‘I
wish that I had an "aha moment" to share with you today, but instead
all I have is an "ack moment" to share. As I was analyzing all
of the info coming out of Europe in recent days, I came to the following
realization: "Ack! They are actually going to let Greece
default!" The only question is whether it is going to be an orderly
default or a disorderly default. Of course the EU (led by Germany) could
save Greece financially if it wanted to. But Germany has decided against
that course of action. Many in the German government are sick and tired
of pouring bailouts into Greece and then watching Greek politicians fail to
fully implement the austerity measures that were agreed upon. At this
point a lot of German politicians are talking as if a Greek default is a
foregone conclusion. For example, Michael Fuchs, the deputy leader of
Angela Merkel's political party, recently made the
following statement: "I don't think that Greece, in its current
condition, can be saved." But that is not entirely accurate.
Greece could be saved, but the Germans don't want to make the deep financial
sacrifices necessary to save Greece. So instead they are going to let
Greece default.
Many
prominent voices in the financial world that have been watching all of this
play out are now openly declaring the Greece is about to default. Moritz
Kraemer, the head of S&P's European sovereign ratings unit, made the
following statement on Bloomberg Television on Monday:
"Greece will default very shortly. Whether there will be a solution at the
end of the current rocky negotiations I cannot say."
You
might want to go back and read that again.
One
of the top officials at one of the top credit rating agencies in the world
publicly declared on television that "Greece will default very
shortly."
That
should chill you to your bones.
If
the EU allows Greece to default, that would be a signal to investors that the
EU would allow Italy, Spain and Portugal to all default someday too.
Confidence
in the bonds of those countries would disintegrate and bond yields would go
through the roof.
Right
now, confidence in government debt is one of the things holding up the fragile
global financial system. Governments must be able to borrow gigantic
piles of very cheap money for the system to keep going, and once confidence is
gone it is going to be incredibly difficult to rebuild it.
That
is why a Greek default (whether orderly or disorderly) is so dangerous.
Investors all over the world would be wondering who is next.
At
the end of last week, negotiations between the Greek government and private
holders of Greek debt broke down.
Negotiations are scheduled to resume Wednesday, and there is a lot riding on
them.
The
Greek government desperately needs private bondholders to agree to accept a
"voluntary haircut" of 50% or more. Not that such a
"haircut" will enable the Greek government to avoid a default.
It would just enable them to kick the can down the road a little farther.
But
if Greece is able to get a 50% haircut from private investors, then why
shouldn't Italy, Spain, Portugal and Ireland all get one?
Once
you start playing the haircut game, it is hard to stop it and it rapidly erodes
confidence in the financial system.
This
point was beautifully made in a recent article by John
Mauldin....
So our problem country goes to its
lenders and says, "We think you should share our pain. We are only going
to pay you back 50% of what we owe you, and you must let us pay a 4% interest
rate and pay you over a longer period. We think we can do that. Oh, and give us
some more money in the meantime. And if you refuse, we won't pay you anything
and you will all have a banking crisis. Thanks for everything."
The difficult is that if our problem
country A gets to cut its debt by 50%, what about problem countries B, C, and
D? Do they get the same deal? Why would voters in one country expect any less,
if you agree to such terms for the first country?
But if Greece is able
to negotiate an "orderly default" with private bondholders, that
would be a lot better than a "disorderly default". A disorderly
default would cause mass panic throughout the entire global financial system.
One key moment is coming up in
March. In March, 14 billion euros of Greek debt is scheduled to come
due. If Greece does not receive the next scheduled bailout payment, Greece
would default at that time.
But the EU, the ECB and the IMF are not
sure they want to give Greece any more money. There are a whole host of
austerity measures that the Greek government agreed to that
they have not implemented.
Since the Greeks have not fully honored
their side of the deal, the "troika" is considering cutting off
financial aid. The following comes from the New
York Times....
Officials from the so-called troika of
foreign lenders to Greece — the European Central Bank, European Union and
International Monetary Fund — have come to believe that the country has neither
the ability nor the will to carry out the broad economic reforms it has
promised in exchange for aid, people familiar with the talks say, and they say
they are even prepared to withhold the next installment of aid in March.
But the austerity measures that Greece has
implemented so far have pushed the Greek economy into a full-blown depression.
Greece is experiencing a complete and total economic collapse at this
point. The following comes from
the New York Times....
Greece’s dire economic condition can
hardly be overstated. After two years of tax increases and wage cuts, Greek
civil servants have seen their income shrink by 40 percent since 2010, and
private-sector workers have suffered as well. More than $75 billion has left
the country as people move their savings abroad. Some 68,000 businesses closed
in 2010, and another 53,000 — out of 300,000 still active — are said to be
close to bankruptcy, according to a report issued in the fall by the Greek
Co-Federation of Chambers of Commerce.
“It’s an implosion — it’s an endless
sequence of implosions from bad to worse, to worse, to worse,” said Yanis
Varoufakis, an economics professor at the University of Athens and commentator
on the Greek economy. “There’s nothing to stop the Greek economy losing 60
percent of its G.D.P., given the path it is at.”
But Greece is not the only one in
Europe with major economic problems. The unemployment rate for those
under the age of 25 in the EU is
an astounding 22.7%. And as I have written about previously,
there are a whole host of signs that Europe is on the verge of a major recession.
Greece is just the canary in the coal
mine. The truth is that the entire European financial system is in danger
of collapsing.
Today, it was announced that S&P
has downgraded the European Financial Stability Facility. It is pretty
sad when even the European bailout fund is getting downgraded.
Of course most of you know what
happened on Friday by now. Very shortly after U.S. financial markets
closed, S&P downgraded the credit ratings of nine
different European nations.
Only four eurozone nations (Germany,
Luxembourg, Finland, and the Netherlands) still have a AAA credit rating from
S&P.
But even more importantly, the
nightmarish decline of the euro
is showing no signs of stopping.
Right now, the EUR/USD is down to 1.2650. It is hard to believe how
fast the EUR/USD has fallen, but if a major financial crisis erupts in Europe
it is probably going to go down a whole lot more.
So what happens next?
Well, if there is a Greek default all
hell will break loose in Europe.
But even if Greece does not default,
the coming recession in Europe is going to put an incredible amount of strain
on the eurozone.
Many have been speculating that Greece
or Italy could be the first to leave the euro, but actually it may be the
strongest members that exit first.
The number of prominent voices inside
Germany that are calling for Germany to leave the euro continues
to increase.
In addition, public opinion in Germany
is rapidly turning against the euro. One recent poll
found that only 47 percent of Germans were glad that Germany joined the euro,
and only 36 percent of Germans want "a more federal Europe".
As this crisis continues to unfold,
there will probably be even more "ack moments". European
leaders have mismanaged this crisis very badly from the start, and there is no
reason to believe that they are suddenly going to become much wiser.
Once again, it is important to
emphasize the role that confidence plays in our financial system. The
entire global financial system runs on credit. Banks and investors lend
out money because they have confidence that they will be paid back. When
you take that confidence away, the system does not work.
Let us hope that the folks over in
Europe understand this, because right now we are steamrolling toward a credit
crunch that could potentially make 2008 look tame by comparison.’