A
Greek Fund Manager Explains Why Greece Will Soon Be The Source Of
'Dramatic Headlines'
20
August, 2012
Greece
is heating up.
Next
month the Troika will visit and Greece will attemp to renegotiate its
bailout with creditors.
PM
Samaras meets with Germany on Friday.
It's
time to revisit and reassess what's going on.
During
my trip to Greece this past summer, I got to meet a Greek fund
manager.
I
asked him for his take on things right now.
Preferring
to remain anonymous, here's his take:
Regarding
the situation in Greece, the feeling among the business community is
that when the summer holidays end things will get worse. The Greek
public cannot endure much more austerity and the German public cannot
endure any more bailouts.
There
is a fear that the Germans, now, want Greece out of the Euro. While
it is possible for the coalition Government to agree on a set of
measures, those measures may not be accepted by Europe. If the German
mood truly sours on Greece then there is little any government can
do. That would lead to an exit from the Euro, the stress of which
would likely lead the country to new elections quickly.
Such
elections would see a radical left Syriza victory and a very good
showing from the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party. If the Germans decide to
continue aid to Greece and a more tenable solution is worked out
(including possible ECB and Euro debt haircuts/restructurings and
bailout extensions), it would be considered a victory for the
coalition government and we would see elections again in 2-3 years.
In which case Syriza would probably win but not as a radical left
party but as a re-incarnation of the dying Pasok party. While
elections are no guarantee in the next few months I think Greece will
be the source of some dramatic headlines in the near future.
Greece
stuff really cranks back to life this week. As NYT reports, Greek PM
Samaras goes to Germany on Friday. We should know more soon

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