This
has not made any of the mainstream news I have been listening to
LIVE:
EUROPE IS IMPLODING
Europe
is having a no good, very bad day
23
May, 2012
European
equities markets saw a major sell-off, while EU leaders prepared to
meet for an informal summit in Brussels. The euro fell and stuck
below the important $1.26 benchmark.
In
the lead up to the summit, analysts speculated that euro area common
bonds ("eurobonds") would top the docket for discussion,
with French President Francois Hollande, Spanish PM Mariano Rajoy,
and Italian PM Mario Monti all prepared to face off against the
anti-eurobond Angela
Merkel.
They
were also expected to discuss international aid for Spanish banks and
titter over Greece.
Here
are the major developments we've seen so far:
Merkel
confirmed that nothing will happen at today's EU summit in statements
made to reporters.
According
to German newspaper Die Zeit, the European
Central Bank has
already set up a crisis committee to prepare for a possible Greek
exit from the eurozone.
A
Eurogroup draft document seen by Reuters
suggested that the European Union offer Greece €50 billion to
leave the euro quietly (via
ForexLive).
Clemens
Fuest, a senior advisor to the German Finance Ministry, told
us that the German government is not as resolute about Greece
sticking to its current bailout plan as they'd like everyone to
believe.
Investors
are chattering about an unconfirmed report that Merkel is proposing
some kind of bank deposit guarantee program.
Hollande
told reporters that while he's not expecting EU leaders to endorse
eurobonds today, they could make some progress on this issue in June
(via @ItalianPolitics).
Scroll
down for live updates. We're updating regularly.
ORIGINAL
(7:07 AM EDT): European
shares are in free fall right now, with all major indices down about
2 percent or more.
A
look at the carnage so far:
CAC
40: -2.1%
DAX: -1.8%
FTSE MIB: -3%
IBEX 35: -2.1%
Meanwhile,
the euro is also getting killed, briefly dipping to $1.261 before
recovering to about $1.266, its lowest value since 2010. Meanwhile,
U.S. Treasuries are confirming this risk-off attitude, with yields
rivaling lows seen late last year.
UPDATE
I (10:30 AM EDT): The
implosion is going nuclear.
Italy
is now off a full 3.6 percent, and the CAC 40 is off 2.6 percent!
Meanwhile,
the euro has hit its lowest value since August 2010, falling below
$1.26 and breaking through earlier resistance that had kept it above
that important benchmark.
Just check out the EUR/USD trade so far
today:
|
UPDATE
II (11:30 AM EDT): European
markets fell dramatically right into the close. A look at the
miserable scoreboard:
FTSE
100: -2.35%
CAC
40: -2.59%
DAX:
-2.22%
FTSE
MIB: -3.7%
IBEX
35: -3.3%
The
euro remains below $1.26.
This
market carnage comes ahead of an
informal—but highly anticipated—EU summit in Brussels today,
where many leaders are likely to discuss reiterate arguments that the
newest round of elections are a referendum on Greece's membership in
the euro currency.
On
the other hand, they'll also be discussing far more activist measures
than we've seen them consider so far. Backing for eurobonds appears
to be at an all-time high, with the staunch support of French
President Francois Hollande. They are also likely to discuss
international support for the troubled Spanish banking sector.
UPDATE
III (12:30 PM EDT): Merkel
confirmed that nothing will happen at today's EU summit, a
conclusion that we had predicted earlier today.
According
to Bloomberg,
she reiterated her opposition to common euro area bonds and told
reporters that leaders "will only exchange options" at
today's meeting.
Greek
exit fears send global markets reeling
Investors
increasingly nervous as Greek poll nears but Athens denies rumours of
eurozone emergency plan
23
May, 2012
Rumours
that eurozone countries are drawing up emergency plans for life
without Greece sent share prices plunging on both sides of the
Atlantic on Wednesday.
As
Europe's leaders prepared to meet in Brussels to discuss the crisis,
Athens was forced to issue a formal denial of claims that the "euro
working group" of member-country governments had been asked to
set out how they would cope if Greece left the single currency.
"Such
reports not only are false, but actually hinder the efforts of the
Hellenic Republic to address its challenges at this critical
juncture," the Greek government said in a written statement.
The
FTSE 100 index closed 136 points lower amid the nervous mood, at
5266, a fall of 2.5%. The French CAC lost 2.6%, and Germany's DAX
shed 2.4%.
Investors
are watching nervously as the Greek electorate prepares for elections
on 17 June, after an inconclusive poll left the balance of power in
the hands of anti-austerity parties. Europe's leaders have urged the
Greeks to see the upcoming poll as a referendum on euro membership;
but the risk of Greece leaving is putting pressure on other
vulnerable countries such as Italy and Spain. The Italian stock
market index was down 3.7%, and the Spanish market was off 3.2%. On
Wall Street the Dow Jones was down 161 points at 12,340 by
mid-morning, a fall of 1.3%.
A
paper from Germany's Bundesbank spelling out the possible
consequences if Greece fails to fulfil the promises of tough
austerity measures made when it received its €130bn bailout earlier
this year added to the sense of a looming crisis.
"When
the euro system provided Greece with large amounts of liquidity, it
trusted that the programmes would be implemented and thereby
ultimately assumed considerable risks. In the light of the current
situation, it should not significantly increase these risks,"
the Bundesbank said, suggesting that parliaments and governments of
other member states should decide whether to offer any more help to
Greece.
Simon
Derrick, currency strategist at BNY Mellon, said: "Everyone's
going through the same basic process of saying, is anything going to
happen before 17 June 17, and what are the possible outcomes on 17
June?" He added that governments such as Germany and the
Netherlands have shown an increasingly frustrated tone in recent
weeks. "You get the sense that they have been pushed as far as
they could and they will not be pushed any farther."
The
sharp divide between healthy countries such as Germany and its
stricken southern neighbours was underlined by an auction of German
debt, which saw Berlin sell €4.6bn-worth of two-year bonds at a
record low yield of 0.07%.
That's
less than the rate of inflation, so that buyers are accepting a
negative real yield on their investment.
Sony
Kapoor, of Brussels-based thinktank Re-Define, said: "The new
record low negative real borrowing costs being enjoyed by Germany and
other AAA-rated eurozone countries are less a reflection of their
strength and more a symptom of investor desperation amid all the talk
of a Greek exit."
He
added: "As long as the new record highs being tested by German
bonds are seen by some as a reflection of German economic strength,
rather than as a sign of a eurozone in crisis, it will make a
political solution harder."City analysts are holding out little
hope that tonight's meeting will yield anything radical enough to
staunch the crisis and ensure that the consequences of a Greek exit
from the eurozone could be contained.
Chris
Beauchamp, of IG Index, said, "today is the anniversary of the
Defenestration of Prague in 1618, the start of the 30 Years' war.
Frankly, it seems as if this crisis has been going on for 30
years...Hopes for today's EU summit have been well and truly chucked
out of the window, as the Germans once again state their firm
opposition to eurozone bonds as a means of solving the crisis. Berlin
has ignored the pleas of the OECD, IMF and its allies in Paris and
Rome, believing that such a solution would only worsen the
spendthrift ways of their southern neighbours.
"There
will probably be little progress at tonight's meeting," said
analysts at Citi. "It will probably require more pressure from
the market and from deposit holders at periphery banks to agree on
measures such as a likely euro-area-wide deposit guarantee scheme. In
our view, broad-based common bond issuance is unlikely to take place
any time soon.
John
Higgins, of Capital Economics, said, "stock markets fell back
sharply again on Wednesday and the euro came under further pressure
as doubts grew that the evening's informal meeting of EU leaders in
Brussels would do much to prevent an imminent exit of Greece from the
euro-zone."
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