Police
Urging Greeks To Stop Stuffing Mattresses
Zero
Hedge, 24 May
We
have spent a considerable amount of time in the last week or two
explaining just why depositor withdrawals (or bank runs) are the
death knell for the Euro experiment. We first described the 'run
on banks and governments' on
the basis of the potential for overnight loss of 'fungibility' back
in December but
the escalation last week in Greece (and the contagion to Spain's
Bankia) signals things are shifting to 11 on the amplifier of
Euro-Fail.
This evening brings new information from The Guardian that 'Police are urging Greeks to keep their money in bank accounts rather than putting it at risk of theft, amid further uncertainty about whether the austerity-struck country will remain in the eurozone.'
This evening brings new information from The Guardian that 'Police are urging Greeks to keep their money in bank accounts rather than putting it at risk of theft, amid further uncertainty about whether the austerity-struck country will remain in the eurozone.'
Greece's
national police spokesman, Thanassis Kokkalakis, told Reuters:
"Many people have withdrawn their money from the banks fearing a financial crash, and they either carry it on them, find a hideout at home or in storage rooms.We urge people to trust the banking system, leave their money there, or at least in a safe place, not hide it at home."
Uhm,
does anyone remember Cramer and his 'Bear Stearns' call? Or are we
just "being silly?"
Speculation
of a Euro-wide deposit guarantee scheme was quashed somewhat by
yesterday's dismally predictable non-event summit - especially given
the only three-week span to the next elections. That
leaves Greek citizens juggling the possibility of having their home
robbed against the probability that the government, via
GEURO-isation, will do it for them in the bank.
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