Fermer X Les cookies sont necessaires au bon fonctionnement de 24hGold.com. En poursuivant votre navigation sur notre site, vous acceptez leur utilisation.
Pour en savoir plus sur les cookies...
Cours Or & Argent

Greece's Debt: Guess Who Pays in the End?

IMG Auteur
Publié le 27 janvier 2015
523 mots - Temps de lecture : 1 - 2 minutes
( 2 votes, 5/5 ) , 1 commentaire
Imprimer l'article
  Article Commentaires Commenter Notation Tous les Articles  
0
envoyer
1
commenter
Notre Newsletter...
SUIVRE : Euro Eurozone France
Rubrique : Marchés

Greek debt will not be renegotiated just because Syriza won. So it will default, in the end, because Greece cannot pay...

 

SO GREECE is apparently "set on collision course" with its Euro partners after Sunday's "comprehensive victory" by Syriza...the "radical, far-left party",.

 

Just for the record, Greece has been "colliding" with Germany, France and the rest since 2010. Syriza won only 149 out of 300 seats in parliament, and it only gained 36% of total votes. It must lead a coalition to take power. 

 

As for "far left", Syriza looks more "socialist" than "Maoist" to me. You can spot that because the word "naive" would also fit very well. 

 

Still, calling Syriza "radical" today...just for wanting to free a little of Greece's future from the debt bubble of a decade ago...shows how much power creditors hold.

 

Those creditors will lose in the end. You can be sure of that. 

 

But for Greece today...as for most everywhere else...a Biblical debt jubilee looks a long way off. I fear there's a lot more pain, arguing and strife to get through yet. 

 

Syriza is also guilty of hype this morning, of course. "Your mandate," party leader Alexis Tsipras told supporters, "is undoubtedly cancelling the bailouts of austerity and destruction." 

 

Really, a mandate? With barely one Greek vote in every three? 

 

Outside Greece, the Eurozone's political leaders don't think Tsipras won a mandate for change either. Its political leaders told him as much last night when they called to congratulate.

 

Greece's other big lender, the IMF in Washington, also agrees...unwittingly (and correctly) forecasting a mass cancellation of debt sometime in the future by saying it "rules out special treatment for Greece."

 

Meantime, financial markets also think nothing has changed. Gold and silver are lower today as the Euro rallies from new 11-year lows. Germany's stock market is hitting new all-time highs. London's FTSE100 just enjoyed its best week since 2011.

 

Yes, Greek bond yields are higher as bond prices fall. But only by 0.4 percentage points, and way below the record levels of 2012.

 

"Relax," says a fund manager with asset-management giant Blackrock. "There's nothing to fear from Greece." 

 

We agree. Do not fear Greece...and do not fear its coming debt default. Fear instead the Eurozone and IMF delays, risking more anger and violence as they delay the inevitable. Because when debtors can't pay...or their children and grandchildren refuse to...then the creditor must.

 

Short term there's a little profit-taking in gold and silver derivatives this morning. After all, net speculative betting on gold had jumped last week to sudden two-year highs. BullionVault users, overall, are small net sellers of vaulted metal so far today as well. But further ahead, physical bullion owned outright will remain...as always...the only tradable asset class which cannot go bust.

 

Contrast that with bonds, bank deposits, derivatives contracts or any other investment requiring someone else to stay solvent for its value.

 

Yes, gold and silver pay no interest. But that is an inevitable consequence of lacking debt-default risk...a risk which a small but growing number of people are choosing to insure against by holding at least some of their savings in physical bullion.

 

Données et statistiques pour les pays mentionnés : France | Tous
Cours de l'or et de l'argent pour les pays mentionnés : France | Tous
<< Article précedent
Evaluer : Note moyenne :5 (2 votes)
>> Article suivant
Publication de commentaires terminée
  Tous Favoris Mieux Notés  
I have read better analysis from Adrian: Greece is in an extremely strong position and the EC has to give in. If Greece leaves and defaults on its debt it might become as successful as Iceland and Spain and Italy will be eager to follow in which case the EC will experience a RUD. Greece could also and is already preparing to do so, block the sanctions against Russia which will save the EC billions which than can be diverted to Greece.
Evaluer :   1  0Note :   1
EmailPermalink
Dernier commentaire publié pour cet article
I have read better analysis from Adrian: Greece is in an extremely strong position and the EC has to give in. If Greece leaves and defaults on its debt it might become as successful as Iceland and Spain and Italy will be eager to follow in which case the  Lire la suite
belville1907 - 28/01/2015 à 02:22 GMT
Note :  1  0
Top articles
Flux d'Actualités
TOUS
OR
ARGENT
PGM & DIAMANTS
PÉTROLE & GAZ
AUTRES MÉTAUX
Profitez de la hausse des actions aurifères
  • Inscrivez-vous à notre market briefing minier
    hebdomadaire
  • Recevez nos rapports sur les sociétés qui nous semblent
    présenter les meilleurs potentiels
  • Abonnement GRATUIT, aucune sollicitation
  • Offre limitée, inscrivez-vous maintenant !
Accédez directement au site.