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Endless Supply of Rabbits? Greece to Make April 9 IMF Repayment; Bond Market Unimpressed; Tsipras Heads to Russia

IMG Auteur
Publié le 04 avril 2015
696 mots - Temps de lecture : 1 - 2 minutes
( 1 vote, 1/5 ) , 4 commentaires
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SUIVRE : Euro Eurozone Swaps
Rubrique : Opinions et Analyses

Greece to Make April 9 IMF Repayment

April 9th was one of the critical dates by which Greece was said to be out of cash. By now most expect these kinds of deadlines to come and go in belief the eurozone hat has an endless supply of rabbits.

Sure enough, Reuters reports Greece Says Ready to Make IMF Payment on April 9

Greece will repay a loan tranche to the IMF on time on April 9, its deputy finance minister said on Friday, seeking to quell fears of default after a flurry of contradictory statements on the issue in recent days.

Greece is fast running out of cash and its euro zone and International Monetary Fund lenders have frozen bailout aid until the new leftist-led government reaches agreement on a package of reforms.

That prompted the interior minister to suggest this week that Athens would prioritize wages and pensions over the roughly 450 million euro ($490 million) payment to the IMF, though the government denied that was its stance.

Euro zone officials then quoted Greece as saying it will run out of money on April 9, which the finance ministry denied.

"We strive to be able to pay our obligations on time," Dimitris Mardas told Greece's Skai TV. "We are ready to pay on April 9."

Adding to the confusion, German magazine Der Spiegel quoted a finance ministry general secretary, Nikos Theocharakis, as saying Greece would probably not pay next week's IMF tranche, prompting a further denial from the Greek finance ministry.
Bond Market Unimpressed

The bond market is unimpressed. Let's take a look at several durations.

Greece 10-Year Bond Yield



Greece 5-Year Bond Yield



Greece 2-Year Bond Yield



Notice the steep inversion in the yield curve. The 10-year yield is 11.91% while the 2-year yield is 23.57%.

This is a sign of default risk and the larger haircuts that shorter term durations will take vs. longer durations. Come in far enough and the bond prices are steep, but no longer inverted.

For example let's take a look at 3-month and six-month durations.

Greece 3-Month Bond Yield



Yield on the Greek 3-month bond is exceptionally high compared to the rest of the eurozone but at least it is not inverted compared to 10-year bonds.

However, the 3-month bond is inverted compared to the 6-month bond.

Greece 3-Month Bond Yield



Tsipras Heads To Moscow As IMF Withdraws Athens Staff

Zerohedge reports Tsipras Heads To Moscow As IMF Withdraws Athens Staff; Greek Default Risk Hits Post-Crisis High
Amid growing pressure from their 'Troika colleagues' with Eurogroup Chair Dijsselbloem noting there is "still a long way to go" on Greek proposals and The IMF withdrawing its staff in Athens; new prime minister Alexis Tsipras heads to Russia to meet with Putin early next week. As Kremlin spokesman, Dmitry Peskov noted - somewhat intriguingly - "Greece has not asked [Russia] for financial aid... yet," as Tsipras is expected to seek agreement for a 'road map' of initiatives on the political and economic levels. Greek default risk has resurged in the last few days to its highest since the last 'restructuring'...

Greek default risk hits post-crisis highs...


Odds of Default Surge

Back on January 28, Bloomberg stated Greece Credit Swaps Surge to Signal 70% Probability of Default. Odds have gone up since then.

Endless Supply of Rabbits?

Is there an endless supply of rabbits? I actually do not think so. Greece may not run out of money in April but it will run out of money by June in my estimation. That is less than three months away.

As I noted on February 11, Greece Needs Third Bailout to the tune of €53.8 Billion Needed.

I am convinced that Syriza will not agree to another bailout adding still more debt on top of the already unsustainable €323 billion pile. The extension granted to Greece runs out in June. In July a €3.5 billion payment is due the ECB, and in August another €3.2 billion payment is due the ECB.

Can Greece come up with €6.7 billion? I don't think so. All this extension did was give both sides more time to come up with an exit strategy.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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"Who gives a sh. about Merkel ? And or the suffering of her her her party ?"

The problem is counter-party exposure within the EU in the immediate circle and globally in the final analysis.
Merkel and company are barely holding on against those within Germany that are eager to leave the EU.
As German is the heavyweight in the EU group, their exit would trigger a vast cascade failure amongst all the EU member banks.
Consider the potential loss of Germany's Target2 account and its effect.
First thing to recognize is the EU is a banking union. The rest is just window dressing.
Because of the vast web of derivatives and inter-bank loans, an EU failure would initiate an almost instant global bank holiday.

Margaret Thatcher stated to the effect, "Socialism works until you run out of other people's money."
Then those dependent upon socialism turn real anti-social once the social distribution spigot gets turned off.
Imagine the after-effects of global rioting.
There is no money to re-build, replace or restore the infrastructure that will be destroyed.
Without confidence in the monetary system, there can be no global "Marshall Plan".



Do I care about Merkel and co.?
Not at all. Politicians come and politicians go.
The bureaucracy goes on forever until the monetary system fails.
It is that failure I dread.

Keep in mind that Luxemburg's economy includes an appreciable finance sector.
Then there is that proximity to France issue.
Otherwise Luxemburg could weather out a pretty serious financial storm.

Russia is a survivor.
This latest round of sanctions will only give Russia more reason to turn inward and secure their future without developing a dependence upon the international community.
But even that might not be completely necessary due to BRICs bank and AIIB participation.
Putin seems to be the glue holding the country together, but don't underestimate the work being done by Elvira Nabiullina (sp?).

Greetings to you as well from Alaska, formerly Russian America.
Is there a solid connection between the USA acquiring Russian America and the Crimean War?
Many connections between Alaska and Russia still persist.
There is the Bering Coastal native connection as well as a substantial former USSR ex-patriot base.
And no, I can't see Russia from my kitchen window. (Gratuitous dig on Palin).

Everything is connected to everything.
Everything has to go somewhere.
There ain't no such thing as a free lunch.

Yah, I'm obviously a bit paranoid about the future.
Commerce is the key.
Production and trade will be our only hope for a brighter future after the coming stormy transition.
Start locally and expand.
Develop trading partnerships.
Trade for the sake of trading.
But never forget security.
It is not free.
Someone paid for it and usually that payment was taken by threat from the person who actually earned it.

However, even the National Parks Service, Fish and Game as well as other agencies are quick to tell us,
"Don't feed the animals. It habituates them to hand-outs."
In that respect you are exactly correct.
I probably should have let it go with the first post, but ...,

Consider Angela Merkel.
If she caves in to Greece, her political career and her party will suffer.
If she holds fast, Greece will default.
The German citizenry get a hefty tax increase.
If Greece should magically make the payments by alluding to cuts in the ozone layer,
everyone saves face.
Taxation laws throughout the EU can be tweaked to cover debts incurred by deception over Greece's ability to make sort of timely payments.
Nothing can be obvious.
Maybe buried in the footnotes on page 179.
And even then just an allusion to something else, but not named. Don't offer anyone a search string.

Oh and the Merkel angle?
You addressed that in your own articles.
And not that you need my agreement on anything, but your logical reasoning on the Merkel aspect is sound.

Everyone needs to understand the paraphrased "Laws of Thermodynamics".
Everything is connected to everything. ... Can we grasp the concept of counter-party risk?
Everything has to go somewhere. ... Where do we dump this load of crap?
There ain't no such thing as a free lunch. ... No 100% efficiency. Just entropy aka the "Law of Diminishing Returns". The effects are inversely exponential. Pump in more and more to only get less and less.

At one time the correct term was "political economy" and nobody was foolish enough to call it a science.
But that was in the old days before the language was corrupted.
I gave you a 1 star rating because you are delusional.
What part of smoke and mirrors do you fail to understand?

The EU can't afford Greece to default in the public purview.
Double entry book-keeping wasn't designed for the purposes of divulging data, but rather to obfuscate.
The monasteries wanted Rome to think they were heavily in debt.
If you can't dazzle them with brilliance, then baffle them with bullshit.
How do you think Greece was able to con their way into the EU?

Do you understand that all parties have a serious need to kick the can further down the road without letting the ignorant masses grock it out?
Obviously not!
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"Who gives a sh. about Merkel ? And or the suffering of her her her party ?" The problem is counter-party exposure within the EU in the immediate circle and globally in the final analysis. Merkel and company are barely holding on against those within Ge  Lire la suite
overtheedge - 11/04/2015 à 19:21 GMT
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