Markets
Tumble on Unrest in Greece and Spain
26
September, 2012
Clear
signs of the political and social cost of the euro zone crisis sent
financial markets tumbling Wednesday as Greece faced a crippling
24-hour strike and Spain cleaned up after violent protests near the
country’s Parliament.
Spanish
bond yields approached 6 percent for the first time in months, while
European shares and the euro fell sharply, as developments in Greece
and Spain sent a new wave of anxiety through the ranks of
international investors.
The
Euro Stoxx 50, a measure of euro zone blue chips, closed 2.7 percent
lower on Wednesday. National benchmarks were also down, led by the
Ibex in Spain, which fell 3.9 percent, and the MIB in Milan, down 3.3
percent.
The
euro was at $1.2863, down from $1.2950 late Tuesday in New York.
Spanish
bond yields had fallen back from levels thought unsustainable after
the European Central Bank announced a plan Sept. 6 to buy the
sovereign bonds of debt-strapped euro countries, like Spain and
Italy, in amounts sufficient to bring the cost of servicing their
debt down to a manageable level.
The
renewed spike in borrowing costs indicates that the E.C.B.’s pledge
is losing its power to calm markets, at least in the case of Spain.
Higher borrowing costs also put pressure on the Spanish government,
which is hoping to avoid a full-scale bailout.
The
gap between the rates Spain and Italy must pay is growing, with
Spain’s borrowing costs rising amid new challenges from disgruntled
regional authorities and continuing uncertainty over the central
government’s intentions concerning a possible bailout.
Spain’s
benchmark 10-year government bond yield rose 30.1 basis points to
5.988 percent late Wednesday, while Italian 10-year bonds rose 10.4
basis points to 5.181 percent. A basis point is one-hundredth of a
percent.
Italy’s
short-term borrowing costs fell Wednesday at an auction of debt. The
Italian Treasury sold €9 billion, or $11.6 billion, of six-month
debt priced to yield 1.503 percent. That was down from the 1.585
percent it paid to sell debt at the last such auction, and was the
lowest the Treasury has paid for debt of that maturity since March.
Leaders
in Greece and Spain are confronting difficult decisions on spending
cuts intended to satisfy either international lenders or the bond
markets, and events in the two countries highlighted the growing
European backlash against the politics of austerity.
In
Greece, where political leaders are seeking to negotiate a new round
of cuts to placate the troika of international creditors — the
European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International
Monetary Fund — protesters clashed with the riot police in the
first big anti-austerity strike since a new coalition government took
power in June.
The
troika’s mission to Greece is to release a report next month on
whether the government is Athens is on track to meet the commitments
it made in exchange for a bailout. At stake is whether the country
receives further installments of aid.
In
Spain, several thousand people converged on the Parliament on
Tuesday, where confrontations followed with more than 1,000 police
officers. Wielding batons, the officers charged protesters, and some
demonstrators broke down barricades and threw rocks and bottles.
The
results of an independent assessment on the crisis in the country’s
financial system are due to be released this week, along with next
year’s budget and plans for new structural overhauls.
The
Spanish prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, has said he is considering
whether to seek a new rescue package for his troubled country to
lower borrowing costs, but only if they stay too high for too long.
He has already secured a promise of up to €100 billion from Spain’s
euro zone partners to salvage the nation’s sickly banks.
Philippe
Gijsels, head of research at BNP Paribas Fortis Global Markets in
Brussels, said the turmoil in Greece and Spain had added to bearish
market sentiment that carried over from comments Tuesday by Charles
I. Plosser, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.
Mr. Plosser said the Fed’s latest effort to bolster the economy by
buying bonds would probably be ineffective and said the central bank
could risk its credibility.
“We
have budget discussions in Spain, the troika decision in Greece and
demonstrations in both places,” Mr. Gijsels said. “That’s not
helping things.”
“I
would compare the current situation to August 2010, though,” he
added, when the world economy was slowing and there were worries
about recession and deflation. “This time all the major central
banks are pumping money into the system, but back then it was only
the Fed.”
That
liquidity, Mr. Gijsels said, has to go somewhere, and if the real
economy is moribund, it is likely go into the financial markets,
bidding up prices for financial assets.
As
a result, he said, he did not expect the current wave of selling to
be sustained
Spain's
crisis flares again as AAA club scuppers bank rescue deal
Spain's
debt crisis has returned with a vengeance after Germany, Holland and
Finland reneged on a crucial summit deal and scuppered hopes of
direct eurozone help for Spanish banks.
By
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
26
September, 2012
Yields
on 10-year Spanish bonds punched back above the danger line of 6pc
and spreads over German Bunds reached 450 basis points, intensifying
pressure on Madrid as it continues to resist a sovereign bail-out.
The
alliance of hardline creditors said the European Stability Mechanism
(ESM) – or bail-out fund – could not be used to cover “legacy
assets” from past banking crises, even after the eurozone’s
banking supervisor starts work next year.
This
prevents the ESM from recapitalising Spain’s crippled banks
directly under a €100bn (£79bn) loan package agreed with Madrid in
June. The burden will fall entirely on the Spanish state.
The
Spanish newspaper Expansion said the AAA trio had “dynamited” the
EU accord. The extra debt burden is likely to be around €60bn or
6pc of GDP, depending on bank stress tests to be unveiled on Friday.
Pessimists fear it could rise to 15pc of GDP once full losses from
the property crash are crystallised.
The
European Commission appeared shocked by the German-led volte-face,
saying the original summit deal was “quite clear”. All EMU
leaders signed a pledge to break the “vicious cycle” between
banks and states. The document said the ESM must be allowed to
“recapitalise banks directly”, clearly referring to Spain.
“Europe’s
debt crisis may just have returned to centre stage,” said Fathom
Consulting. The IBEX index of stocks in Madrid fell 3.7pc.
The
Bank of Spain said the economy had shrunk at a “significant rate”
in the third quarter, with all major indicators deteriorating. This
follows a GDP contraction of 1.3pc in the second quarter.
The
deepening slump is playing havoc with public finances. Tax revenues
fell 4.8pc in July from a year ago, largely offsetting gains from
austerity. This replicates the pattern seen in Greece, where drastic
fiscal tightening – without monetary stimulus or exchange rate
relief – has fed a self-defeating downward spiral. Premier Mariano
Rajoy may have accelerated the sell-off by telling the Wall Street
Journal that Spain will not request a full sovereign bail-out unless
borrowing costs go “too high, for too long”.
“He
is inviting the markets to short Spanish debt,” said Marc Ostwald
from Monument Securities. “Markets now know they are fighting
Rajoy, not the European Central Bank.”
The
ECB says it will not buy Spanish bonds until the country requests an
ESM rescue and signs a “memorandum” giving up fiscal sovereignty.
Mr Rajoy said he will decide when he learns the exact terms, but
talks have become a political minefield.
Madrid
is gambling that a reform package and a tough Budget to be unveiled
this week will suffice without further conditions.
Yet
the German and Finnish parliaments must vote on each ESM rescue. They
are certain to demand tougher terms. Spain in turn has issued
thinly-veiled threats to bring down the euro temple on Germany’s
head if pushed too far. German bank exposure to Spain is €145bn.
Desmond
Supple from Nomura said Spain’s 10-year yields would rise back to
7pc over coming weeks as the stand-off drags on, not helped by the
“fresh hand grenade” of Catalonia’s threatened secession.
“We
fear Rajoy will try to delay a rescue until after the Catalan
election. The conditions of any ESM bail-out will involve control
over the regions, so this has become intractable,” he said.
Catalan
leader Artur Mas has set off a constitutional crisis by calling a
snap poll for November 25 – deemed a proxy referendum on
independence. “If the government refuses to allow a referendum, we
will do it anyway,” he said, calling on Spain to learn from
Canada’s handing of Quebec and behave in a “civilised” fashion.
Mr Mas said nothing could stop the Catalan people taking “sovereign
decisions”, describing recent events as the most dramatic in the
300 years of Catalan history.
King
Juan Carlos said it would be “blindness” not to recognise the
gravity of the crisis. It is becoming unclear how much longer Mr
Rajoy can govern. Anti-austerity clashes with police are turning
violent. The latest Metroscopia poll shows 84pc of Spaniards have
lost confidence in his leadership.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.