by John Aziz
So let’s assume Greece is going to leave the Eurozone
and suffer the consequences of default, exit, capital controls, a deposit
freeze, the drachmatization of euro claims, and depreciation.
It’s going to be a painful time for the Greek people.
But what about for Greece’s highly-leveraged creditors, who must now bite the
bullet of a disorderly default? Surely the ramifications of a Greek exit will
be worse for the international financial system?
J.P. Morgan — fresh from putting an LTCM alumnus in charge of a $70 trillion derivatives book (good luck with that) — is upping the fear about Europe and its impact on global finance:
"The main direct losses correspond to the €240bn of Greek debt in official hands (EU/IMF), to €130bn of Eurosystem’s exposure to Greece via TARGET2 and a potential loss of around €25bn for European banks. This is the cross-border claims (i.e. not matched by local liabilities) that European banks (mostly French) have on Greece’s public and non-bank private sector. These immediate losses add up to €400bn. This is a big amount but let’s assume that, as several people suggested this week, these immediate/direct losses are manageable. What are the indirect consequences of a Greek exit for the rest?
The wildcard is obviously contagion to Spain or Italy? Could a Greek exit create a capital and deposit flight from Spain and Italy which becomes difficult to contain? It is admittedly true that European policymakers have tried over the past year to convince markets that Greece is a special case and its problems are rather unique. We see little evidence that their efforts have paid off.
The steady selling of Spanish and Italian government bonds by non-domestic investors over the past nine months (€200bn for Italy and €80bn for Spain) suggests that markets see Greece more as a precedent for other peripherals rather than a special case. And it is not only the €800bn of Italian and Spanish government bonds still held by non-domestic investors that are likely at risk. It is also the €500bn of Italian and Spanish bank and corporate bonds and the €300bn of quoted Italian and Spanish shares held by nonresidents. And the numbers balloon if one starts looking beyond portfolio/quoted assets. Of course, the €1.4tr of Italian and €1.6tr of Spanish bank domestic deposits is the elephant in the room which a Greek exit and the introduction of capital controls by Greece has the potential to destabilize."
A multi-trillion € shock — far bigger than the fallout
from Lehman — has the potential to trigger a default cascade wherein busted
leveraged Greek creditors themselves end up in a fire sale to raise collateral
as they struggle to maintain cash flow, and face the prospect of downgrades and
margin calls and may themselves default on their obligations, setting off a
cascade of illiquidity and default. Very simply, such an event has the
potential to dwarf 2008 and 1929, and possibly even bring the entire global
financial system to a juddering halt (just as Paulson fear-mongered in 2008).
Which is why I am certain that it will not be allowed
to happen, and that J.P. Morgan’s histrionics are just a ponying up toward the
next round of crony-”capitalist” bailouts. Here’s the status quo today:
Greece no longer wants to play along with the game?
Okay, fine — cut them out of the equation. In the
interests of “long-term financial stability”, let’s stop pretending that we are
bailing out Greece and just hand the cash over to the banks. Here’s
my expected new normal in Europe:
After all — if the establishment is to be believed —
it’s in the interests of “long-term financial stability” that creditors who
stupidly bought unrepayable debt don’t get a big haircut like they would in a
free market. And it’s in the interests of “long-term financial stability”
that bad companies who made bad decisions don’t go out of business like they
would in a free market, but instead become suckling zombies attached to the
taxpayer teat. And apparently it is also in the interests of “long-term
financial stability” that a broken market and broken system doesn’t liquidate,
so that people learn their lesson. Apparently our “long-term financial
stability” depends on producing even greater moral hazard by handing more money
out to the negligent.
The only real question is whether or not it will just
be the IMF and the EU institutions, or whether Bernanke at the Fed will get
involved beyond the inevitable QE3 (please do it Bernanke! I have some crummy
equities I want to offload to a greater fool!)
"Have the 2008 bailouts cemented a new feudal aristocracy of bankers, financiers and too-big-to-fail zombies, alongside a serf class that exists to fund the excesses of the financial and corporate elite?"
And will the inevitable 2012-13 bailouts of European
finance cement this aristocracy even deeper and wider?
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