
Thursday, February 26, 2015

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Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Tuesday, February 24, 2015
The Greeks were screwed to save the banks, now the banks are free, they are
being screwed to save EU taxpayers and the debt just keeps on growing, how
anyone thinks this makes sense I do not know....Grexit is inevitable. The only
question is when, and how? Many imagine Grexit will mean be a return to the
Drachma and cheap holidays in Greece and maybe even cheap property to buy in
Greece. The reality will be very different. You cant wind the clock back to
the nineties (some DT journalists think you can!). Most likely scenario is a
semi-orderly/disorderly retreat from the Euro. Starting this weekend with
drastic capital controls to prevent a run on Greek banks next week , in the run
up to the 28 Feb deadline. Followed by either a cut in Govt spending
(unlikely) or IOU’s and delayed payments for /salaries /pensions/ contracts from
the Greek govt.(more likely)
Reason being the Greek Govt budget is already at -12% at end of last year - they are bankrupt and this is set to go higher - Greek taxpayers aren’t paying their taxes …they are stuffing their spare Euros in offshore accounts or under the mattress, plus the social spending promised by Syriza– rehiring public employees, pensions at 50, free energy for some (the ones who voted for them). The introduction of capital transfer controls and IOU’s by Greek Govt will be de facto exit from Euro , although officially Greece wont leave the Euro and cant be kicked out… instead a dual currency economy will exist. You will still pay for your holiday in Greece this year in Euros… nothing will change for those parts of the Greek economy which are productive and competitive. Likewise real assets like property will keep their Euro value. A situation much like Cambodia for example – a third world country but with a competitive tourist industry. Tourists pay in Dollars and get dollars from ATM’s , but every time they pay with foreign currency they get their small change in local currency …ending up with a pile of useless local currency at the end of the holiday.
Unproductive parts of the Greek economy – public employees, pensioners, unemployed and the poor will have to use local, depreciating currency on a hand to mouth basis, like all banana republic currencies. But if you are a Brit- look on the bright side - the depreciation in the Euro , primarily due to this Greek fiasco, will result in holidays being 10-15% cheaper in2015 , as compared to 2014….
Reason being the Greek Govt budget is already at -12% at end of last year - they are bankrupt and this is set to go higher - Greek taxpayers aren’t paying their taxes …they are stuffing their spare Euros in offshore accounts or under the mattress, plus the social spending promised by Syriza– rehiring public employees, pensions at 50, free energy for some (the ones who voted for them). The introduction of capital transfer controls and IOU’s by Greek Govt will be de facto exit from Euro , although officially Greece wont leave the Euro and cant be kicked out… instead a dual currency economy will exist. You will still pay for your holiday in Greece this year in Euros… nothing will change for those parts of the Greek economy which are productive and competitive. Likewise real assets like property will keep their Euro value. A situation much like Cambodia for example – a third world country but with a competitive tourist industry. Tourists pay in Dollars and get dollars from ATM’s , but every time they pay with foreign currency they get their small change in local currency …ending up with a pile of useless local currency at the end of the holiday.
Unproductive parts of the Greek economy – public employees, pensioners, unemployed and the poor will have to use local, depreciating currency on a hand to mouth basis, like all banana republic currencies. But if you are a Brit- look on the bright side - the depreciation in the Euro , primarily due to this Greek fiasco, will result in holidays being 10-15% cheaper in2015 , as compared to 2014….
Monday, February 23, 2015

Sunday, February 22, 2015

At a joint press conference on Wednesday, OECD head Angel Gurria told Mr
Tsipras that his organisation would "work with Greece in getting growth back not
only on the books but also... to the Greek citizens". The government's plan also includes bond swaps
and a proposal to reduce the primary budget surplus target for this year to
1.49% of GDP, rather than the 3%.
Saturday, February 21, 2015
Greece and its European creditors reached Friday a deal over the country's request to extend its bailout that would keep the country from falling out of the euro bloc. An official close to discussions, who spoke only on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to comment publicly, says a deal was reached between the two sides at a meeting of finance ministers in Brussels. The official said that, as part of the agreement, Greece could "present a first list of reform measures by Monday" for the country's debt inspectors to assess.
European creditors have insisted that any extension to loans should be accompanied by a commitment to some budget measures and reforms. If the officials from the European Central Bank, International Monetary Fund and European Commission, say the list of measures presented Monday by Greece is acceptable, then eurozone finance meeting could discuss the issue by conference call on Tuesday. The breakthrough in the standoff between Greece and its creditors helped global markets, with the euro and stock markets in the U.S. rising. Friday's meeting was delayed by 4 hours as the finance ministers worked in clusters, where details of the statement were discussed. The developments come a day after Athens requested a six-month loan extension, which would allow Greece to pay its bills and avoid an eventual bankruptcy...
A bad day for Greece from the looks of it, another 4 months of pain in a fiscal straightjacket that they have no hope of ever escaping from. They are a long way off the levels of competitiveness required to stay in the EU and they are also now saddled with huge debt. Logic says exit but logic doesn't include the stubborn heads of the politicians. An exit is coming, it's just a case of when.
A total defeat for Greece actually:
1) The accord requires Greece to submit by Monday a letter to the Eurogroup listing all the policy measures it plans to take during the remainder of the bailout period, to ensure they comply with the conditions.
2) That drove ministers to make Greece hand over custody of nearly 11 billion euros in aid earmarked for stabilising its banks to the euro zone's rescue fund. "We wanted to make sure that the money for Greek bank recapitalisation is for that purpose, not for recapitalisation of the government," Dijsselbloem said.
3) "The Greeks certainly will have a difficult time to explain the deal to their voters," Schauble said.
But I cannot think why Germany has bothered. No way Greece can deliver any primary surplus, so all the next four months will do is prove that.
European creditors have insisted that any extension to loans should be accompanied by a commitment to some budget measures and reforms. If the officials from the European Central Bank, International Monetary Fund and European Commission, say the list of measures presented Monday by Greece is acceptable, then eurozone finance meeting could discuss the issue by conference call on Tuesday. The breakthrough in the standoff between Greece and its creditors helped global markets, with the euro and stock markets in the U.S. rising. Friday's meeting was delayed by 4 hours as the finance ministers worked in clusters, where details of the statement were discussed. The developments come a day after Athens requested a six-month loan extension, which would allow Greece to pay its bills and avoid an eventual bankruptcy...
A bad day for Greece from the looks of it, another 4 months of pain in a fiscal straightjacket that they have no hope of ever escaping from. They are a long way off the levels of competitiveness required to stay in the EU and they are also now saddled with huge debt. Logic says exit but logic doesn't include the stubborn heads of the politicians. An exit is coming, it's just a case of when.
A total defeat for Greece actually:
1) The accord requires Greece to submit by Monday a letter to the Eurogroup listing all the policy measures it plans to take during the remainder of the bailout period, to ensure they comply with the conditions.
2) That drove ministers to make Greece hand over custody of nearly 11 billion euros in aid earmarked for stabilising its banks to the euro zone's rescue fund. "We wanted to make sure that the money for Greek bank recapitalisation is for that purpose, not for recapitalisation of the government," Dijsselbloem said.
3) "The Greeks certainly will have a difficult time to explain the deal to their voters," Schauble said.
But I cannot think why Germany has bothered. No way Greece can deliver any primary surplus, so all the next four months will do is prove that.

Tsipras was scheduled to meet the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, in an attempt to hammer out a deal after he told her, following his election a little more than a fortnight ago, that he will lift draconian austerity measures, contravening the terms of the Greek bailout programme. Greece has failed so far to persuade European leaders that it needs more generous loan financing to alleviate poverty and to promote growth. Talks earlier his week between eurozone finance ministers reached a deadlock after plans put forward by Athens for cheaper long-term loans were rejected...The ECB has come under pressure to allow Greece to access short-term lending facilities after it said the crisis-hit country no longer qualified for drawing on standard borrowing terms. ECB officials declined to comment, but two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters that the provision of emergency liquidity assistance (ELA) by the Greek central bank would be authorized by the ECB as a temporary expedient... Merkel was scheduled to meet Tsipras privately on the sidelines of the one-day informal EU summit, which was meant to focus mainly on the Ukraine crisis and report back on negotiations in Minsk with the Russian president, Vladimir Putin. Tsipras’s position appeared to weaken before the summit after figures showed a shortfall in Greek tax receipts and a steady flight of savings from the country’s largest commercial banks. Finance ministry data showed tax revenues were €3.49bn (£2.58bn) in January, well below the €4.54bn target set under Greece’s latest budget. The grim data adds to concerns that Greece will run out of time and money before settling differences with European partners, who want Athens to stick with a debt plan that expires at the end of this month. Greek households withheld tax payments desperately needed by the new Athens government after it rejected the last payment worth €7.2bn under the existing bailout scheme. Greek banks have also been hit by a flight of capital to foreign-owned rivals in the runup to snap elections, which propelled Tsipras’s radical left party Syriza to the head of a coalition.
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