Archive for the ‘Debt’ Category

Bernanke Reflates Inflation Trade

Tuesday, March 27th, 2012

Stocks closed at session highs Monday, logging their best one-day rally in almost two weeks, boosted by Ben Bernanke’s earlier comments that the Fed may continue its easy monetary policy if the jobs market continues to show signs of weakness. Stocks are on track to post their best quarter since 1998. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke spoke to members of the National Association for Business Economics. In his speech, Bernanke acknowledged the recent signs of improvement in the U.S. economy, but warned that we can’t “yet be sure that the recent pace of improvement in the labor market will be sustained.” He went on to say that “continued accommodative polices” are necessary to reduce high unemployment and spark further recovery. Many on Wall Street understood Bernanke’s comments to mean that the central bank may be keeping the door open for additional monetary easing, should the economy require another boost.

The U.S. economy needs to grow more quickly to bring the unemployment rate down further, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Monday, defending the central bank’s policy of very low interest rates. “Further significant improvements in the unemployment rate will likely require a more-rapid expansion of production and demand from consumers and businesses, a process that can be supported by continued accommodative policies,” Bernanke told a gathering of the National Association for Business Economics.

While he offered no indication the Fed is keen to embark on a third round of bond purchases, Bernanke also made clear the central bank is in no rush to reverse course after responding aggressively to a deep recession. The jobless rate has dropped to 8.3 percent from 9.1 percent last summer, a move Bernanke said was “somewhat out of sync” with the rather modest pace of economic growth. He said the decline could reflect an effort by businesses to recalibrate their payrolls after unusually heavy job cuts during the recession. If this is the case, he said, progress may stall.

The policy does have detractors, including some inside the central bank. Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank President Charles Plosser on Monday said central banks should not have unfettered ability to purchase assets because that violates the traditional separation of monetary and fiscal policymaking and can allow governments to inflate away debts. ”Granting vast amounts of discretion to our central banks in the expectation that they can cure our economic ills or substitute for our lack of fiscal discipline is a dangerous road to follow,” Plosser told a conference in Paris.

In Europe

German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday said Germany may be open to boosting the overall size of the euro-zone bailout funds to around 700 billion euros ($930 billion), news reports said. Merkel said she backs allowing the temporary European Financial Stability Facility, which has provided around 200 billion euros in loans to bailout recipients, run alongside the permanent, 500-billion euro European Stability Mechanism, that is set to become operational at midyear, reports said. Germany had previously resisted calls to boost the size of the region’s firewall.

Coming Up This Week:

TUESDAY: S&P Case-Shiller home price index, consumer confidence, 2-yr note auction, Fed’s Rosengren speaks; Earnings from Lennar, Walgreen
WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage apps, durable goods orders, oil inventories, 5-yr note auction, Fed’s Bullard speaks, FDA discusses obesity drugs
THURSDAY: GDP, jobless claims, corporate profits, Fed’s Plosser speaks, 7-yr note auction, farm prices, Fed’s Lacker speaks; Earnings from Best Buy, Research In Motion
FRIDAY: Personal income & outlays, Chicago PMI, consumer sentiment, Stringer’s last day as Sony CEO

Bernanke Says Fed Will Help EU If Needed

Tuesday, March 20th, 2012

Doomsday Scenario For Banks

Monday, March 12th, 2012

Ever since the 2007  stock market collapse that the Fed had missed, they have been actively monitoring the world and US markets to safe guard the economy. The Fed and Treasury have just performed their 3rd stress test test of the largest banks. Today the Federal Reserve released its “worst-case scenario” bank stress test criteria. Results will be released Thursday at market close. I will post the results once they become available. The Fed conducts the tests on banks every year, but this is the first time since 2009 that it will release its results to the public. In 2009 the Fed found billions in insufficient funds on bank balance sheets. The tests are designed to make sure banks have enough cash and cash-like securities to withstand catastrophic losses in a financial crisis.

The Fed will look at how the nation’s 19 largest banks would survive a world with a 13 percent jobless rate, a 50-percent drop in stocks, a 21-percent decline in housing prices and a significant contraction of other major world economies. Wow, that’s taking it to the extremes. Can this happen, it certainly can. The Fed wants banks to be strong enough to keep lending money to Americans and businesses. The Fed can stop banks from paying stock dividends or buying back their own stock if they fail the test.

You know what the Fed is not accounting for? They should stress test Municipal government debt and defaults. I foresee this making a larger splash. Why aren’t they stress testing this?

Greek Bond Swaps; 83.5% Of Private Sector Accepts

Friday, March 9th, 2012

The Greeks avoid “Default”. The Greek government said Friday that 83.5% of its private-sector bondholders agreed to a crucial bond-swap deal that leaves those investors with bonds worth less than half the value of their original ones. The goal was up to 90%, thus falling short. The takeup was short of the 90% needed to prevent legal force to get the rest of the private bondholders to participate. As a result, the Greek finance ministry said it had gotten approval for collective-action clauses, or CACs, which would essentially force some bondholders on board, and which will bring the total participation rate to 96%. The government has also given some bondholders an extended deadline to March 23. The deal cuts Greece’s debt burden by more than €100 billion ($132 billion), with the participation rate of 83.5% representing €172 billion out of the €206 billion total eligible bondholdings.

Markets will have to wait and see if the use of the CAC clauses qualify as a ”credit event” by the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA). The ISDA said in a statement that it will meet at 1 p.m. GMT (8 A.M. EST) on Friday to determine whether that has happened. It if has it could trigger the payout of credit-default swaps. Credit-default swaps are derivative instruments used to insure against nonpayment of debt.

The Institute of International Finance (IIF), a lobby group for the world’s largest banks that has been one of main negotiators for that side, hailed the agreement as a key step toward resolving the Greek debt crisis. The debt exchange represents the largest-ever sovereign-debt restructuring. It is likely to lead to a most substantial reduction in the debt stock of Greece and a very significant decline in the amount of maturing debt to be refinanced between 2012 and 2020.

Spain’s violation of the fiscal compact and Portugal’s collapsing growth could have us back negotiating haircuts for Portugal and a new package for Greece inside the next three months. A week ago, the Spanish government announced the country would be targeting a new, higher debt-to-GDP target of 5.8%, which is well above the 4.4% level the prior government had agreed with the European Union.

The second bailout will NOT solve Greece’s fundamental problems. In the near term, there remains a risk that after elections in April or May the new Government seeks to renegotiate the bailout deal, perhaps prompting the package to be withdrawn. Even if the new Government doesn’t try to reopen negotiations, it could decide to walk away from the bailout deal further down the line if the troika demands more austerity

Greece Is Downgraded To The Lowest Rating

Saturday, March 3rd, 2012

Ratings agency Moody’s downgraded Greece to the lowest rating on its bond scale late Friday, following a deal with private investors that would see them ultimately lose an estimated 70 percent of their holdings in Greek debt. Moody’s lowered Greece’s sovereign rating to C from Ca, arguing that the risk of default remains high even a bond-swap deal with banks and other private investors, due to be completed this month, is successful. Ratings agency Standard & Poor’s took similar action on Feb. 27. It said it would “re-assess the credit risk profile” after Greece issues the new bonds.

The swap deal aims to cut euro107 billion ($144 billion) from the country’s debt, and would see private investors lose more than half the face value of their Greek bonds in exchange for new ones issued with more favorable repayment terms for the crisis-hit country. The exchange is an integral part of a second bailout package for Greece by other eurozone countries and the International Monetary Fund. Looking ahead, the EU program and proposed debt exchanges will reduce Greece’s debt burden, but the risk of a default even after the debt exchange has been completed remains high. Greece has been relying since May 2010 on rescue loans from eurozone partners and the IMF. But despite receiving euro73 billion from its initial euro110 billion bailout and pushing through tough austerity measures in return, the country has consistently missed its reform targets. To limit a threat to Europe’s single currency, its leaders have agreed to extend the country a second bailout, this time worth euro130 billion ($172 billion), which is accompanied by the debt reduction deal.

So far, the eurozone has agreed in principle to release the first batch of bailout loans to Greece to finance the bond-swap, with the final green light to due till come next week. But harsh austerity has pushed the country into a fifth year of recession and seen the unemployment rate reach nearly 21 percent. Earlier Friday, provisional figures from the finance ministry figures showed Greece posting a deficit in January of euro490 million ($652 million), in contrast to last year’s equivalent surplus of euro154 million. The ministry’s General Accounting Office said revenues during the month were hit by the expiry of a one-off business tax, as well as reduced revenues from consumption. Revenues in January totaled euro4.87 billion ($6.48 billion). Though a little bit better than the government’s latest target, it’s markedly worse than last year’s equivalent of euro5.12 billion.

“Moody’s believes that Greece will still face medium-term solvency challenges: its stock of debt will still be well in excess of 100 percent of gross domestic product for many years, the country is unlikely to be able to access the private market once the second assistance package runs out, and its planned fiscal and economic reforms will still face very significant implementation risks”\

In return for the second bailout, the government has pushed through legislation setting out more spending cuts, including salary and pension cuts, and has begun pushing through a promised privatization plan for state property. On Friday it called for bids for the exploitation of one of its former Olympic Games venues, the International Broadcasting Center. Built to accommodate broadcasting facilities for the 2004 Games, the IBC has since been converted into a shopping mall. It includes a vacant area of 14,300 square meters (153,925 square feet) and an underground parking area of 7,300 square meters (78,577 square feet). The country’s Asset Development Fund issued a tender for the rights of exclusive use, management and exploitation of the facility for 90 years. The offer includes the area currently leased as a shopping mall under a 40-year agreement that expires in 2047, the fund said.

Earlier this week, Greece launched a privatization offer for its Public Gas Corporation, DEPA. Greece hopes to raise 11 billion euros by the end of 2012 from a privatization drive started last year, and 20 billion euros ($26.9 billion) by the end of 2013. The original target had been to raise 50 billion euros by 2015.

ECB’s QE2 Amounts to $712.4B Loaned To Banks

Wednesday, February 29th, 2012

Taken from the playbooks of the US Fed, the ECB moved forward with a massive second QE2 (Quantitative Easing) lending facility to shore up the banks. The inflation trade continues to be in effect as Silver (NYESE:SLV) and Gold (NYSE:GLD) continues to prop up. The European Central Bank announced Wednesday that banks borrowed €529.5 billion, or $712.4 billion, under a highly-anticipated lending program aimed at preventing a credit crunch in Europe. In its second long-term refinancing operation (LTRO), the ECB offered banks unlimited three-year loans at interest rates as low as 1%. The ECB allotted nearly €500 billion in the first round of the operation in December. The ECB said a total of 800 banks were allotted funds under the LTRO. Banks are under no obligation to use the money for any specific purpose, and it remains to be seen if Italian and Spanish banks will continue to use ECB money to buy government bonds.

The ECB introduced the three-year LTROs in December as it sought to quell fears of a potential near-term funding crisis for euro-zone banks. The injection of liquidity was credited with reopening some funding channels, though some still remain largely closed. The move was also credited with easing fears that a European bank could collapse solely due to funding problems, which in turn helped boost risk appetite. That contributed to a broader rise in asset prices, including global equities, much like to its US counterpart. Meanwhile, banks appeared eager to chase yield, buying up Italian- and Spanish-government debt and helping to pull borrowing costs down from crisis levels. While the LTROs are credited with easing near-term worries, many economists argue the liquidity rush has merely papered over the cracks in the euro zone’s debt crisis. The ECB has undoubtedly encouraged some of the weakest banks to buy the debt of the most poorly positioned sovereigns within [the euro area], the ECB’s actions have clearly not addressed any of the structural problems associated with the euro-zone crisis. The measures do little to address the underlying problems at the heart of the debt crisis.

ECB president Mario Draghi has said the main objective is to support the banking sector and boost lending to the “real economy.” He has called on euro area governments to reign in spending, and stressed that the ECB is legally prohibited from financing national budgets. The announcement comes one day before European Union leaders will gather in Brussels for a two-day summit to determine the size of their financial firewall and discuss the details of a pact on fiscal discipline.

Update On World’s Sovereign 5YR Credit Default Swap Rates (CDS)

Tuesday, February 28th, 2012

Ever since Iceland and Greece fell prey to the bond vigilantes, followed by Ireland and Portugal, CDS rates were crystal ball. Borrowing rates around the world have gone up since the Credit Bubble burst. As it appears, Greece has a long road to be back onto the public markets. Portugal on the other hand is “expected” to borrow back in the public markets by 2013. I don’t believe that may be the case. They are headed towards a second bailout. Below we have comparisons of the 2011 vs today’s CDS rates. Other link video of Portuguese minister Gaspar (l) got a nod from Germany promises Portugal ‘programme adjustment’ after Greece.

CDS Rates 4-11-11 vs 9-12-11

Sovereign Credit Default Swaps 2-28-12

Video of German nod here for Portugal.

Greeks Woes Cost European Banks Billions

Friday, February 24th, 2012

Official year end earnings from European banks are out. The influence of Greece was apparent in bank earnings. The news of the massive losses resemble the US Real Estate Equity collapse of the 2007-2009 period. The ECB along with the help of the US Fed acted quickly to stem a deepening crisis. Capital infusions or a.k.a (US versions – TARP) reigned the banks from collapse and prevented a frozen inter-bank lending environment. Banks highlighted below clearly illicits risks associated with an indebted small country like Greece can have a resounding affect on earnings. The world is no longer immune to other countries financial ills. If other countries follow Greece towards a debt restructure, the collapse of the Euro may have a destructive affect on World economies as unknown to man kind. It could make the 1920′s Great Depression child’s play. The nominal haircut of 53.5% on Greek debt holdings with banks are outlined below.

Source: Wall Street Journal

In France, Credit Agricole S.A. has a stake in Greece’s Emporiki Bank, reported a net loss of 1.47 billion euros ($1.96 billion) for 2011 compared to a profit of €1.26 billion in the previous year. In the fourth quarter of 2011, the bank posted a loss of €3.07 billion. Credit Agricole took an average writedown of 74% on its Greek bond holdings. In total, the Greek crisis cost the bank €2.38 billion in 2011.

The losses at troubled French-Belgian bank Dexia were particularly heavy. The lender reported a net loss of €11.6 billion for 2011, with total impairments on its exposure to Greece amounting to €4.61 billion last year.

Royal Bank of Scotland which was rescued by the U.K. government at the height of the financial crisis, also paid a price for its exposure to Greece. The bank reported Thursday a loss of 1.99 billion pounds ($3.12 billion) for 2011, up from the £1.13 billion loss posted in 2010. RBS took a £1.1 billion impairment on Greek sovereign debt last year. As of Dec. 31, the bonds were marked at 21% of par value, the bank said.

Germany, Commerzbank AG, took a €700 million writedown on Greek sovereign bonds in the fourth quarter of 2011. The bank marked down the value of its Greek bonds to 26%. Still, the German lender managed to post a rise in fourth-quarter profit to €316 million from €257 million.

Greece is going through a severe recession which makes it even more difficult for the nation to meet its debt-reduction goals. Euro-zone officials are hoping that the nation’s debt-to-GDP ratio will fall to 120.5% by 2020, from around 160% in 2011. <~ Good luck with that.

It’s A Greek Affair; DJIA Hits 13,000

Tuesday, February 21st, 2012

Wall Street opened the short week on a high note this morning, with traders feeling upbeat about the much-anticipated and finally secured Greek rescue package. Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) reached above the 13,000 level for the first time since May 2008, but ultimately pared its gain to 15.8 points. The S&P (SPX – 1,362.21) ended near its intraday high of 1,367.76, inching up 1 point. The tech-rich Nasdaq (COMP – 2,948.57) didn’t fare as well, dropping 3.2 points. Earlier in the session, the COMP tagged 2,965.05 — its highest level since Dec. 13, 2000. The bailout has saved Europe, for now, but it’s unlikely to save Greece.

The euro130 billion ($172 billion) rescue — agreed to Tuesday after an all-night summit of European ministers — prevented an uncontrolled bankrupcty and calmed investors worried that a Greek default would have started a chain reaction across Europe. But it left key problems unresolved. Draconian budget cuts could keep Greece mired in recession after five straight years. The deal doesn’t directly address the debt problems in other struggling countries in the 17-country zone that uses the euro. Spending cuts could reduce tax revenue and possibly worsen the government’s finances.The agreement was the second massive bailout of Greece following a euro110 billion ($146 billion) rescue in 2010 that didn’t return the country to solvency. It will give Greece euro130 billion in loans through 2014 from other eurozone governments and the International Monetary Fund. It was secured after Greece agreed to painful and humiliating measures, including thousands of layoffs of civil service workers and cuts to the minimum wage, imposed by countries suspicious of Greece’s reform efforts after two years of what they called the country’s broken promises. The finance ministers wrangled until the early morning over the details of the rescue, squeezing last-minute concessions out of private holders of Greek debt who agreed to lose 53.5 percent of the face value of their investment to avoid even more severe losses if Greece fails to pay euro14.5 billion in debt due March 20. The serious risks of the bailout’s failure include the likelihood that Greece’s economy remains in a deep recession instead of returning to growth in 2013 as the deal assumes. That would undermine chances of paying even the reduced debt load, estimated at a still-high 120 percent of annual economic output in 2020, down from 160 percent now.

Additionally, political outrage over the cutbacks could lead Greece politicians to balk at the tough conditions. That could push rescuer countries led by Germany to cut off further funding. Elections in Greece are expected in April. The leaders of the two main parties have committed to the cuts and reform program, but anti-bailout parties have been gaining in the polls. Greece’s economy shrank 7 percent in the fourth quarter of last year and unemployment is 19 percent, a consequence of cuts in public wages and increased taxes inflicted during a downturn. If that keeps up, even the rescuers acknowledge the reduction goal of 120 percent of GDP is long gone.

By austerity alone, Greece will not solve the problems it has at the moment. We don’t know when the economy will return to growth and how it will grow.

Bailout Details

Including Greece’s first bailout worth euro110 billion the new deal means every Greek man, woman and child will owe the eurozone and the IMF about euro22,000 ($29,000). Greece agreed to cut spending and wages, and to permit outsiders to supervise its finances through European Union and IMF officials stationed in Greece. The rescuers also demanded a separate account for the aid money and legal guarantees that creditors get paid before teachers, doctors and police do. The agreement assumes that banks and investors owed money by Greece will take new bonds that reduce their holdings by more than half. Inability to pay — or unwillingness to accept the harsh conditions — could lead to a non-negotiated “hard” default that could end in Greece leaving the euro. On top of the new rescue loans, Athens will also ask banks and other investment funds to forgive it some euro107 billion ($142 billion) in debt, while the European Central Bank and national central banks in the eurozone will forgo profits on their holdings.

It is being pushed to make its economy more business-friendly and productive by opening access to closed trades and professions; halting rampant tax evasion; allowing more flexibility in wage bargaining between companies and unions; simplifying starting a business; and cutting its bureaucracy. For the private debt-holders who Greece owes money to, the bond swap will lop euro107 billion off Greece’s euro352 billion load. On top of that, investors will be asked to give Athens 30 years to repay them, compared with just under 7 years. Average interest rates would fall to 3.65 percent from around 4.8 percent. Overall losses for private bondholders would be above 70 percent when accounting for the new bonds’ longer repayment period and lower interest rate.

Private investors weren’t the only ones having to give ground. The eurozone countries will reduce the interest that Greece has to pay for its first package of bailout loans to 1.5 percentage points over market rates from between 2 percentage points to 3 percentage points currently. At the same time, the European Central Bank and the national central banks in the countries that use the euro will forgo profits on their Greek debt holdings, again reducing the costs for Greece. Several hurdles remain before Greece will see any of the money or other benefits of the new program.

Apart from the implementation of more than 30 different savings and reform measures by Greece, the new bailout has to be debated by parliaments in several member states, including Germany, the Netherlands and Finland.

The IMF also still has to decide how much of the euro130 billion bill it is willing to stump up. The Washington-based fund had indicated its contribution will be lower than the one-third of the total it has provided in previous bailouts. Lagarde, the IMF chief, said the fund’s board would decide on its contribution in mid-March. It will consider the whole program, “but also additional matters such as the proper setting up of a decent firewall,” she said. The overall ceiling for eurozone rescue loans has been set at euro500 billion ($663 billion), much of which has already been committed to Ireland, Portugal and now Greece. Euro leaders will decide at their summit in early March whether that ceiling should be increased.

In one downside scenario included in the report, Greek debt could fall to only 160% of gross domestic product by 2020, falling far short of the target of 120% set by the International Monetary Fund. It’s possible that Greece could need another €50 billion in funds by the end of the decade. Greece also faces an expected election in April. Greece will remain subject to quarterly reviews of its compliance with the terms of the program, investors could be back to worrying about whether Greece will receive its next tranche of funds by summer.

Minister Evangelos Venizelos said the agreement managed to prevent imminent catastrophe: “we avoided the nightmare scenario,” he said.

US Investors Watch Greece As Markets Close Monday

Friday, February 17th, 2012

Yesterday’s optimism rally over Greek bailout supports investor sentiment, but cautious into the weekend in observance of President’s day. The S&P rose to a 9-month high on Thursday and pushed above technical resistance level toward 1360. More gains could be ahead after European shares rallied to a 6-1/2-month high as investors bet that Greece would sign a deal to secure a second bailout by Monday. That would help the euro-zone nation avoid a messy default, which could have a rippling effect in the financial markets. Investor sentiment improved after euro-zone officials said the finishing touches were being put on the bailout package, which would include a debt swap deal that cuts the value of bonds held by financial firms by about 70 percent.

The leaders of Germany, Italy and Greece are “optimistic” that a deal on a second bailout for Athens can be clinched next week, a spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Friday. Agreement on a second, €130 billion ($170 billion) bailout has been delayed for months due to doubts over Greek political leaders’ commitment to tough new austerity measures as well as the worsening economic situation in the country that kicked off Europe’s debt crisis two years ago. That deal has to be completed before March 20, when Athens faces a €14.5 billion bond redemption it cannot afford.

Meanwhile, in Portugal, the leader of the country’s main opposition party pressed the government to ask international lenders for a one-year extension on the country’s debt reduction targets. Debt-stressed Portugal is locked into an austerity program through 2013 in return for last year’s €78 billion ($103 billion) financial rescue. However, the austerity measures are widely blamed for a deepening recession, with the government forecasting a 3% contraction this year, and a record 14% jobless rate. Socialist leader Antonio Jose Seguro told Parliament that economic conditions have changed considerably since the bailout terms were agreed. He argued that austerity during an economic downturn is misguided. ”This remedy is wrong,” Seguro said.