Greece is far from being Europe’s only problem

By MoneyWeek Editor John Stepek Feb 21, 2012

John Stepek

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I don’t know about you, but I try to avoid giving binding commitments at 2:00 in the morning. Agreeing to anything important when you’re that tired and grumpy and had that much to drink is just asking for trouble.

Yet European leaders seem to be in the habit of concluding big bail-out deals in the wee small hours. It’s the ‘last negotiator standing’ tactic. Everyone gets so fed up and tired and has invested so much time and energy that they’ll agree to anything, just to get back to bed.

And that’s how, this morning, Greece was saved - again.

Greek citizens can look forward to years of grinding austerity and resenting Germans. Their debtors can look forward to writing off even more of their debts in the not-too-distant future.

But Europe is intact. And that’s what matters. Isn’t it?

Yet another ‘make-or-break’ moment for Greece

“Everyone understood that this was the moment of truth,” said Belgian finance minister Steven Vanackere at this morning’s Greek deal press conference.

Maybe ‘truth’ has a different meaning in Belgium. We’ve seen so many ‘moments of truth’ in the eurozone crisis that we’ve lost count. So what’s the latest one all about?

Greece is to get €130bn in aid. This is all meant to get Greece past a big bond redemption (in other words, when it’s due to repay a load of its debt) next month. Private sector bondholders have agreed to swap the bonds they hold now, for new ones. This will involve a ‘haircut’ of 53.5% on the face value of the bonds, up from the 50% agreed in October. They’re also set to get a lower interest rate on the new bonds than they’d previously hoped.

In exchange, Greece has agreed another €325m in spending cuts. There will be a permanent team of monitors in Athens, watching the nation’s finances. Greece will have to hold three months’ worth of debt payments in an escrow account, to make sure it prioritises paying off its debts and doesn’t blow the lot.


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Here’s where the problems start. After every ‘grand package’ announced by Europe, the loose ends are quickly revealed, and just as quickly, start to unravel. As noted above, that’s because these ‘deals’ are agreed at 2:00 in the morning, when no one is in a fit state to commit to anything.

Firstly, private sector bondholders need to agree to swap their bonds for the new ones. Secondly, Greece needs to suck up yet more austerity – so if there’s anything flammable left in Athens, don’t expect it to be there for much longer. Thirdly, every other government in the eurozone needs to approve the deal too.

Assuming this does all get passed, then Greece won’t go bust next month hopefully. But the chances of it ever getting back to any sort of sustainable debt position under current circumstances are frankly non-existent. The best-case scenario is for debt-to-GDP to come in at 120.5% by 2020. That’s if everything goes according to plan.

But do markets care?

So Greece is still doomed to default. It’s just a matter of time. But do markets really care anymore? The bail-out news didn’t make much difference to them, which suggests they’d already priced it in – or that they simply weren’t worried, regardless of the outcome.

Perhaps that’s understandable. Mario Draghi at the European Central Bank (ECB) has made it clear that he won’t allow banks to run out of money on his watch. The ECB is effectively doing quantitative easing, whether it admits it or not.

So chances are, we’re not going to have a Lehman Brothers moment in the eurozone. Banks have now had long enough to offload their exposure to Greece, and any other weak links, onto the ECB (and ultimately, the German taxpayer). And the ECB has shown that just like every other developed world central bank, it’s happy to print money. Hence the recent rally.

But we’d be wary of getting too excited about all this. Politics is of course, always going to be an issue. The markets are currently pricing in a ‘muddle-through’ scenario, where there’s the occasional hiccup, but the ECB smoothes everything over by printing money when needed.

If Greece gets fed up and votes for an anti-Europe party; or Germany does the same; or any of the other 15 countries in the eurozone do something similar; panic could return. And if the ECB becomes more hesitant about printing money, that’d probably be even worse.

But the real problem for now – as James Ferguson noted in a recent issue of MoneyWeek magazine - is that the European economy is going to endure a miserable time as banks embark on a much-delayed repairing of their balance sheets. This is a project that British and American banks started on far earlier than Europe’s did. And we’ve hardly had a pleasant few years.

With Europe’s banking system tightening credit, and the economy shrinking, that has to have a knock-on effect to the rest of the world, not least of all China. In the next issue of MoneyWeek – out on Friday - our roundtable experts look at the best ways to play the current market rally while protecting yourself from the potential downside. You can get your first three issues free here.

• This article is taken from the free investment email Money Morning. Sign up to Money Morning here .

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  • 1. David

    (21 February 2012, 10:48AM)  Complain about this comment

    The only issue that politicians routinely ignore is politics. In its' current form, it is clearly responsible for years of crass decisions which are arrived at by people terrified of losing power. Decisions made with fears will end in tears. The whole system of politics needs to be re-invented so that decisions are made for the RIGHT reasons. Greece is now temporarily hidden by the woods. The next to come out of the trees is Portugal, then Spain and Italy, Belgium and France until all the trees are gone and there's no air left to breathe. Hopefully, I'll have had my time by then! Pity my ancestors.......

  • 2. Michael

    (21 February 2012, 12:28PM)  Complain about this comment

    Would you go holidaying in Greece this year if you were from Germany. I don't think we have seen the end of social unrest!

  • 3. Lefty Goldblatt

    (21 February 2012, 03:02PM)  Complain about this comment

    Can Greece not sell themselves short?

    Just a phone call to JPM and they will set up that trade!!!

  • 4. Tom O'Neill

    (21 February 2012, 03:24PM)  Complain about this comment

    "If Greece gets fed up and votes for an anti-Europe party"
    Well, if the KKE (Communist Party) gathers enough electoral support by the end of March to be either a potential winner or at least a coalition party in government, the April elections may be forestalled by a Greek military coup. It has happened before - most recently in April 1967...

  • 5. Boris MacDonut

    (21 February 2012, 05:27PM)  Complain about this comment

    Let's just pause and think about this......... The EU, and to some extent the markets, think or hope that Greece is a special case.
    On the face of it,with Government debt at 176% of GDP it is. But the Eurozone also contains Ireland at 144% and with 13 times GDP as an external debt commitment, Belgium at 103% and rising, Austria at 80% and with grave exposure to bankrupt Hungary and the east, Spain.....enough said there, Portugal at over 100% and limping along. Even Holland and Luxembourg,ostensibly strong nations carry massive external debt. Funnily enough only Italy is reducing it's debt pile!!

  • 6. Alex

    (21 February 2012, 09:09PM)  Complain about this comment

    @David - would it not be better to pity your descendants?

  • 7. Orb

    (21 February 2012, 11:08PM)  Complain about this comment

    So, let's see if I got my sums right:

    Greece gets 130bn for 325m in cuts? Hmmm.... not sure that works!

    Is that the same as a years' unlimited supply of ice cream for taking one teaspoon of medicine?

    I never was any good at maths.

    Boris, yes, if you've done your homework, you'll know that as long as the markets let Italy be, it is in better financial shape than Germany.

  • 8. Crisis was planned

    (22 February 2012, 01:47AM)  Complain about this comment

    The crisis will be used to create political union. The Greeks are not allowed to leave.

    http://www.thedailybell.com/3629/EUs-Prodi-Admits-Euroleaders-Knew-Euro-Would-Cause-Difficult-Moments-The-Rest-Will-Follow-

  • 9. Lefty Goldblatt

    (22 February 2012, 08:02AM)  Complain about this comment

    Whether a “credit event” is a “default” triggering a payout is determined by the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA), and it seems that the ISDA is owned by the world’s largest banks and hedge funds. That means the house determines whether the house has to pay.

    http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/02/20

  • 10. SteveH

    (22 February 2012, 03:20PM)  Complain about this comment

    Do you think I can sensibly move some money safely back to BNP-Paribas from HSBC?
    As I understand it BNP have officially written of 70% of their exposure to Greece now, and have it covered by whatever means, so it sort of feels like they could survive losing the other 30% as and when Greece slips into default.

  • 11. Boris MacDonut

    (24 February 2012, 05:27PM)  Complain about this comment

    #7 Orb. You are correct. I have said for well over a year that the scaremongering about Italy is without substance. That economy is fundamentally sound.

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