Posts Tagged ‘Greece’

Greece Debt Deal Seconds Away (Or Hours,Days,Weeks Away)

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

Markets are in euphoria as stocks held onto their gains for the first trading day of February. This is extending the impressive rally in January, following a handful of positive economic news from Europe and China in addition to news that Greece and its private creditors may only be hours away from a deal. BUT, several hours later, we are still waiting for the 70% haircut “really slice” of Greece’s forgiven debt  burden. On Tuesday, the S&P triggered a “golden cross,” meaning its 50-day moving average rose above its 200-day average. That is seen as the signal of an uptrend, but some analysts see it more as a psychological positive, confirming a move, rather than as a major signal.

For the month of January, the Dow rallied 3.4 percent, the S&P 500 jumped 4.36 percent, and the NASDAQ surged 8.01 percent. All three major indexes posted their best month since last October, while the Dow and S&P logged their best January since 1997.

US and World Economic Data

The pace of growth in the U.S. manufacturing sector rose to 54.1 in January, to its highest level since June, according to the Institute for Supply Management. Economists had expected a reading of 54.4, according to a Reuters poll. Still, a reading above 50 indicates an expansion of the U.S. manufacturing sector. Construction spending gained 1.5 percent in December, logging its fifth consecutive monthly gain, according to the Commerce Department.

China’s factory sector expanded in January, supporting hopes the world’s second-biggest economy will avoid a hard landing.

Greece Debt Deal

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said talks between Athens and its private creditors were “one formal step away” from a deal needed to avoid a messy default. Greece is locked in two sets of talks— one with private creditors to have them take losses on their bondholdings and the other with its international bailout rescuers to receive new loans. 

“We are at a crucial point in developments. In the coming days, the agreements must be completed” for the bond swap and a second €130 billion ($171 billion) bailout package, government spokesman Pantelis Kapsis said. Debt inspectors from the European Commission, European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, known as the troika, are in Athens for talks on the second rescue package, which is tied to an agreement with private creditors to accept losses on Greek bonds they hold. The success of the bond deal, however, also depends on the outcome of the bailout talks.

The bond swap, known as the Private Sector Involvement, or PSI, will see private creditors swap the bonds they hold with new ones worth half their original face value, longer repayment times and lower interest rates. They will also get a €30 billion cash sweetener — to be taken from the €130 billion bailout — for accepting the deal. Once secured, the PSI will cut €100 billion off Greece’s national debt.

Overall, the investors participating in the deal will face a loss on their bondholdings of more than 70 percent, Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said in a Parliament committee meeting Tuesday night. The official offering of the new bonds will come by Feb. 13, Venizelos said. Greece is running out of time, as it faces a €14.5 billion bond redemption on March 20 that it cannot afford to pay without additional help. A default would spell disaster for the country and destabilize European and global markets.

Both deals will need the agreement of the heads of the three political parties in Greece’s interim coalition, Kapsis said, and Prime Minister Lucas Papademos was to call the party heads to a meeting to sign off on them and required austerity measures. Chief IMF inspector Poul Thomsen also said a deal was close, but pressed the recession-plagued country to lower employment costs and even slash the minimum wage to make the economy more competitive.

On the contrary the European Central Bank is likely to refuse to show its hand on how it will help cut Greece’s debt burden until private investors and the government have agreed to a deal. While Greece’s creditors are increasing pressure on the ECB to join the bond swap being negotiated with the country, central bankers have remained silent on their intentions. Economists say the ECB wants to see the private-sector agreement concluded before indicating its strategy, which may include forgoing profits from its Greek bonds or a transfer to one of the region’s rescue funds.

Result Of The EU Summit; Housing Prices Dip Again

Tuesday, January 31st, 2012

Meeting in Brussels, on Monday, European Union leaders agreed to implement the European Stability Mechanism, a permanent rescue fund, in July. The first summit of the year ended without new solutions for the debt crisis in Greece. Without a deal with private-sector creditors, the country jeopardizes its access to bailout funds, and might not be able to make a €14 billion debt payment that’s due March 20. The €500 billion ESM was originally set to enter into force next year, when a temporary bailout fund expires.  The leaders of all but two members of the 27-nation EU also agreed to sign a fiscal pact, which was designed to prevent governments from running excessive deficits and racking up unsustainable debts. U.S. stocks recovered most of their lost ground Monday afternoon, but struggled to pull out of the red as concerns over Greece continued to weigh on the market. Stocks initially opened higher amid renewed hopes for a Greek deal and after the approval of a new euro zone budget discipline pact. Stocks then erased their early gains Tuesday following a handful of weaker-than-expected earnings and economic news.

However, gains were limited by the mounting tension surrounding Portugal’s debt woes, with the nation’s two-year bond yields hitting a euro-era record above 21 percent. Meanwhile, Standard & Poor’s warned it may downgrade “a number of highly rated” G20 nations from 2015 if their governments fail to enact reforms to curb rising health care spending. Concerns over the size of United States debt reared their head once again as ratings agency Standard & Poor’s warned that health care costs for a number of highly-rated Group of 20 countries, including the U.S., could hurt growth prospects and harm their sovereign creditworthiness from the middle of this decade.

“Governments’ fiscal burdens will increase significantly over the coming decade, with the highest deterioration in public finances likely to occur in Europe and other advanced G-20 economies, such as Japan and the U.S.,” S&P said in a statement on Tuesday. Health care costs for a typical advanced economy will stand at 11.1 percent of gross domestic product by 2050, up from 6.3 percent of GDP in 2010, S&P said. Population aging will lead to profound changes in economic growth prospects for countries around the world as governments work to build budgets to face ever greater age-related spending needs.

Housing Doldrums Remain

On the economic front, home prices fell 1.3 percent last November, according to S&P/Case-Shiller’s 20-city composite index, adding to the 0.7 percent drop seen in October. Economists had expected a decline of 0.5 percent. On a seasonally adjusted basis, 17 out of 20 cities racked up monthly declines and average national home prices were around levels seen in mid-2003. Prices in the 20 cities also steepened their year-over-year decline, falling 3.7 percent compared to a 3.4 percent decline in October. Despite continued low interest rates and better real GDP growth in the fourth quarter, home prices continue to fall.

Recent data has lead to optimism the housing sector is in the early stages of the healing process, with some economists looking for prices to find a bottom this year. Still, the recovery is expected to be a lengthy one as the market remains hampered by an excess amount of homes for sale in the midst of weak demand.

Portugal May Be Next On Debt Restructuring

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

This morning the Portuguese 5 Year Credit Default Swaps (CDS) rates touched an all time high 1250 basis points or 12.5%. Yes it’s true, they are not borrowing from the public markets therefore are not affected by high rates since bailout, early summer of 2011. However bond vigilantes are demanding higher rate of returns which may signify a 70% risk of default. Yet, the dilemma on Greece’s debt restructuring has still not panned out. To add to the doldrums, this morning Standard & Poor’s announced that it will likely downgrade Greece’s ratings to “selective default” when the country concludes its debt restructuring. Athens is desperate for a deal within days to ensure funds from a 130 billion euro rescue plan drawn up by European partners and the International Monetary Fund arrive before 14.5 billion euros bond redemption’s fall due in March.

Greece was clinging on Tuesday to hope of a last-minute bond swap deal to avoid a messy default after euro zone officials sent talks back to square one by rejecting a final offer from the country’s private bondholders. After weeks of haggling with creditors in Athens, euro zone finance ministers in Brussels on Monday dealt a sharp setback to those hopes by rejecting creditors’ demand for a 4 percent coupon, or interest rate, on new, longer-dated bonds in exchange for existing debt. Private sector creditors now have the upper hand in deciding whether Athens will be forced into a hard default that could sow chaos across the global financial system (credit event) and push other weak euro zone members closer to a default.

A “voluntary” swap where both sides agree to the terms of the deal is required to prevent insurance against a Greek debt default from being paid out. The bond swap is meant to cut 100 billion euros from Greece’s debt burden of over 350 billion, in a bid to ultimately slash its debt from around 160 percent of GDP to a more manageable 120 percent of GDP by 2020.

Read previous post of Portugal issues here.

To see the Macro Economic effects to US markets see this video on Portuguese 5 Yr CDS Rates

Greece Close To A Debt Cut Deal

Friday, January 20th, 2012

Greece and its private creditors on Friday were nearing an agreement on a deal to write down 50%-70% of the face value of the country’s debt by swapping existing bonds for new bonds with longer maturities and lower interest rates. Last weeks talks broke down, so we have yet to see the details on paper. What rate is chosen could determine how much of a loss creditors will take on the current value of their Greek debt holdings. Participants in the talks say discussions are continuing and the exact details could change. Technically, this is considered a restructured debt reorganization dubbed during the process of bankruptcy. Portugal clinched a deal on ambitious labour market reforms this week and carried out its biggest debt sale since seeking a 78-billion-euro bailout, but the challenges for the second-most risky country in the euro zone may be shifting up a gear. Portugal is the next potential candidate to default in the euro zone after Greece — a point that is fast becoming clear as Athens approaches the end of its debt restructuring talks.

A deal between Greece and private-sector creditors has been identified as a prerequisite for progress by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to make their contributions to a second bailout package for Greece totaling €130 billion ($168.6billion). Greece and representatives of bondholders, predominantly banks and hedge funds, were closing in a coupon that would begin at 3.5% on new bonds with shorter maturities and rising to a cap of 4.6% on longer-dated bonds. The new bonds will carry maturities of up to 30 years, with a grace period on repayment of principal debt of up to 10 years under discussion.

Creditors would be writing down 50% of the face value of the bonds, but in terms of net present value over the course of the maturities represents a loss for bondholders of between 65% to 70%, said a participant in the talks. The goal is to slice €100 billion off Greece’s total €360 billion stock of debt—saving Greece some €4 billion a year in interest payments. The amount of public support for Greece will depend on how much of a reduction the private sector makes in the country’s overall debt.

There is pressure on the government to make up for missed deficit targets last year, as well as to detail some €12.5 billion in further fiscal cuts to narrow Greece’s budget deficit over the next four years which will further bring deep recessions.

Portugal

Portugal clinched a deal on ambitious labour market reforms this week and carried out its biggest debt sale since seeking a 78-billion-euro bailout, but the challenges for the second-most risky country in the euro zone may be shifting up a gear. Portugal is the next potential candidate to default in the euro zone after Greece — a point that is fast becoming clear as Athens approaches the end of its debt restructuring talks. 

The concerns were clearly borne out this week as Portugal’s bond yields rose virtually without interruption, to all-time highs, despite the issuance of 2.5 billion euros of short-term treasury bills on Wednesday at slightly lower yields. The country’s 10-year yields rose to almost 15 percent on Thursday and hovered around 14.80 percent on Friday. Five-year credit default swap prices implied the market was pricing in a 66.8 percent chance of a Portuguese default. The sharp rise in bond yields was partially triggered by Standard & Poor’s downgrades of European countries last week, which left Portugal as the second euro zone country to be rated “junk” by all the main rating agencies, along with Greece.

Portugal was the only country really rattled by the downgrade because it is seen as a much more complicated case. It combines the same high level of private sector overindebtedness as Spain, high public sector debt similar to Italy, plus the economic recession. 

The key problem for Portugal, which was the third euro zone country to seek a bailout after Greece and Ireland, is whether it has enough time to restructure its economy to grow as it enacts harsh austerity and faces the worst recession in decades. This year will be the toughest of the three-year bailout as deep spending cuts, including the elimination of two months of pay for civil servants and across-the-board tax hikes, spark a 3 percent economic contraction after a 1.6 percent slump in 2011. The most probable outcome is Portugal asking for longer terms or more bailout money, just as Greece has done. Portugal has to return to the long-term bond market in the second half of 2013, which many analysts see as at least hard to achieve. Problem relates to its high level of debt, currently around 100 percent of gross domestic product, combined with low growth.

EU Summit January 30th: Credit Event?

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

Nicolas Sarkozy wants to speed up the launch of the proposed tax on financial transactions in Europe because he thinks this might help his re-election bid. As the euro zone gears up for yet more high-level meetings about its debt crisis, a series of planned summits await. German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s latest meeting with French President Nicolas Sarkozy focused on the problems facing Greece. They put pressure on the euro zone’s most heavily indebted nation to make a deal with creditor banks on a bond swap and avoid defaulting on its debt repayments. The macroeconomic imbalance has to be resolved, not only by the deficit countries but also by surplus countries.

Merkel meets IMF head Christine Lagarde Tuesday, and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti Wednesday. Together with Sarkozy, Merkel warned Greece on Monday that it would not get any more bailout funds if it did not reach a deal soon. Merkel and Sarkozy do not feel confident enough to write a big check to help out Greece yet. 

Greece enters a pivotal period in which it must finish a crucial renegotiation of its more than $200 billion of debt. Thus far, the plan is to offer bondholders 15 cents in new cash and 35 cents in new debt for every 100 cents of Greek debt they hold. According to several people familiar with the situation, the maturity on the new debt is likely to be 30 years, but the interest rate is yet to be decided and is the most contentious part of the deal. The new bonds are expected to be under U.K. legal jurisdiction rather than Greek jurisdiction. Bondholders prefer U.K. jurisdiction because it prevents Greece from retroactively changing the terms of the debt. (The Greek Parliament can’t change U.K. laws). Also expected to be part of the offer, a structure that puts the new bonds on par with the European Financial Stability Fund. Greece has a principal repayment of more than $14 billion due in mid-March and it doesn’t have the money. In fact, the country remains cash-flow negative each week. The debt negotiation must get done in order to first reduce the size of that payment in March, and second to get the next tranche of bailout money from their European partners. If those things don’t fall into place, a default is highly likely. The only other remedy would be a last-minute emergency injection of cash. Where could that come from? Perhaps other European countries, but that would be a tremendous political hurdle to climb.

One way to force bondholders to tender their existing debt is to impose a “collective action clause” retroactively. That means Greece could simply change the terms of the old debt, and decide that if a certain percentage of bondholders, say 75 percent to 90 percent, agree to tender, then the deal is imposed on every bondholder. However, this, too, would trigger a credit event because changing the terms of a bond is understood to be a triggering event under the terms of CDS contracts. European leaders are concerned a credit event could trigger a Lehman-like contagion in the euro zone.

Yet another option is for Greece to change its laws at the parliamentary level, rather than changing the terms of the old debt. Passing that law in and of itself is not a credit-triggering event. But what remains uncertain to market participants is this: If enough bondholders still don’t tender their bonds, and then Greece imposes the Collective Action Clause, is that a CDS triggering event? That will be decided by a committee from the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, and some market participants say it is impossible to predict what a committee will do, especially when there is so much political pressure from European leaders to avoid it.

Sarkozy said last week he was ready to go it alone and introduce a financial transactions tax just in France if necessary rather than wait for the whole European Union to sign up to it — an unlikely prospect given that Britain is refusing to impose such a tax for fear of damaging the City of London, Europe’s biggest financial center. Merkel, keen to show nervous markets that the Franco-German alliance is intact at the start of what promises to be another difficult year in the euro crisis, praised Sarkozy’s stance and even made a minor concession, saying for the first time that she could envisage the tax being introduced just in the 17-member euro zone rather than the full 27-member EU. The tax, based on concept proposed by US economist James Tobin who called for a tax on currency transactions in the early 1970s, has been under renewed discussion since 2011 when the European Commission proposed a plan to tax stock, bond and derivatives trades from 2014, potentially raising €57 billion ($73 billion), much of it from Britain, the region’s biggest trading center. Under the EU plan, which would need the backing of all 27 member states to become law, stock and bond trades would be taxed at the rate of 0.1 percent, with derivatives deals at 0.01 percent. Given the public mistrust of banks since the 2008 global financial crisis, such a tax would be a popular move and would help cover the cost of this and future crises. But it would prove difficult to introduce, with critics saying it will simply scare off traders. Sweden and Britain are strongly opposed to it.

Greece Hits 113% 5 Year CDS Rates

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

It’s becoming more and more apparent that Greece is getting the boot from investors and public markets as the 5 Year CDS rates hit unimaginable rate of 113%. This is in extraordinary circumstances if Greece were borrowing from public markets, but luckily they are being funded by the ECB and IMF. This leads me to suggest Greece will get the boot from the EU and be made an example of. The must be done to set the precedence of the future stability of the Euro and Euro-zone. Drachmas must begin to be recirculated to support the economy. It has created many citizens to migrate across borders while creating  pain and suffering amongst the people. The price for remaining bound to the single currency will be more hardship and sacrifice.  Current rumor has it that a growing number of legal and financial experts are examining in detail what would happen if Greece abandoned the euro.

It would be Europe’s worst nightmare: after weeks of rumors, one day the Prime Minister of Greece will tell the World that they are leavinG the Euro. The danger that Greece or some other deeply damaged country in the euro zone could leave the single-currency union can no longer be ruled out. And it was largely this prospect that drove leaders last week to agree to adopt strict fiscal rules that they hope will wrap the 17 European Union nations that use the euro into an even tighter embrace.

The monetary union have refused to discuss in public the possibility of member states abandoning the euro — a contingency not even addressed in any of the treaties governing the monetary union. As Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, put it last week: “It would be imprudent to create contingency plans when we see no likelihood that they could happen.”

Over the last year, Greeks have withdrawn almost 40 billion euros, or nearly $53 billion, in deposits from their banking system, equal to about 17 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product. A total of 14 billion euros in deposits was withdrawn in September and October alone. According to testimony by Georgios A. Provopoulos, the head of the Greek central bank, before a parliamentary committee last month, this outflow continued in early November “at a very large scale.”

About the Drachma Here

Below is the research of Landon Thomas, Jr.  of  The New York Times

Over the last month Nomura and UBS have come out with detailed studies on the topic. Nomura forecast a 60 percent devaluation of the new drachma. UBS went further, warning of hyperinflation, military coups and possible civil war that could afflict a departing country.

One of the more detailed studies comes from Eric Dor, an economist at the Iéseg School of Management in Lille, France. In “Leaving the Eurozone: A User’s Guide,” Mr. Dor starts with the obvious: any return to the drachma would have to be preceded by an immediate freeze on bank deposits. To prevent panicked Greeks from sending the rest of their deposits abroad, transfers to countries outside of Greece would be halted. As the new currency inevitably lost value, new drachma accounts would remain frozen. Shops would be required to accept scrip or devalued euros circulating only within Greece until the country’s bank note printer, operated by the central bank, could churn out enough drachmas to replace the 200 billion euros in cash and deposits currently in Greece. Meanwhile, Greece would become a financial pariah. Visitors would find Greece a paradise of bargains, but for most Greeks themselves, travel would become prohibitively expensive.

One person who does think a Greek exit will happen is Charles Proctor, a British lawyer who has studied the legal intricacies of leaving the euro zone. “I think there has to be a recognition that a single currency does not suit a vast range of economies,” Mr. Proctor said. “And that some member economies must depart in order to get their economic houses in order.” Like others, he points to the fact that there is no explicit clause in European treaties that allows for an easy departure, either forced or voluntary. While 10 European Union countries do not use the euro, a disorderly exit would almost certainly mean that Greece would have to leave the union as well. Mr. Proctor also takes on the thorny issue of what would happen to the investor holding a Greek bond that is governed by domestic law, as more than 90 percent of Greek bonds are. Most likely, he concludes, the result would be default as investors would not accept interest and principal payments in devalued drachmas. While this would certainly hurt European banks, the European Central Bank, which owns around 60 billion euros or so of Greek bonds, would suffer the most. Unless the International Monetary Fund agreed to help, Greece would be unable to borrow from abroad. On the plus side, with a cheap currency and restored control of its monetary policy, Greece’s chances of returning to growth might improve drastically.

While their numbers remain small, some Greek economists say that this is the only way to address the country’s persistent inability to balance its trade. Theodore Mariolis, an economist at Panteion University in Athens, argues that a devaluation of 50 percent or more could close Greece’s trade gap without sending inflation soaring — an outcome that many economists might regard as too good to be true.

But whether that provides a long-run solution for a country that has failed to improve its competitiveness is questionable. And the biggest problem for Greece if it returns to the drachma, says Hal S. Scott, an expert on international finance at Harvard Law School, would be persuading Greeks to believe in and hold an ever weakening drachma when a much stronger euro would be so readily available. This constant selling pressure would make a devaluation all the more extreme, raising the threat of hyperinflation. “The devaluation issue is the most serious part,” Mr. Scott said. “I just do not see how you deal with it.”

Markets Are On Monday Muteness

Monday, November 14th, 2011

Last week the markets were in a tug and pull action after the debt ridden issues Italy took front and center attention away from Greece. Two “Technocrat” governments are forming in Greece and Italy. The CBOE Market Volatility Index (VIX) clawed out a weekly gain, and held onto its perch above 30. With global investors still on edge, and significant technical hurdles just overhead, stocks remain stuck in limbo on the charts. Option expirations are set for this Friday the the 18th. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA – 12,153.68) and S&P (SPX – 1,263.85), finished in the green last week, overcoming a 390-point drop in the DJIA on Wednesday.

SPX continue to dance around their year-to-date breakeven points for the year, which are located at 1,257. During last week’s roller-coaster ride, it’s interesting that the SPX’s low on Wednesday was 1,226, a resistance point in September and October. The 1,225 area was one we flagged as being critical while the market grinded higher from its October lows, as it is the site of the SPX’s historically significant 80-month moving average, and a 50% retracement of this year’s May high and October low. That said, the SPX continues to struggle in the 1,257-1,260 area, which coincides with its 2011 breakeven, its lows in March and June, and a 61.8% retracement of the calendar-year high and lows.

Despite the presence of these technical speed bumps, we continue to believe the sentiment backdrop is one in which equities can muster enough buying power to clear these hurdles. For example, as we said last week, put buying on equities relative to call buying recently peaked at a two and a half-year high, indicating an extreme in pessimism that could mark a major market bottom.

Moreover, we are noticing increased call buying relative to put buying on CBOE Market Volatility Index (VIX – 30.04) options, after a long period in which put buying predominated and the market fell sharply. The change in the ratio’s direction suggests that market movers, such as hedge fund managers, could be using VIX calls to hedge stocks they are accumulating.

Speaking of the VIX, we find it interesting that the late-October low in the 24 area was half the August peak at 48, while recent peaks on Nov. 1 and Nov. 9 at the 36 area marked a 50% advance from the trough of 24. So, as we said a few weeks ago, not only is VIX 30 significant, but so are VIX 24 and 36 as the market continues to bounce around critical technical levels. Therefore, if the VIX moves below 30, we would view this as an acceptable level at which you can purchase your portfolio insurance to help ride out any sharp, overnight declines.

Finally, we’re currently on the cusp of options expiration week. Therefore, exchange-traded fund (ETF) options may impact the price action and levels to watch during the course of the week. For example, the 127 and 128 areas on the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) — which correspond to 1,270 and 1,280 on the SPX — are the site of heavy call open interest relative to put open interest, and could act as resistance on rallies. Pullbacks to 124 or 125 — which correspond to 1,240 and 1,250 on the SPX — could provide support, as these strikes are home to heavy put open interest.

Technical speed bumps remain overhead, and headline risks linger, suggesting hedging is still a prudent strategy. But a breakout above resistance levels could be very rewarding for bulls, as short-covering activity and an abundance of sideline cash could provide the fuel to drive equities during a seasonal period that favors the bulls.

World Waits On Greece Confidence Vote

Friday, November 4th, 2011

Greek parliamentarians prepared to give their verdict on Prime Minister George Papandreou on Friday in a confidence vote, with many demanding a national unity government to decide the fate of the nation’s European bailout and the global economy. Analysts declared the outcome too tight to forecast, but had a hunch Papandreou might just survive as would-be rebels in his party said they would back their leader one last time — if he explicitly promised to make way for a national unity government immediately afterwards.  The vote expected as late as midnight (2200 GMT) (10 PM GMT) or 4 PM EST.

“The prime minister must make his intentions clear tonight. We cannot afford to have chaos and anarchy tomorrow,” Sofia Giannaka, a lawmaker in Papandreou’s socialist PASOK party, said before the vote expected as late as midnight (2200 GMT). Giannaka said a unity government was a necessity for the country, which will run out of money in December unless it secures the new financial lifeline. “If the prime minister doesn’t say this, things could get ugly tonight,” she said, shortly before the parliamentary debate got underway.

After heavy pressure from European leaders, the government said it had dropped Papandreou’s plan to hold a referendum on the bailout package, which had threatened an immediate crisis in the euro zone and cast doubt on Greece’s membership. PASOK has 152 deputies in the 300-member parliament. One lawmaker said on Thursday she would not back the government in the confidence vote, but on Friday softened her line. Nevertheless, only two defections would strip the government of its majority and probably trigger an early election. Electoral mathematics meant little on the streets of Athens, where Greeks are struggling with spending cuts, higher taxes and soaring unemployment. Papandreou admitted he had made a mistake in calling on Monday for the referendum on a bailout.

EU Tells Greece Take It Or Leave It

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said late Wednesday that a sixth tranche of aid won’t be paid to Greece unless the country decides to adopt the European proposals outlined last week to help the region out of its sovereign-debt crisis, according to reports. French President Nicolas Sarkozy told a news conference: “Our Greek friends must decide whether they want to continue the journey with us.” European leaders were angered by Papandreou’s surprise unilateral announcement on Monday of a referendum on a bailout deal reached with euro zone leaders at a summit last week. German Chancellor Angela Merkel told the same news conference that Germany wanted to stabilize the euro zone with Greece as a member, but stabilizing the euro was ultimately more important than rescuing Greece. Sarkozy said Wednesday that, if Greece does hold a referendum, it must take place as quickly as possible. The vote is now expected to be held Dec. 4-5, according to reports. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that Europe is prepared in the event that Greece decides to exit the euro, according to reports.

Sarkozy and Merkel were speaking after emergency talks held with Papandreou in Cannes ahead of a summit of leaders from the Group of 20 major economies. Action on the proposals outlined at last Thursday’s marathon European summit will speed up, Merkel said. The proposals included private investors in Greek government debt taking a 50% writedown on the value of their holdings, Greece reducing its public debt to 120% of gross domestic product by 2020 and receiving a new European Union/International Monetary Fund finance program of up to 100 billion euros ($140 billion) by the end of the year.

The referendum in Greece is now a vote to determine whether the nation remains a member of the eurozone. Assuming Greek Prime Minister passes Friday’s vote of confidence, Greece will go ahead with the controversial referendum in December. “This is a question of whether or not we want to be in the eurozone,” said Papandreou. “That is very clear.” The worry is that Greek voters will reject the proposals, which would require the government to enact additional austerity reforms. Merkel and Sarkozy said repeatedly after the meeting that they they want Greece to be a part of the eurozone. But they also stressed that Greece cannot remain a member of the currency bloc if the government does not commit to the program outlined last month. ”It’s up to the Greeks now to determine whether they want to continue on this road with us or not,” said Sarkozy, adding that all European Union members must abide by certain rules. ”If any country wishes to throw out these rules, they are free to do so, but they must leave the eurozone,” he said. Meanwhile, Papandreou said he believes the voters will approve the plan. But he added that the government needs a “wide consensus.”

Why Did Papandreou Pull This Desperate Act of The Referendum

Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou seems to playing an extremely high-stakes game of chicken with the European Union in his call for a national referendum on the euro zone’s latest fix-it plan. The move has destabilized a situation that was already on thin ice. In the end, European leaders may have to sweeten the pot for Greece to make this vote go away. It is unclear why exactly Papandreou decided to step up now and call for a referendum. Unlike in places like California and Switzerland, referendums are extremely rare in Greece, with the last such vote held in 1974 when the country voted to abolish the monarchy.

Papandreou claims that a vote by the people is necessary given the major impact the latest European fix-it plan would have on Greece. That rational has raised some eyebrows across the continent. A referendum wasn’t used when the Greek government pushed through two rounds of tough austerity measures. Nor was it used when the country decided to take billions of euros in aid from the European Union and International Monetary Fund. So what is really going on here? While receiving a vote of confidence from the people is justifiable given the seriousness of the situation, the move is being seen by some in the market as a way for Greece to push the EU into giving it a better deal. It probably isn’t a coincidence that the call for the vote came after the country received its latest cash payment from the EU and IMF and a couple days before the G-20 summit in Cannes, where the EU was supposed to show the world that it has finally got its act together.

This morning, officials from both countries telegraphed that there would be no alterations made to the plan and that Greece was going to have to accept it in its entirety or lose the billions of euros in aid it needs to keep paying its bills.

So who holds the advantage here? If Greece goes ahead with the referendum, its citizenry would most probably reject the plan, creating a wave of instability in the region. In response, the EU would probably cut its lifeline to Greece, forcing the nation to default on its debt. That would cause all of the major Greek banks to collapse, as they are the largest holders of Greek debt. But at the same time, it would cause several European banks to take billions of euros in write downs, as they too hold significant amounts of Greek debt.

Snowball effect

It doesn’t end there. Since the Greeks were forced into default, credit default swap contracts on Greek debt would be triggered. That means the banks and hedge funds that were short Greek debt would now be owed billions of euros in insurance payments by those that were long Greek debt. It is widely believed that the large banks, which issue and sometime hold on to all those CDS contracts, have not set aside enough capital to payout claims. This could lead to an AIG-style meltdown of many financial institutions. That explains why bank stocks around the globe fell hard yesterday, especially those that play big in the CDS market like Bank of America (BAC) and JP Morgan Chase (JPM) in the U.S., which were both down around 6%, as well as those in Europe like Societe Generale, which was down over 16%.

This CDS chain reaction is one of the major reasons why the Europeans have kept Greece on life support for so long. The total collapse of the Greek economy would be a sad event, but a confidence crisis in the word banking system, three years after the fall of Lehman Brothers, would be a catastrophe. One of the major planks of the latest fix-it plan was to get the banks and other major holders of Greek debt to agree to take a 50% haircut on their bonds. Since such a cut would be voluntary “soft default,” it would not trigger the CDS contracts, therefore limiting the fallout to those banks that physically held Greek debt. A hard default would probably see all that Greek debt go to zero. While that would wipe the slate clean for the country, it would be a pyrrhic victory as its economy would be decimated. Papandreou is fully aware of this fact, as are members of Greece’s main opposition party in parliament, which has blasted the prime minister for being reckless. If Papandreou survives a vote of no confidence Friday, the stage will be set for months of further market instability.

Warren Buffett once called derivatives financial instruments of mass destruction. The CDS contracts attached to Greek debt are proving to be quite a destructive force indeed. Papandreou is now threatening to push the button. To avoid a nasty surprise, the Europeans will probably need to yield to Greece’s demands.

What Happens If Greece Leaves The European Union

  • Merkel would gain credibility: She has been accused of lacking leadership, and her party is struggling in local elections. Making such a bold move will win her a lot of points towards the general elections. This move will be popular with voters.
  • More Unity: Throwing out one of the member states isn’t an act of unity, but the current situation of huge gaps between the countries that share the same currency isn’t a sustainable union. Without Greece, the gaps will be smaller.
  • A More Competitive Greece: The Euro makes Greece uncompetitive. A return to the Greek drachma will see a quick devaluation of the old/new currency, making it more attractive for investors that want to export, and for tourists.
  • A Stronger Euro against inflation: Without Greece, the Euro will be stronger. This can curb inflation by making imports, especially of oil, cheaper. With less inflationary pressures on Germany, the ECB won’t need to raise the rates, helping the other vulnerable countries have the much needed low lending rates.
  • Saving other countries: Apart from the aforementioned advantage of a stronger Euro, the Greek departure, if done right, could deter other countries from reaching the same situation. By “done right”, the terms should include not only a return to the drachma, but some additional limits on Greece within the European Union. For example, some limits on banks could serve as means of keeping the union more tight.
  • About the Drachma is located here.

    Will The Greeks Return To The Drachma

    Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

    Drachma (until 2002)) was the currency used in Greece during several periods in its history. Three modern Greek currencies, the first introduced in 1832 and the last replaced by the euro in 2001 (at the rate of 340.750 drachma to the euro). The euro did not begin circulating until 2002 but the exchange rate was fixed on 19 June 2000, with legal introduction of the euro taking place in January 2002. Greece populous is growing support with rumor that the return of the Drachma may be in favor to help Greece of it’s debt. Is the true?

    In 1953, in an effort to halt inflation, Greece joined the Bretton Woods system. In 1954, the drachma was revalued at a rate of 1000 to 1. The new currency was pegged at 30 drachmae = 1 United States dollar. In 1973, the Bretton Woods System was abolished; over the next 25 years the official exchange rate gradually declined, reaching 400 drachmae to 1 U. S. dollar. On January 1, 2002, the Greek drachma was officially replaced as the circulating currency by the euro.

    In a editorial by Landon Thomas Jr. in the New York Times issued this morning discussed the time to ponder the once unthinkable: that Greece might end its 10-year use of the euro and return to its former currency, the drachma.

    Such a move is still officially anathema in Athens. But a growing body of economists argues that it would be the best course, whatever the near-term financial and economic implications. And now, with a referendum on the European-led bailout facing Greek voters, a vocal minority that has long called for a return to the drachma might find itself with a growing group of listeners.

    A return to the drachma is unlikely to offer a quick cure for Greece’s ills. Default on the nation’s $500 billion in public debt would become a certainty, depositors would take their money out of local banks and, with a sharp devaluation of as much as 50 percent, inflation would loom. A return to the international credit markets would take years.

    But drachma defenders contend that these worst fears are overdone. Yes, there would be disruption and panic initially. But, they say, pointing to Argentina’s case when it broke its peg with the dollar in 2002, the export boom ignited by a cheaper currency and the ability to control the drachma would eventually work in Greece’s favor.

    “The real problem is that we are operating under a foreign currency,” Vasilis Serafeimakis, a senior executive at Avinoil, one of Greece’s largest oil and gas distribution companies, said of the euro. In the last year, he has been banging the bring-back-the-drachma drum.

    “If we had our own currency, we could at least print money,” Mr. Serafeimakis said, referring to the ability to revalue the drachma. “And what is the worst thing that happens if we do this? I don’t get a Christmas gift from one of my bankers.”

    According to a recent poll in the Greek newspaper Kathimerini, 66 percent of Greeks believe that returning to the drachma would be bad. But proponents of a euro exit say that beneath the surface, more Greeks are beginning to question the euro.

    “The view that Greece should exit the euro is more widespread than you would think,” said Costas Lapavitsas, a Greek economist at the University of London who has long pressed for a return to the drachma. “It is just that the opposing view is so dominant.”

    Until now, many Greeks have been wedded to a European identity forged by a national embrace of the euro and the wealth that, for a time, came along with it. Talk of returning to the drachma had mainly been held up as an apocalyptic vision rather than a viable policy option.

    But for a growing number of Greeks, the collapse of their economy is apocalypse enough.

    Prime Minister George A. Papandreou threw down the gauntlet to the Greek people Monday when he surprised the world by announcing a referendum on the latest bailout plan. But it was his finance minister, Evangelos Venizelos, who that same day put a finer point on the question.

    “Are we for Europe, the euro zone and the euro?” he asked. Or, he continued, does Greece return to the drachma?

    Under the latest bailout plan from Europe, Greek debt held by private institutions would be written down by 50 percent. In return, as long as Greece stayed on track carrying out painful austerity measures through 2015, Athens would continue to receive more bailout money to finance its remaining debt.

    When Mr. Papandreou brought that tentative deal back from Brussels last week, the escalated protests and rioting on Greek streets were a sign that it was not something his people would easily stand for.

    Supporters of a return to the drachma note that the severe budget cuts of the last two years had resulted in almost closing the budget deficit — as long as interest payments on its debt are not counted.

    Stripping out interest payments, Greece is expected to register a budget surplus next year of 1.5 percent of its gross domestic product (compared with a budget deficit of 8 percent of G.D.P., when interest is counted), and that, in effect, would give it the freedom to stop paying its debts.

    It is an argument for defaulting on the debt and starting over, in other words. That sense of reborn autonomy is what lies behind the drachma movement that Mr. Serafeimakis is promoting.

    For more than a year, he has been educating himself about the euro. He has pestered economists and written passionate posts on obscure blogs, convinced that the benefits from a devaluation of Greek’s currency, while no doubt painful, would result in a return to growth more quickly than further wage cuts and layoffs.

    Outside the country, meantime, many prominent voices have argued for more than a year that it is impossible for Greece to regain competitiveness while clinging to the euro currency. They include prominent economists like Nouriel Roubini, Kenneth S. Rogoff and Martin Feldstein, as well as the investor George Soros.

    Now, a small but growing band of Greek economists, none of them very well known, is beginning to ask the same question: namely, whether the benefit of having a cheap currency under Greek control would outweigh the costs of defaulting on its debt and abandoning the euro.

    In a recent paper, Stergios Skaperdas, a Greek economist at the University of California, Irvine, argued that a cheaper drachma would stem imports, bolster exports and, crucially, give Greece the flexibility to control its own monetary policy and ease the effects of fiscal retrenchment.

    Mr. Skaperdas conceded that getting this view across remained a difficult one as many Greeks found it troubling to accept that their euro dream might be over.

    “For most Greeks, including economists, adopting the euro was like marrying a dream spouse — beautiful, intelligent, caring, even rich,” he said. “And then, rather suddenly, the marriage turned into a nightmare.”

    A euro divorce would carry substantial costs, most profoundly an immediate run on Greek banks. That is why mainstream Greek economists insist that there will be no such outcome.

    “There is no way that Greece leaves the euro — this will take us back many years,” said Yannis Stournaras, an influential economist in Athens who has advised past governments. “We would have a disorderly default, the debt would double — it is out of the question.”

    But in a recent study, Theodore Mariolis, an economist at Panteion University in Athens, argued that the No. 1 problem for Greece under the current system — ahead of debt sustainability, unemployment and the problems of a mismanaged public sector — was its international competitiveness, which he said had declined 30 percent since the country embraced the euro.

    Mr. Mariolis estimated that a 50 percent devaluation of the new drachma would soon erase this competitiveness gap.

    The views of Mr. Mariolis and Mr. Skaperdas have remained within the narrow confines of academia. Other economists, like Theodore Katsanevas, have taken a more aggressive approach by pushing their drachma solution on Greek television.

    “A Greek hotel room is two times as expensive as one in Turkey,” he said, ridiculing the notion that the steep wage cuts and public sector firings that are being demanded by Europe and the International Monetary Fund would restore competitiveness. “We are almost dead now — what we need is a resurrection.”

    In many ways, the drachma’s most passionate and well-known local proponent is also its most controversial.

    For the last two years, the media magnate George Kouris has used his flagship tabloid, Avriani, to run a relentless campaign that argues Greece is best off leaving the euro for the drachma.

    Mr. Kouris, owner of the country’s leading evening news channel, is a die-hard opponent of Mr. Papandreou, and he has been accused of pushing the drachma as a means to wipe out his group’s significant euro debts, a charge he denies.

    But he is insistent that the only way forward is for Greece to return to an earlier time.

    “The people who now support the euro are the people that put us into it and made us a sick country,” he said. “Before the euro, a bottle of water was 0.50 drachmas. Now it’s 1.70 euros. It is a tragedy.”