SS Euro
Posted: 19 Jan 2015, 22:30
Steaming full speed ahead towards the iceberg.
This is probably more visible to me than most as I get paid in Euro and repatriate it into £ in my UK bank accounts. So the ECB is looking like it's going to start Quantitative Easing with a statement due on Thursday at the monthly ECB meeting. The Euro is now trading at around €1.3 to the £ down from 1.23 when I took the job in June.
At the same time the Swiss National Bank just severed the self imposed peg with the Euro. Which means to me that they expect wild changes in the value of the Euro over the next few months as a result of QE.
Then the iceberg. The ECB will exclude Greece from the QE. Which means that the first and only true stimulus package to make the EU economy grow is being denied the Greeks. The statement will happen on Thursday. Did someone forget that the Greek elections are on Sunday? Or that this will massively play into the hands of Syriza? Or that, of the 74% of Greeks who support the Euro, this attempt to exclude the Greeks from the benefits of the Euro will play badly in the polls?
Or was it jus that the pressure finally hit the release valve and it was a case of blow the valve or blow the economy. Would one more month really have caused so much damage? It must do because I can't see any way that this message could possibly be interpreted by the Greeks as anything other than an attempt to "cast off" the Greeks from the core Euro Zone and make a two speed Euro. One for those who are doing well and one for those who are not. It may well be a case of "Portugal and Ireland don't bother applying" too.
I did say, those years before, that Greece was a matter of "when" not "if". It was believed that the austerity and draconian actions from the ECB would keep Greece in the Euro and that the electorate would "see the benefit" and vote to destroy their economy rather than leave a currency which can do nothing for them but harm them over the next 100 years. Perhaps the people will be told the truth. That those who are lending them money are those that hold their debt and that the Greek economy is now in surplus. It is like the bank which holds your credit card demanding you take a loan out to pay off the interest on your credit card whilst paying back only a small part of the debt, rather than clearing the card and paying the loan. They get interest on the loan and they take high interest on the credit card. BUT, for the rest of your life and your children's lives...... In the end the only one's who win are the financial institutions to whom Greece are paying more interest than debt. Both on the bonds and on the bailout.
So we are back where we began in 2010. Greece is tottering on the Brink, her banks are looking for refinancing again, but they are being held back from the stream of money being poured into the EU. It's like dying, slowly, of thirst, whilst the rich pour water into the desert to hope that some crops will grow.
The ECB and the rich nations of the Euro believe they now have a stable enough climate that they can dictate to Greece without major impact to the Euro. They believe that the PIIGS will not leave and will always just do as they are told. However the jokers in the pack are Spain and Italy. You could take Portugal, Ireland and Greece and wrap them into the Spanish debt with room to do it all over again. Spain is back to elections again this year and one of the parties is talking that investors have to take a haircut (loss) on 1 Trillion Euro of debt. Given that causing a haircut is effectively a default, it's unlikely that they will do it for less than 75%, which is what Greece did with their debt. If Spain make that happen they'll be forced out of the Euro. Spain is approx. $1.3tn GDP, Italy is approx. $2tn GDP and even more in debt than Spain. Forget Portugal and Ireland, making a bad misstep with Greece this month could cause total havoc in the Euro because there is time to see the true impact of Greece getting the boot by the time the Spanish go to the polls.
Interestingly the only election which will not be influence the EU or the Euro, this year, is the UK elections. They don't care that much about us and we don't care that much about them. Which is a very revealing status as to staying in the EU, isn't it???
This is probably more visible to me than most as I get paid in Euro and repatriate it into £ in my UK bank accounts. So the ECB is looking like it's going to start Quantitative Easing with a statement due on Thursday at the monthly ECB meeting. The Euro is now trading at around €1.3 to the £ down from 1.23 when I took the job in June.
At the same time the Swiss National Bank just severed the self imposed peg with the Euro. Which means to me that they expect wild changes in the value of the Euro over the next few months as a result of QE.
Then the iceberg. The ECB will exclude Greece from the QE. Which means that the first and only true stimulus package to make the EU economy grow is being denied the Greeks. The statement will happen on Thursday. Did someone forget that the Greek elections are on Sunday? Or that this will massively play into the hands of Syriza? Or that, of the 74% of Greeks who support the Euro, this attempt to exclude the Greeks from the benefits of the Euro will play badly in the polls?
Or was it jus that the pressure finally hit the release valve and it was a case of blow the valve or blow the economy. Would one more month really have caused so much damage? It must do because I can't see any way that this message could possibly be interpreted by the Greeks as anything other than an attempt to "cast off" the Greeks from the core Euro Zone and make a two speed Euro. One for those who are doing well and one for those who are not. It may well be a case of "Portugal and Ireland don't bother applying" too.
I did say, those years before, that Greece was a matter of "when" not "if". It was believed that the austerity and draconian actions from the ECB would keep Greece in the Euro and that the electorate would "see the benefit" and vote to destroy their economy rather than leave a currency which can do nothing for them but harm them over the next 100 years. Perhaps the people will be told the truth. That those who are lending them money are those that hold their debt and that the Greek economy is now in surplus. It is like the bank which holds your credit card demanding you take a loan out to pay off the interest on your credit card whilst paying back only a small part of the debt, rather than clearing the card and paying the loan. They get interest on the loan and they take high interest on the credit card. BUT, for the rest of your life and your children's lives...... In the end the only one's who win are the financial institutions to whom Greece are paying more interest than debt. Both on the bonds and on the bailout.
So we are back where we began in 2010. Greece is tottering on the Brink, her banks are looking for refinancing again, but they are being held back from the stream of money being poured into the EU. It's like dying, slowly, of thirst, whilst the rich pour water into the desert to hope that some crops will grow.
The ECB and the rich nations of the Euro believe they now have a stable enough climate that they can dictate to Greece without major impact to the Euro. They believe that the PIIGS will not leave and will always just do as they are told. However the jokers in the pack are Spain and Italy. You could take Portugal, Ireland and Greece and wrap them into the Spanish debt with room to do it all over again. Spain is back to elections again this year and one of the parties is talking that investors have to take a haircut (loss) on 1 Trillion Euro of debt. Given that causing a haircut is effectively a default, it's unlikely that they will do it for less than 75%, which is what Greece did with their debt. If Spain make that happen they'll be forced out of the Euro. Spain is approx. $1.3tn GDP, Italy is approx. $2tn GDP and even more in debt than Spain. Forget Portugal and Ireland, making a bad misstep with Greece this month could cause total havoc in the Euro because there is time to see the true impact of Greece getting the boot by the time the Spanish go to the polls.
Interestingly the only election which will not be influence the EU or the Euro, this year, is the UK elections. They don't care that much about us and we don't care that much about them. Which is a very revealing status as to staying in the EU, isn't it???