Ponzi
Financing in Greece Continues; Greek Banks Receive €18bn Transfer
29
May, 2012
Greek
banks have been shut off from regular ECB liquidity operations due to
lack of sufficient collateral. Today the Banks have that collateral
thanks to a disbursement of funds from the EFSF which in turn will be
used as collateral for more loans from the ECB.
If this makes little sense to you it is because it should not make any sense to anyone. It is another act of desperation in a long line of desperate acts.
Please consider Greek banks receive €18bn transfer
If this makes little sense to you it is because it should not make any sense to anyone. It is another act of desperation in a long line of desperate acts.
Please consider Greek banks receive €18bn transfer
Greece’s four largest banks received a €18bn transfer on Monday as the first instalment of a recapitalisation plan agreed as part of the country’s second bailout by the EU and the International Monetary Fund.Anyone who thinks this will stop outflows has holes in the head. As I see it, it will allow a means of additional outflows.
The funding, in bonds issued by the European Financial Stability Facility, will help banks reduce their dependence on emergency liquidity assistance, a temporary lifeline provided by the Greek central bank after they were excluded from European Central Bank liquidity operations this month.
The four banks are now expected to regain access to the ECB’s liquidity operations, using the bonds as collateral for funding at cheaper rates than under the emergency liquidity arrangement.
Bankers said they hoped the funding would help stem a continuing outflow of deposits since an inconclusive general election on May 6 triggered fears that Greece would soon be forced to leave the eurozone.
You can be reasonably safe in concluding that is what the mainstream is predicting the reality will be much worse than this.
Greek
Euro Exit Aftershocks Risk Reaching China
Greece,
responsible for 0.4 percent of the world economy, now poses a threat
to international prosperity as investors raise bets its days using
the euro are numbered.
30
May, 2012
A
Greek departure from the currency would inflict “collateral
damage,” says Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Richard
Clarida, a view echoed by economists from Bank of America Merrill
Lynch and JPMorgan Chase & Co. At worst, it could spur sovereign
defaults in Europe as well as bank runs, credit crunches and
recessions that may spark more euro exits.
Global
trade and financial ties mean the pain wouldn’t be confined to the
euro area. JPMorgan Chase estimates a 1 percentage point slump in the
euro countries’ economy drags down growth elsewhere by 0.7
percentage point. Exporting nations from the U.K. to China would
suffer and commodity producer Russia would face falling oil prices.
While the U.S. may fare better, even it would feel echoes similar to
the financial infection following the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc.
“An
awful lot depends on what is done to limit the contagion within
Europe,” Barry Eichengreen, a professor at the University of
California, Berkeley, and author of a 2006 history of the European
economy, said in a telephone interview. “If too little is done
then, to use a financial term, all hell breaks loose. I can imagine
things playing out that way.”
Base
Case?
Citigroup
Inc. economists, who earlier forecast departure chances at as much as
75 percent, now are assuming as a “base case” that Greece will
leave on Jan. 1, 2013. BofA Merrill Lynch strategists estimate the
euro-region’s gross domestic product would contract at least 4
percent in the recession that follows, similar to the decline after
Lehman’s 2008 collapse.
The
euro would slide through $1.20 and Europe’s Stoxx 600 Banks Index
would tumble below 110 points, from 123 yesterday, according to BofA
Merrill Lynch’s May 17 report.
Other
crisis-torn countries, such as Portugal and Spain, would incur higher
borrowing costs. In Germany, perceived by investors as a safe haven
because of its stronger economy and lower debt, 10-year bund yields
could fall to 1 percent, the report said. If policy makers act
decisively then bank stocks and bonds in the so-called periphery
could rally and exporters could eventually benefit as the region
stabilizes, it said.
Strategists
at Credit Suisse Group AG said in a report today that while the
Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) would fall to 1,200 on a
Greek exit, it could then jump by 20 percent if officials were
aggressive in providing liquidity and protecting banks.
‘Disaster’
for Some
“If
you let Greece go you would be sending the message that being a
member of the euro zone is not necessarily permanent, which could be
a disaster for some countries,” said Laurence Boone, chief European
economist at BofA Merrill Lynch in London. Her primary scenario is
that Greece remains within the euro because of the high cost of the
alternative.
The
creditworthiness of governments and banks in Italy and Spain, the
euro area’s third and fourth-largest economies, would be thrown
into fresh doubt as traders shun their sovereign bonds and pore over
their financial institutions’ balance sheets, said Yiannis
Koutelidakis, an economist at Fathom Financial Consulting in London.
Investors
are signaling increased concern. The euro has dropped about 5 percent
in the past month against the dollar, while the cost of insuring
Spanish government and financial debt reached a record this month.
Germany, by contrast, last week sold 5 billion euros ($6.3 billion)
of two-year notes with a zero-percent coupon for the first time.
Trade
Impact
Beyond
the euro area, major trading partners such as the U.K., Switzerland
and nearby emerging economies including Romania’s could be hurt as
demand slows. Their currencies probably would rise against the euro,
making exports less competitive. China’s biggest investment bank
says that nation could see its weakest growth in more than two
decades.
Even
if the dollar surges, the U.S. may be more insulated given signs of a
rebound in its domestic economy -- at 8.1 percent in April, the
jobless rate is down from a peak of 10 percent in October 2009 -- and
the fact that just 13 percent of its exports head to the euro area.
Capital flooding into a perceived safe haven may also hold down
interest rates.
Still,
BofA Merrill Lynch estimates U.S. bond and stock markets each account
for a third of global capitalization, leaving them prone to a
European shock. Greek elections helped wipe almost $3 trillion from
worldwide equities this month.
‘Greater
Urgency’
If
the U.S. economy is pulled down it may complicate President Barack
Obama’s re-election bid, said Eichengreen. Obama said May 21 that
what happens in Greece has an impact in the U.S. and called for
“greater urgency” from European leaders.
“The
election will turn on the economy and the economy is significantly
affected by Europe,” Eichengreen said. “The longer it remains
unresolved and the more volatility it creates the worse it is for
Obama.”
A
splintering of the 13-year-old currency bloc might not come to pass
even if Greece next month elects parties campaigning to reject the
terms of the bailouts needed to pay its bills, said Jacob Kirkegaard,
a fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in
Washington.
Cut
Off
Such
an event would probably cut the nation off from outside aid, tipping
Greece’s economy and financial system into such chaos that the new
government would fall within weeks, he predicted. Credit Suisse
analysts say a majority of Greeks back staying in the euro, the costs
of leaving for the country and the rest of the euro region would be
considerable and the single currency is a political project.
“I
will attach less than a 5 percent probability for an actual Greek
exit,” said Kirkegaard.
Continued
membership may still cause headaches for the world economy as Greece
suffers political paralysis, a fifth year of recession, the need to
repay what it owes and the burden of austerity goals. “Our best
guess is they’re not leaving yet and that this will be a story that
will be discussed repeatedly for more than another year,” said Jim
O’Neill, chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management in London.
Still,
some companies are bracing themselves. Jan du Plessis, chairman of
London-based Rio Tinto Group (RIO), the world’s third-biggest
mining company, said May 10 that any exit by Greece “would
destabilize the European economy to a significant extent.” With
sales to Europe accounting for 12 percent of revenue last year, the
region is “one of the many reasons why our posture has to be
cautious,” he told reporters in Brisbane.
Quarantine
Pressure
If
Greece does depart, the pressure would be on central bankers and
governments to quarantine it, said Lucrezia Reichlin, the European
Central Bank’s former chief economist, now a professor at London
Business School. Governments would quickly need to recapitalize weak
banks and guarantee deposits as the ECB provided emergency aid, she
said in an interview.
Global
central banks may also help out by pumping dollars around the world
and pursuing easier policies where they can, said Nariman Behravesh,
chief economist at Englewood, Colorado- based forecasters IHS Inc.
The International Monetary Fund has already won pledges of new
resources to help fight crises.
The
cost of Greece exiting the euro would probably exceed the 1 trillion
euros previously estimated by the Institute of International Finance,
Managing Director Charles Dallara said in a May 25 interview. That
bill includes direct projected losses from Greece’s debt and the
need to protect Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Italy, as well as money
for reinforcing banks.
Beyond
Europe
The
channels of trade, confidence and finance would spread the impact
beyond Europe, according to Joseph Lupton, an economist at JPMorgan
Chase in New York.
Euro-area
imports account for 5 percent of global GDP, Lupton estimates, so a
15 percent decline would drag down the world economy by 0.5
percentage point.
Euro-area
nation economies would be first to feel the reverberations if Greece
quits, given that about half their exports go to each other. Already,
data last week showed declines in German business confidence as well
as European manufacturing and services output.
Mark
Cliffe, the London-based global head of financial markets research at
ING Bank NV, calculates a Greek departure would leave output in the
rest of the euro region about 2 percentage points lower than
otherwise, with Spain and Italy suffering the most. A complete
breakup of the euro would provoke a cumulative GDP loss of more than
12 percentage points over two years, he estimates.
Contagion
Risk
Financial
contagion is another damaging route, said Fathom’s Koutelidakis.
Investors could dump the bonds of cash- strapped economies and pull
money out of banks, tightening credit.
Greece
defaulting would raise the odds of Portugal following, in turn
setting off a domino chain that could leave a total euro breakup
“very much on the cards,” he said: “It is foolhardy to assume a
Greek exodus would be manageable.”
Greece’s
exit could also spur bank runs and capital flight in Europe’s
peripheral countries as investors flee corporate bankruptcies or try
to escape redenomination of their accounts. European banks alone hold
$1.2 trillion of debt issued by Spain, Portugal, Italy and Ireland,
according to the Bank for International Settlements in Basel.
Another
financial threat, says Lupton at JPMorgan Chase, is European banks
pulling back some of the 5 trillion euros they have overseas.
‘Firing
Line’
Beyond
the euro area, Bulgaria and Romania are “first in the firing line,”
according to Neil Shearing, chief emerging markets economist at
Capital Economics Ltd. in London. Romanian exports worth 3.5 percent
of GDP head to Greece and Greek banks have a large presence in both
nations. Hungary and the Czech Republic each send shipments
equivalent to more than 40 percent of their GDP to the wider euro
area.
Eastern
European banks are also dependent on euro-country parents for
funding. Short-term credit lines are equivalent to over 10 percent of
GDP in Hungary, Croatia and Bulgaria.
Oil-producer
Russia could suffer: Capital Economics estimates Brent crude would
fall to $95 a barrel as global growth declined. OAO Sberbank, the
country’s biggest lender, estimates Russia’s economy would
contract 2.1 percent and banks may lose $95 billion in capital in a
worst-case scenario, while the Center for Strategic Studies in Moscow
says President Vladimir Putin would risk increased political
instability.
Threat
to China
Greece
quitting the euro could reduce China’s expansion to 6.4 percent
this year, from 9.2 percent last year, if international growth is
dragged down by half as much as during the 2008-2009 financial crisis
and policy makers don’t offset the pain, economists at China
International Capital Corp. said in a report last week.
Chinese
exports, 19 percent of which go to the European Union, slowed
unexpectedly in April. They may fall 3.9 percent this year if Greece
leaves, compared with a 10 percent gain without an exit, CICC
projected.
A
euro-region crisis would also mean a “renewed, deep recession would
be highly likely in Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Taiwan and
Korea,” Robert Prior-Wandesforde, Singapore-based director of Asian
economics at Credit Suisse, said in a report today.
Such
economies are key to the global supply chain and often rely on trade
for growth. Prior-Wandesforde calculated that exports to the euro
zone account for more than 5 percent of total GDP in Hong Kong,
Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and Taiwan. More than six percent of
total domestic bank lending in Singapore, Hong Kong, India and the
Philippines was from the euro area last year, he said.
Housing
Market
As
for the U.S., the hit to its economy from turmoil in Europe may be
0.5 percentage point at the very most, said Behravesh at IHS. In a
sign that economy is on firmer footing, data last week suggested the
housing market is stabilizing.
Financial
ties have diminished as the Greek travails have lasted. Fitch Ratings
says estimates U.S. money market funds have about 15 percent of their
assets there.
For
Clarida, a former U.S. Treasury official and now a global strategic
adviser at Pimco, Greece leaving the euro may be too much of a risk
for Europe to take. In an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “In
the Loop” with Betty Liu, he said a common view in mid-2008 was
that a Lehman failure could be managed.
“We
saw how that turned out,” Clarida said. “The one thing markets
hate is making it up as you go along, and that’s what we’d have
with a Greek exit.”
Boy. When this scheme collapses it's going to suck all the banks and governments into a black hole. My feeling is that out of it a new currency will arise in a hope to save the day because riots will be tearing countries apart.
ReplyDelete