Showing posts with label EFSF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EFSF. Show all posts

Monday, April 16, 2012

Remerging EU Debt Crisis in Spain Will Damage Stocks



The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

The yield on Spanish 10-year government debt was as high as 6.16% on Monday. Credit default swaps on Spanish debt hit a record even though the peak yield on the 10-year was 6.70% on November 25, 2011. After a big selloff on Friday, stocks were rallying on Monday despite the new emerging crisis in Europe.

The 6% yield level is watched closely because when rates went over that level in Greece, the Greek debt crisis emerged. Spanish 10-year yields were over 6% three times last year. Prior to last November they reached 6.32% on July 8, 2011 and 6.28% on August 4, 2011. The ECB (European Central Bank) has intervened directly in bond markets under its Securities Market Program (SMP) to hold down interest rates in the peripheral countries. At least one Spanish official has called for a renewal of these efforts.

The ECB also established the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) and the European Financial Stabilisation Mechanism (EFSM). Massive money-pumping operations have also been conducted through the two LTROs (Long-Term Refinancing Operations), one for $645 billion and a second for $713 billion.  The massive liquidity coming out of Europe has led to the recent global market rally. This will be just one of its unintended consequences. Later on we will be experiencing a large uptick in consumer price inflation as another.

While the inflation caused by the ECB is likely to last, the lower interest rates aren't. Spain has now broken above the 6% line in the sand four times. Portugal has never even gotten down to that level. Its 10-year governments were yielding 12.7% on Monday. So far they have peaked at 17.4% on January 30th. Italian 10-year governments have also yielded over 7% last November and this January, but were driven back down to below 5%. They are now rising rapidly again and heading toward 6%.

European stock markets were damaged significantly on Friday and the U.S. markets to a lesser degree. Despite the ongoing bad news markets across the pond were rallying today. And why shouldn't they. Another bailout (and another bailout and another bailout and another bailout and even another bailout) is expected. So far, even with the massive amounts of printed money thrown at the bond markets in the peripheral countries, the debt problems keep emerging . And now the global stock market rally looks like it is beginning to fray around the edges.


Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Monday, January 16, 2012

The EU Has Fallen Into a Liquidity Trap and It Can't Get Up



The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

While the EU is still reeling from S&P's downgrade of the sovereign debt of nine of its members on January 13th and the latest talks to keep Greece afloat have hit a wall, there is an even bigger problem with the effectiveness of its stimulus programs -- the money is just not finding its way into the economy.

Global markets were jubilant in December when the ECB (European Central Bank) pumped 490 billion euros of three-year loans into the EU banking system. These funds were used by eurozone banks to buy high-risk government debt from the struggling peripheral countries. This indeed caused a temporary decline in interest rates, especially for Spain and Italy. Money from this program and other EU stimulus measures is stuck in the banking system however and it is doing little to keep the EU from sinking into a deep recession. As of Monday January 16th, the ECB had 493 billion euros on overnight deposit -- more than the entire December stimulus package.

Large amounts of funds on deposit at any central bank are an indication of a crisis in the banking system. Before the current EU debt crisis, eurozone banks usually kept only around 100 million euros on deposit at the ECB. Even during the height of the 2008 Credit Crisis, EU banks kept only around 33% of money lent out by the ECB on deposit. The percent now is over 70% (the ECB has lent out 664 billion euros in total) meaning things are in much worse shape in the EU than they were after Lehman Brothers collapsed. When money is trapped in the banking system, the economy suffers and extra stimulus measures don't help to revive it. EU money-printing measures meant to rescue its profligate debt-ridden members aren't likely to help its economy, which in turn will result in a self-feeding cycle of more and more debt (as happened in Japan during the last two decades) or more and more money printing (as has been taking place in the U.S. since the 2008 Credit Crisis). Like the U.S., the EU has run out of borrowing power, so debt without money printing is no longer an option.

Weaker economies mean more downgrades from the ratings agencies can be expected. On Friday, both France and Austria lost their coveted triple A ratings from S&P. They were downgraded a notch as was Malta, Slovakia and Slovenia. Italy, Spain, Portugal and Cyprus were downgraded two notches. Italy is now rated BBB+. The only countries in the eurozone that still have triple A ratings are Germany, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and Finland. S&P put the later three on negative outlook for a possible future downgrade however. The EFSF bailout fund itself may also be downgraded.

The current debt crisis that is now impacting the entire eurozone started in Greece in late 2009. The problems there have yet to be fixed despite numerous mainstream media reports to the contrary in the last two years. Greece is now on financial life support. Any missed bailout payment from the EU will send it immediately into default. Talks have broken down once again, but as before will once again be resuming shortly. The market has never been convinced that any of the proposed Greek bailouts will work.  On Monday, Greek one-year government bond yields hit a high of 416% and 10-year yields a high of 35%. These rates have continued to rise after each bailout proposal. Greece has to make substantial bond payments this March.

The EU's debt crisis is not getting resolved because it is no more possible to solve a debt crisis with more debt than it is to sober up a drunk by giving him more alcohol. Yet, every mainstream news article has comments from well-placed sources that are hopeful that some resolution will be coming to the EU's problems soon. Rarely is it mentioned they have been hopeful -- and wrong -- for the last two years as the situation has increasingly deteriorated. Nor is it mentioned that the Japanese with similar problems in their financial system have now been hopeful for twenty years that their economy will fix itself. Wishful thinking doesn't fix markets, nor do plans involving spining straw into gold -- no matter what central bankers and their toadies claim.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, December 9, 2011

New EU Plan is Much Ado About Nothing

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Once again the EU has come up with a too-little, too-late solution to deal with its very serious debt crises. Proposals for a tighter fiscal union and the small amount of funds committed will only delay the inevitable default.

Treaties only have meaning if their terms are actually followed. The eurozone already has a treaty that created it. That treaty has very clear fiscal benchmarks that all members must follow. The key benchmark concerning a maximum 3% debt to GDP ratio for an annual budget was almost universally ignored by all member states. Greece was only the most extreme example. It finally admitted to lying about its numbers (it was not "caught in the act" by the central EU head office even though the numbers it submitted were too good to be true). Greece originally reported a projected debt to GDP ratio of 2.0% for 2009. After many revisions, it turned out to be 15.4%. It was not punished for its duplicity or major violation of EU accords; instead it has been offered three bailout packages so far.

The new treaty provisions once again state that the eurozone countries need to have a balanced budget and should not violate the 3% debt to GDP limit. This wasn't enforced the first time and there is no reason to believe that it will be enforced the second time either. This time however the new treaty states that there will be automatic consequences, including possible sanctions. I'm sure they all had a good laugh about those possible sanctions. This is a complete and total joke and should be treated as such.

As for the current amount of money proposed to rescue the over indebted EU countries, it is much too inadequate to be more than a temporary stopgap measure (the only thing the Europeans seem capable of doing). The debt problem for the troubled EU countries -- Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Spain -- runs into the trillions. How much is on the table now --  €200billion. The EU will loan this amount to the IMF, which will in turn use it to provide the same amount of aid back to the EU.  Not only is this is a paltry sum, it is disturbing they need to engage in a financial shell game as part of their bailout attempts. Even more absurd is that the ESM (European Stability Mechanism), set up to handle the debt crisis, will be capped at €500 billion. What will happen when they run out of this money and there is still a large amount of debt in danger of defaulting?

The problem with debt crises is that the amount needed to handle them is a moving target. It keeps rising and rising with time because interest rates keep rising and this makes borrowing costs continuously more expensive. Greek one-year bond yields are at 353% today. Even with three rescue packages, they continue to climb toward the stars. Immediately after the announcement of each rescue plan, yields dropped significantly for a short period of time, then they went much higher than they had been before. Expect to see this pattern with the other EU debt crisis countries. The EU is very good at getting its problems under control for a few weeks with its band aid measures.  Expect its current efforts to be another short-term success that turns into a long-term failure.


Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

EU Deal With Greece Falling Apart

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

The market lost its rose colored glasses today with Greece announcing a political referendum early in 2012 on the recent EU bailout deal. This could lead to the deal falling apart sooner rather than later.  Stocks sold off on the news in Europe and the U.S. while interest rates rose in Greece and other troubled EU countries.

The deal that the EU put together last week to handle its debt ridden members and to help prop up its banks was essentially smoke and mirrors surrounding a house of cards. It had no chance to work in the long run and the best it could accomplish was to buy more time before the inevitable day of reckoning. The 50% haircut on Greek debt, plus $130 billion euros did provide Greece with enough funds to keep going. It did not stabilize the situation enough however to ensure another debt crisis didn't occur within the next few years. Nor was there any reason to believe that Italy, Spain, Portugal and Ireland wouldn't need a similar bailout in the future. The plans for recapitalizing EU banks were likely to create a credit crunch and send the EU into a deep recession before further steps were taken. The centerpiece of all the bailout operations  the EFSF (European Financial Stability Facility) was based on essentially printed money that was going to be leveraged. This was how the problem of too much debt was going to be solved.

While stock markets worldwide had huge rallies based on the "good" news that came out of the EU last week (traders like hearing about governments printing more money), they were giving back those gains on Tuesday. Both the German DAX and French CAC-40 were down over 4% in late day trading. The euro, which has held up remarkably well during the entire crisis was down over 1%. Big EU banks were getting slammed hard. France's Société Générale (FR:GLE) was down  almost 17%, Credit Agricole (FR:ACA) fell almost 13% and BNP Paribas (FR:BNP) dropped almost 12% .  Deutsche Bank (DB) was down over 6% and Commerzbank (DE:CBK) down over 10%. The U.S. S&P 500 was lower by a comparatively mild 2% in early going.

Bonds reacted more strongly. The yield on the safe haven 10-year U.S. treasury fell over 6% and the yield was barely above 2% in the morning in New York. Yields on trouble country debt in the EU were moving in the opposite direction. Italian 10-year governments traded over 6.25% (above 6% is considered a critical point of potential breakdown). Only buying from the ECB, which also included Spanish government debt, kept yields from soaring much higher. Yields in Greece were even more telling of the market's true opinion of the EU debt deal and its aftermath. Before the deal, yields on one-year Greek governments reached 193%. They had only fallen to 154% (no solvent country pays anywhere close to this amount) before the announcement of the Greek referendum. This yield peaked at 200% today (November 1st).

Panic was caused by the proposed referendum in Greece because polls show that the terms reached with the EU and IMF are highly unpopular with the Greek people. Even though they have gotten an incredibly good deal, the average Greek is focused on the additionaly years of austerity that would be required on Greece's part.  Apparently, neither the Greeks, nor the markets like hearing that there is no free lunch.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

It's a 50% Default for Greece

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

EU leaders have agreed to seek a 50% reduction in Greek debt from bondholders. This supersedes the 21% reduction decided on in July that was supposed to resolve Greece's financial problems. Apparently $30 billion will be given to the banks as an inducement for them going along with the plan. The EU and IMF will also give Greece an additional 100 billion euros in bailout aid.

While the announcement was delivered with a sense of finality, the first bailout of Greece in May 2010 was supposed to solve Greece's debt problems and so was the second bailout this July. It has only taken three months since the  "everything is really fixed now" July announcement before a much bigger bailout and debt writedown proved to be needed. Until fairly recently, EU officials have constantly denied that this would be necessary or that Greece would default. Not paying 50% of your bond debt is not only a default, but it's a major default.

EU officials still seemed mathematically confused about the situation in Greece. EU President Van Rompuy claimed that the current deal will reduce Greece's debt to GDP ratio to 120% by 2020. If so, Greece is still likely headed for more trouble. Since it is estimated that Greece's debt to GDP ratio is around 160%, it should fall to 80% if all bondholders took a 50% hit. Perhaps all bondholders will not be taking a reduction after all. Both the IMF and ECB hold large amounts of Greek government debt and have in the past been reluctant to accept any writedown of their investments.

The pre-dawn news for the EFSF (European Financial Stability Fund), which is supposed to receive 440 billion euros, is that it will be leveraged up to a trillion euros. The U.S. has been pressing for two trillion. This money can be spent to bail out all the EU banks hurt by the Greek default, but only if they can't raise additional capital in the open markets. So the debt problem will be solved by incurring additional debt and borrowing against it. If this isn't a financial system ticking time bomb, nothing is.

The unanswered question is what is going with happen to Portugal (the next most likely crisis), Ireland, Spain and Italy. EU officials tried to minimize the situation by saying Greece is a special case. It would have been more accurate to say that its problems were more extreme and urgent. They are not unique.  The other countries are already somewhere on the path to insolvency and this will have to be dealt with in the future. The only question is how soon that future will arrive. 

 Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Can the EU Solve Its Debt Crisis with More Debt?

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

European and U.S. stocks were rallying on Friday in what appears to be a liquidity frenzy supplied by the central banks. The market is once again hopeful now that EU leaders are beginning six days of meetings on how to save Greece and the euro. Based on their previous track record, which has led to the current crisis, there is little reason for long-term optimism.

Stock prices have not been the only thing rising lately.  Interest rates have been too in the credit- challenged Eurozone countries. While yields of Greek one-year governments have fallen back to only 180%, they were as high as 189% on October 19th. Greek two-years are at a more manageable 77%. Rates keep increasing in Greece despite the bailouts and this indicates the bailouts aren't nearly large enough and will have to continue and get bigger to keep the country out of default.  The political will for ongoing and ever-larger amounts of bailout money doesn't exist in the EU or does it?

While the EU voting public doesn't approve of spending more rescue money, the EU has created the EFSF (European Financial Stability Facility) a 440 billion euro fund to help bail out its member countries that have debt problems and to bail out the banks that lent them the money that allowed them to have those debt problems. Much remains to be decided on how the EFSF will actually function. There is disagreement of how to use it to bail out failing banks for instance (this is currently being referred to as recapitalization since bank bailouts are also unpopular with voters). There is also a proposal to leverage EFSF funds up to five times, so there will be more than two trillion euros available. This idea is apparently a "helpful" suggestion made by the U.S. monetary authorities.

While the stock market is showing almost as much enthusiasm for the leveraged bailout proposal as it did for the great innovation of triple A rated subprime mortgages in the mid-2000s, such financial trickery ended badly the first time and is likely to fall apart even faster this time. Mainstream media coverage, at least in the U.S.,  rarely looks at where the money is coming from for the EFSF. Technically, the money is being borrowed. So in order to deal with a debt crisis that is wreaking havoc on the financial system because of too much risk, more money will be borrowed and then that money will be leveraged (a form of borrowing in and of itself) to magnify the risk of the new borrowing. If this appears not to make any sense at all, that's because it doesn't. When the default comes — and there is 100% chance that it will —  the end will be much, much worse.

A case can be made however that the EFSF money isn't really borrowed, but a form of money printing instead. If governments borrow without the ability to actually pay back the money without inflating their currency, they are printing money. EU countries are already highly indebted just like the United States (Japan is in even worse shape). The fact that there is a debt crisis in a number of Eurozone countries is confirmation that the level of debt is beyond the point of no return. So a more accurate portrayal of what is going on with the EFSF is that money will be printed, this counterfeit money will be leveraged by borrowing against it and this will solve the problem of too much debt. 

The world has already lived through a debt binge in the early 2000s. The current crisis centered in Europe is simply a continuation of the unraveling of that debt. Governments handled the first implosion with trillions of dollars of bailouts, by running trillions of dollars in budget deficits, and by printing trillions of dollars of money. Debt problems keep resurfacing however. Could it be that engaging in additional reckless and irresponsible financial behavior isn't a solution for reckless and irresponsible financial behavior? EU leaders may wish to ponder this before going forward. 

Disclosure: None


Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Markets Rally on Hopes of Huge EU Bailout

  
The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

In a replay of the 2008 Credit Crisis, global stock markets are now rallying strongly after a huge selloff last week. This pattern was common in late September and all during October three years ago. It seems to be replaying itself again in 2011. Huge moves down and up are common in severe bear markets.

As has happened many times so far, stocks are rallying on "hopes" of a resolution to the Greek debt problem and liquidity issues with EU banks. The Greek prime minister has stated confidently that Greece will definitely receive the next tranche of money from the first bailout and his comments got a lot of positive press attention. The mainstream press failed to inform the public that Greek officials have consistently made "misleading" statements during the debt crisis and their credibility might be considered questionable. The next payment from the first bailout has been delayed because Greece broke the promises it made for meeting fiscal objectives. Instead of listening to Greek officials, investors should consider that Greece has a CCC credit rating the lowest sovereign debt rating in the world. If any country is going to default anywhere, it's Greece.

The numbers describing Greece's situation also speak for themselves and clearly indicate the inevitability of default.  Greece's debt to GDP ratio was 127% in 2009 in the early stages of the crisis. By the end of 2010, it was 143%. Reuters and a number of other sources report it as now around 160%. This rapid rise is taking place as Greece is getting €110 billion bailouts (the second one is in the works). Clearly the bailouts are not solving the problem, but merely slowing down an explosion of debt. Historically, once a country's debt to GDP goes over 150%, default seems to become inevitable.

The market keeps predicting default in Greece by setting astronomical interest rates. The one-year government bond had a yield of 138% on September 26th, down from its high of 142% on September 14th. Two-year debt was yielding 71% yesterday and the ten-year bond 24%. How can any entity pay these interest rates and avoid default?

All sorts of schemes are being discussed by EU leaders to handle the current crisis. There are rumors of a default plan that involves Greece paying back only half of its debt. EU officials described these rumors as just speculation, although in some cases the denials were less than firm. They also denied any enlargement of the EFSF (European Financial Stability Facility) — the EU's 440 billion euro bailout slush fund — was underway. The current global stock market rally got started when CNBC News reported that the EFSF would be leveraged up to eight-times and the European Investment Bank would issue bonds to buy up sovereign debt. The specific reaction to this report from one EU official was that it was "just bizarre". The big-money investing operations can make quite a bit of profits by planting "just bizarre" stories though because they can juice the markets up for a day or two. Then some bad news story appears and markets drop right back down. We've seen this pattern over and over again in the last two months.

At some point, the Greek debt crisis will be resolved. Until then, the EU will kick the can down the road as long as it can. At this point though, the can looks like it was run over by a freight train and then tossed around by a tornado. Greek debt holders will have to take a significant haircut on their debt and this means that banks in Germany and France will have to be recapitalized. Then something will have to be done to prevent the emerging defaults in Portugal and Ireland (both have already been bailed out once) and prevent the situation in Spain and Italy from getting bad enough to need a bail out. This will take a lot of money,  much more than the €440 billion in the EFSF.  Where will this money come from? It's quite simple — it will be printed.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.