is a programme that can be successfully completed."
Both he and Mr Dijsselbloem said they remain hopeful that an agreement could be reached before the end of the week. But, the recriminations appeared to further fray already well-worn nerves on both sides.
Mr Varoufakis vowed not to give in to the eurogroup's "ultimatum", and earlier in the day, Wolfgang Schauble, German finance minister accused Athens of "behaving rather irresponsibly".
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