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Greece is now for sale

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Published : July 02nd, 2011
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Category : Editorials

 

 

 

 

And so the Ponzi scheme that has come to be known as the Greek money merry-go-round continues with German banks agreeing to continue the financing of an economy that will fail despite the fact that more money is being poured into it.

As part of the government’s fire sale we can officially say that Greece is now for sale. Here’s a graphic courtesy of CBC News that illustrates the extent of the privatization plan that the government voted through.





It is important to look at this lunacy one more time. Greece owes the rest of the world more than $500 billion US.

The Greek economy has contracted by 4.5% over the past year, seen the national unemployment rate jump to 16% and was in serious danger of defaulting on July’s debt obligations before George Papandreou was able to reshuffle his cabinet, gain the vote of confidence that his PASOK party so desperately needed and pass austerity measures that will cost the average Greek family of 4 roughly $4,000 US dollars a year.

The real question that remains now is whether or not the massive cuts and fire-sales announced by the government will actually curtail growth rather than spur it. I argue the prior.

Then we have the ECB’s recent tone with regards to interest rate hikes. Trichet has been hawkish of late talking up even more rate increases and the market is pricing one in for the next month. Here is a “zone” struggling with massive debt and the leader of its central bank wants to burden them even more with increased borrowing costs.

While the European Central Bank is the largest individual creditor, with about €49 billion ($70 billion) owed to it, Greek banks are the holders of approximately $100 billion (US dollars) of the country's total debt and they would most probably collapse under the weight of everyone trying to rush to get their money out in a default scenario. Next in line are the Germans and their banks and then there is France with two of its biggest banks also having large ownership positions in some over-exposed Greek Banks.

Back to Greece, my view remains unchanged from when their debt problem emerged last year. That is that they have simply borrowed so much money that they will never be able to pay it back and that at some point, a default on that debt will be inevitable. What Greece, The European Central Bank and the IMF were really doing is looking out for the banks. According to Barclay’s Capital, exposure to Greek debt is large and highly concentrated; “the top 10 names account for 50% of holdings, the top 30 for 70% and the top 40 for close to 72%.”

The following are at risk:

  • BNP Paribas holds about €5 billion ($7 billion) on its balance sheet;
  • Dexia, a French-Belgium-Luxembourg operation, comes second with €3.5 billion ($5 billion),
  • Italy’s Generali and Germany’s Commerzbank with €3 and €2.9 billion each respectively
  • France’s Societe Generale (€2.9 billion)
  • Axa (also French, €1.9 billion)
  • Deutsche Bank from Germany (€1.6 billion)
  • and the Royal Bank of Scotland (€1.1 billion)

This afternoon Germany’s biggest banks agreed on a proposal to “roll over” Greek debt holdings. In essence what that means is that they will be reinvesting money from maturing bonds into new Greek bonds. According to the deal, German banks have agreed to roll over at a minimum, the Greek bonds they’re holding that mature through 2014, which amount to about 2 billion euros ($2.9 billion). So you see, Greece is getting money not to pay their creditors or bond holders but in order to keep the banks alive because a roll-over of debt simply means an extension of the payback terms of the loan.

The money Greece has taken from the IMF and ECB since last year’s bailout did nothing to curtail their crisis. Is the world so naive to think that this tranche will have any different outcome?

For now the money shell game continues at the expense of the Greek people so that the banks can stay afloat.



Dan Dontrose

  

 

 

Data and Statistics for these countries : Germany | Greece | Luxembourg | All
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The government shouldn't have been in the business of buying businesses in the first place.
It's like a crack addict, but if the patient is ever going to recover, there is going to be a period of withdrawal. Hanging on to the broken socialist model is a guarantee for future failure, and only taps into yet another layer in the Ponzi scheme.
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