Quarta-feira, 16 de Maio de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 16 de Maio de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

Greek president warns of a bank run – and Spain’s spreads top 500bp for the first time

  • Greek parties fail in a last-ditch attempt to form a government;
  • there will be new elections, most like June 17;
  • decision followed an attempt by the Democratic Left to broker a deal, whereby ND and Pasok would renounce the promises they made in a letter to the EU;
  • the Greek election campaign has already started, with centrist leaders trying to portray the poll as a vote for or against the euro;
  • President Karolos Papoulias said he had been informed by the central bank governor that there was a danger of a bank run in Greece;
  • statistics show that Greece have stepped up bank withdrawals since the elections;
  • former Greek PM Costas Simitis says leaving the euro would be a disaster for Greece;
  • the caretaker Greek government has decided to service the current tranches of Greek international law bonds;
  • Cyprus has become the latest country to run into trouble with its banks, and is likely to request official help soon;
  • Francois Hollande was inaugurated as president, takes off to Berlin, and tells Angela Merkel that he really wants to renegotiate the fiscal pact;
  • he says the eurozone will miss its deficit targets without a stronger effort to raise growth;
  • he said all options, including eurobonds, will have to be carefully considered;
  • the German economy grew by 0.5% in Q1, helping the eurozone to achieve an overall rate of zero;
  • but experts warn that the German performance is unlikely to be sustained as the global economy turns down;
  • Hollande names the former German teacher Jean-Marc Ayrault as his prime minister;
  • Michel Sapin and Pierre Moscovici are considered the most likely candidates for the finance ministry;
  • the ECB and Germany are at loggerheads over what to do with the EFSF guarantees to the ECB during the Greek PSI;
  • Spain wants to co-opt the ECB into its bank resolution strategy;
  • five candidates are standing for the EBRD presidency, with the eurozone unable to announce its own candidate;
  • Fitch says another LTRO is needed because banks will not have deleveraged in time to repay the old one;
  • John Kay says economists’ notions of credibility was incompatible with democracy;
  • Robert Skidelsky, meanwhile, wonders what Keynes would have done.

Spain’s 10-year spread has risen to above 500bp this morning for the first time in the eurozone;

 

The big news yesterday were the announcement of new elections in Greece, and the extraordinary statement by the Greek president that the country may already be subject to a run (something that can easily become a self-fulfilling prophecy). As we are writing our newsbriefing this morning, the Spanish 10-year rose to over 500 basis points for the first time. The eurozone crisis is once again in a highly acute phase.

 

Greece is likely to hold elections on June 17, after party leaders failed on Tuesday to agree on the formation of a government despite efforts by President Karolos Papoulias to broker a last-ditch deal. After barely two hours, the meeting was over. Kathimerini reports that Democratic Left leader Fotis Kouvelis had put forward a proposal to break the deadlock during the meeting. SYRIZA leader Alexis Tsipras had argued that it was impossible for his party to form a government with PASOK and ND as their leaders, Evangelos Venizelos and Antonis Samaras, had given the EU and IMF written pledges to keep to the terms of the loan deal. Kouvelis suggested this could be overcome by Venizelos and Samaras giving fresh pledges to back the new government’s efforts to negotiate a gradual disengagement from the EU-IMF bailout. But the proposal was not backed.

 

Almost immediately after the meeting, Greek party leaders were in front of cameras and supporters in spirited pre-election campaign mode.  "The message you sent is clear: 'Yes' to the euro, 'No' to those policies which devastate the Greek people," Reuters quotes Samaras.   New Democracy sources told Kathimerini that during the campaign Samaras would focus his attacks on Tsipras rather than Venizelos. The conservatives believe that they have to turn the campaign into the question of staying in the euro or returning to the drachma. They will attempt to convince voters that SYRIZA’s economic policies would lead to Greece having to leave the eurozone.

 

Has the Greek president invited his countrymen to take part in a bank run?

 

 

He spoke the truth, but when it comes to the likelihood of bank run, you politicians to shut up.

It emerged yesterday that George Provopoulos, head of the Greek central bank, told President Karolos Papoulias that Greeks have withdrawn as much as €700m and the situation could worsen,Bloomberg reports. “Provopoulos told me that of course there’s no panic but there’s great fear which can evolve into panic,” Papoulias said. The ECB needs to step in to guarantee the deposits of the regional lenders to fend off contagion, Yannis Ioannides, economics professor at Tufts University, told Bloomberg TV.

 

Leaving the euro would be a “catastrophe” for Greece, with the risk of a run on banks, former Greek Prime Minister Costas Simitis is cited by Bloomberg. Banks would have to close for at least three months while preparations, including printing a new currency, are made, Simitis said, citing the views of “experts.”

 

In another development, the caretaker government in Athens decided to service the interest payment on the holdouts. The government this is not a decision, merely an acknowledgement that it is not in a position to take a decision.

 

Cyprus likely to tap the EFSF/ESM

 

 

Cyprus’s banks sustained huge losses as a result of the Greek debt write-down, with the two biggest, Bank of Cyprus and Laiki now being called upon to proceed with significant recapitalization measures. Bank of Cyprus is already close to its goal, though Laiki is still quite far off the mark, as it needs €1.8bn in fresh capital. Newly appointed Finance Minister Vassos Shiarly said the government was ready to discuss ways in which it could contribute, if the need arises. 

 

A €2.5bn loan from Russia has largely covered Cyprus’s financial needs for 2012, but this money is insufficient to bolster the banking system as well if the need arises. But the fiscal deficit is already behind target and Shiarly had to announce new measures to keep the deficit below 2.5%.  Given these developments, the likelihood of Cyprus having to resort to a support mechanism to ensure the domestic banking system has the necessary capital is no longer just theoretical, writesKathimerini.

 

Hollande insists that the fiscal treaty must be renegotiated

 

In his first meeting with Angela Merkel after being sworn in as president Francois Hollande insisted last night that the fiscal pact be “renegotiated”, Les Echos reports. According to the new French president the aim is “to integrate a growth dimension” into the treaty. “Our method is to put all ideas on the table and to see afterwards how they can be legally implemented”. By staying firm on his request to actually renegotiate the treaty that has already been ratified by several euro member states and not accept simply adding growth enhancing measures Hollande was tougher with the chancellor than many expected. But the president’s calculation appears to be that the chancellor is significantly weakened by her recent electoral defeats in state elections. Also Hollande warned “without growth we cannot respect the aims that we have fixed ourselves regarding the debt and the deficit”. As a candidate Hollande has repeatedly promised to bring the deficit to 3.0% in 2013 and to present a balanced budget by 2017. But the commission last Friday warned that without drastic additional measures the French deficit would be 4.2% next year.

 

France trails Germany in terms of the growth rate

 

 

New Eurostat figures showed a considerable difference between France and Germany in terms of growth rates, Le Figaro reports. While Germany grew by 0.5% in Q1 of 2012 the French rate was 0% for the same period. Germany pushed up the eurozone growth to 0%. However, certain experts caution that the German rate is no precursor to strong and sustained growth in Germany. Italy’s economy shrank by 0.8% and Spain by 0.3% in Q1 2012 according to Eurostat.

 

Hollande names Ayrault as prime minister

 

Francois Hollande yesterday nominated the former the Socialist’s former chief whip in parliament Jean-Marc Ayrault prime minister, Le Monde reports. The nomination of the former German teacher who is considered to be a pragmatic social democrat will reassure those in Germany and Europe who had feared a traditional left wing politician such as the Socialist’s former chairwoman Martine Aubry. Hollande and Ayrault are working on the government portfolios which will be attributed and announced today. According to Les Echos the finance ministry will either go to Michel Sapin, a former finance minister already under Francois Mitterrand, or to Pierre Moscovici, a former Europe minister in Lionel Jospin’s government. The foreign ministry could go to former French prime minister Laurent Fabius or to Moscovici if he does not get finance. According to Les Echos, Aubry may get a big ministry for education, research and culture.

 

ECB and Germany fight about €35bn of guarantees

 

The ECB and Germany clashed in Monday night’s eurogroup meeting on what to do with €35bn of guarantees the EFSF had given to the ECB during the time of the Greek PSI, when the ECB was no longer able to accept Greek government bonds as collateral, Financial Times Deutschland reports. Germany and the EFSF argue that the ECB should repay those guarantees since the PSI had been successfully implemented and only a handful of Greek bonds were still rated as selective default (SD). The ECB, however, refers to a treaty clause that says that it may keep the guarantees as some of the Greek SD bonds are still around. The ECB also argues that the uncertain situation requires keeping the guarantees. Germany thinks the ECB’s stance is “disproportionate” while the central bank says Germany is acting under pressure of the Bundestag.

 

Spain involves ECB in bank programme

 

The Spanish government has become so desperate that it asked the ECB to get involved in the clean-up of the banking sector. El Pais said the decision was evidence that the markets are distrusting the government’s banking reform. Luis de Guindos confirmed that the ECB had “shown interest” (yeah, right). The markets, and apparently also the eurogroup, distrust the Spanish bank data, and the idea to involve the ECB is to give credence to the published data. El Pais points out this exercise is likely to fail just as the previous government’s stress tests failed to bring calm to the markets. (We think the ECB should tread with caution here. If the ECB becomes part of a general exercise in obfuscation, it, too, gets tangled up in the markets’ distrust.)

 

Chaotic selection process of next EBRD president

 

According to Financial Times Deutschland the election of the next EBRD president is totally open. The euro and EU finance ministers were unable to agree on a common candidate on their meetings Monday and Tuesday. As a result there will be five European candidates at Friday’s vote of the 65 EBRD shareholders: Next to the outgoing German president Thomas Mirow, who was proposed by Russia and Bulgaria but who is not supported by his own government, there will be candidates from France, the UK, Poland and Serbia. Given that the victor has to have a double majority of 33 of the 65 national representatives and of the countries’ capital shares in the bank it is impossible to predict the outcome. Despite the fact that the EBRD is dominated by Europeans it may now be non-European shareholders such as the US, Russia or Australia who will effectively decide who will head the London based institution. Should Mirow win the vote it would be an embarrassment for Angela Merkel who may then face headwinds getting Wolfgang Schäuble accepted as the successor to Jean-Claude Juncker as the eurogroup’s chairman.

 

Fitch wants another LTRO III

 

Given that the LTRO has failed to solve the problem, as some naïve investors, and virtually all politicians had hoped, it comes as a surprise to us that Fitch now wants another one, at least according to Reuters. The article quotes an investors survey, and says that Fitch believes another round may be necessary because many banks will not have deleveraged in time for the repayment of the second LTRO. The survey says 38% of respondents thought a third LTRO would be necessary. Additionally, 25% of investors said they would not invest in any European senior  unsecured bank debt.

 

John Kay says the economists’ notion of credibility is not compatible with democracy

 

This is a brilliant column by John Kay, who argues that the way economists and policymakers are defining credibility is not compatible with modern democracy:

 

„The elevation of credibility into a central economic doctrine has turned a sensible point – that policy stability is good for both business and households – into a dogma that endangers stability. The credibility the models describe is impossible in a democracy. Worse, the attempt to achieve it threatens democracy. Pasok, the established party of the Greek left, lost votes to the moderate Democratic Left and more extreme Syriza party because it committed to seeing austerity measures through. Now the Democratic Left cannot commit to that package because it would lose to Syriza if it did. The UK’s Liberal Democrats, by making such a deal, have suffered electoral disaster. The more comprehensive the coalition supporting unpalatable policies, the more votes will go to extremists who reject them.“

Robert Skidelsky on what Keynes what have done

 

 

In a commentary in the FTRobert Skidelsky compares the austerity policies of the EU with the Versailles Treaty. He has dug out a quote by Keynes: “If they do sign, they can’t possibly keep some of the terms, and general disorder and unrest will result everywhere.” He says that there is solution to the eurozone crisis without growth.  This might mean debt restructuring, or project bonds, or both, but it has to be done. On Greece, he said, an exit with a controlled devaluation, cannot be avoided.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

Still getting worse. Euro now at $1.27, Spanish spreads approach 5%.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.375

1.436

1.452

Italy

4.415

4.690

4.690

Spain

4.796

4.902

4.958

Portugal

9.660

9.979

10.176

Greece

26.569

28.465

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.545

5.897

6.115

Belgium

1.889

1.921

1.958

Bund Yield

1.456

1.468

1.468

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.286

1.2717

 

Yen

102.720

102.19

 

Pound

0.799

0.7963

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.2009

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.8

1.81

 

2 yr

1.75

1.75

 

5 yr

1.84

1.83

 

10 yr

2.01

2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-7.700

-7.7

 

1 Month

-0.650

0.15

 

3 Months

28.707

28.407

 

1 Year

97.664

97.664

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 17:00
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Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 15 de Maio de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

Worse than Lehman

  • The financial crisis has returned in full force, with Spanish spreads now at a new record;
  • markets were yesterday fretting simultaneously about a Greek exit, and a Spanish banking meltdown;
  • German bunds hit lowest yield in history;
  • euro fells below $1.29;
  • El Pais writes that eurogroup did not rule out an EFSF programme for Spain;
  • in Greece, President Karolos Papoulias is now proposing a technical government;
  • but Syriza has already rejected the proposal;
  • another meeting of party leaders and the president is due to take place at 2pm today;
  • Jean-Claude Juncker said the most one could expect is a promise to extend some of the austerity deadlines, but there can be no change to programmes itself;
  • the Dutch finance minister admits his government has conducted an impact study of a Greek exit;
  • BVVA writes in a submission to the SEC that the situation for eurozone banks is much worse now than after Lehman;
  • Jim Flaherty, Canada’s finance minister, says the eurozone should either show solidarity or dissolve;
  • after the election defeat Angela Merkel is under pressure to adopt a more conservative stance (not a good time, given where the crisis is going);
  • party is nervous, as public support is falling to a level of below one-third;
  • Bild doubts that Merkel still has the authority to lead;
  • Le Monde says the SPD’s victory in North-Rhine Westphalia would strength Francois Hollande’s negotiating position;
  • a majority of Germans oppose measures to support economic growth in the eurozone;
  • a poll in France shows that two thirds are in favour of fiscal consolidation;
  • the SPD sets conditions for its approval of the fiscal pact;
  • Stefan Collignon argues for a genuine growth pact that ends the inherent pro-cyclicality in the eurozone’s fiscal policies;
  • Philippe Aghion, meanwhile, says Hollande’s 75% tax will be reversed and that Merkel has nothing to worry about.

Eurointeligence Comment and Analysis

 
Eurozone governments should agree to stop taking new austerity measures in 2011 and define next year’s budgetary consolidation in terms of structural measures and not in terms of specific reduction in deficit and debt ratio.

 

And they thought they had two years to solve the crisis after the LTRO…

 

The crisis is back at the acute point last November, when spreads spiralled out of control. Spanish spreads are at a record 4.8% this morning. Italian spreads are 4.5%. And the yield on the bund reached another all-time low of 1.459%. The euro broke below $1.29.

 

The markets yesterday panicked about Spain and Greece simultaneously. Spain has come under pressure to join the EFSF during a eurogroup meeting, while the political standoff  in Greece remains unresolved.

 

On Spain, El Pais has details from yesterday’s eurogroup meeting where Spain came under pressure over the banks, as Jean-Claude Juncker asked the question whether Spain had sufficient resources to help its banks. El Pais said the meeting did not rule out a future of EFSF/ESM programme for the country. In the meantime, the Spanish economy minister Luis de Guindos was asked to step up the efforts to clean up the banking sector. (Last Friday’s measures were clearly seen as insufficient).

 

In Greece president Karolos Papoulias will ask politicians on Tuesday to stand aside and let a government of technocrats steer the nation away from bankruptcy, but leftists have already rejected the proposal and look set to force a new election they reckon they can win, Reutersreports. Party leaders, deadlocked since a parliamentary vote nine days ago, will convene at the presidential palace at 2pm but said they had little hope President Karolos Papoulias's offer would resolve a political crisis.  SYRIZA spokesman said "We will attend the meeting. But we are sticking to our position. We don't want to consent to any kind of bailout policies, even if they are implemented by non-political personalities". If supporters and opponents of the bailout cannot agree a government, the head of state must call a new election in June.

 

At the eurogroup meeting, Jean-Claude Juncker said a new Greek government could potentially raise the question of extending deadlines to meet some of its austerity targets, as long as it was still firmly committed to them.  He called speculation of a Greek exit as “propaganda and nonsense”. The Dutch finance minister confirmed yesterday that his government had specifically looked at a Greek exit scenario, according to Reuters. “But it is not the policy of Europe”, he hastened to add.

 

BBVA said financial crisis in Europe now worse than after Lehman Brothers

 

 

El Pais has the story that BBVS, in its annual submission to the SEC, has written that the eurozone debt crisis is now worse than the banking crisis that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008. He said the banking crisis plus austerity would result in downward revisions for economic growth. The submission said that concerns about the health of financial institutions was now more intense than after Lehman, as governments and banks have lost access to funding.

 

Canada’s finance ministers says: eurozone should bail-out to split up

 

Seen from the outside, some things seem clearer. Canada’s finance minister Jim Flaherty put it well when he outlined the stark choice the eurozone is facing. This is according to CBC television, as quoted by Reuters:

 

"This is a time of crisis in the euro zone. The whole future of the euro zone is up for grabs, and this is very important for many of the euro zone member countries, given the history of Europe in the last 100 years or so… So they have to show courage. They have to do the right thing, use some of their taxpayers' money to bail out some of the weaker members of the euro zone - or start moving away from the euro zone and just say this was an experiment that has not worked." 

 

Merkel under pressure to change course after electoral defeat 

After the CDU’s severe defeat in the Northrhine-Westphalia state elections Angela Merkel is coming under increasing pressure to sharpen the conservative profile of her party. The chancellor’s coalition partner Horst Seehofer, Barvaria’s prime minister and chairman of the CSU said that he was not ready “to just go back to business as usual” after the defeat, the Süddeutsche Zeitung reports. He cited an argument about a state handout for young parents and the decision to get out of nuclear energy as topics that alienated more conservative voters. The result was “a political catastrophe”. There was also severe criticism of the CDU’s top candidate Norbert Röttgen, who is also Merkel’s environment minister and a protégé of the chancellor. In an internal meeting leading CDU politicians argued that the party needed to be worried because it had managed “to organize a two-thirds-majority” against itself.

 

Bild doubts Merkel still has the authority to lead

 

The mass market daily Bild asks whether Merkel is “lacking the power” to impose her views as the chancellor of Germany. The paper that is traditionally very close to Merkel cites five major setbacks she has suffered recently and that undermined her authority, among them the fact that Joachim Gauck was imposed on her by a blackmail of the FDP, her junior coalition partner and the fact that Röttgen refused to clearly state whether or not he was willing to relinquish his ministerial post in Berlin to go to Northrhine-Westphalia as an opposition leader in case of a defeat as Merkel had requested him to do.

 

Le Monde argues the SPD’s victory strengthens Hollande in his arm twisting with Merkel

 

I a front page editorial Le Monde the SPD’s clear victory reinforces Francois Hollande when he today meets Angela Merkel for difficult negotiations on the fiscal pact and growth measures for Europe. “Hollande has taken over the role of the spokesman of a strategy to rekindle growth in order to get out of the euro crisis while Merkel gives priority to cleaning up the budgets which according her is the precondition for ‘sustainable growth’. Hollande’s victory and the ideas he defends have given rise to considerable expectations in other EU countries confronted with the debt crisis including to parts of the SPD on the other side of the Rhine. Merkel knows that Sunday’s electoral setback is an additional incentive for her to loosen her position on the question of a growth pact.” However Le Monde cautions not to over-interpret the elections in North-Rhine-Westphalia. According to the paper Merkel’s insistence on sound public finances continue to be very popular in Germany. “According to a poll published by the Stern magazine 59% of the Germans are hostile to growth support measures that would lead to additional debt.”

 

SPD details conditions for its support of the fiscal pact

 

The three hopefuls for the role as the SPD’s challenger to Angela Merkel in the next federal election have published a common paper to outline their condition for support of the fiscal pact in the parliamentary ratification procedure, Süddeutsche Zeitung reports. Sigmar Gabriel, Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Peer Steinbrück insist that banks be held more strictly accountable when speculative deals turn sour and that the bank’s retail and investment activities be separated. Also the three ask that a European banking authority sees to it that the banks support more strongly the real economy and that a European rating agency be established. The three also ask to dedicate existing EU funds to the fight against unemployment and youth unemployment. Lastly they suggest to create a common liability for all debt of euro member states exceeding 60% of GDP if the state in question agrees to submit to a binding debt reduction program in exchange. The SPD insists the plan was drawn up in close coordination with Francois Hollande whom Angela Merkel meets today.

 

Two thirds of the French support cutting government spending in France

 

According to a poll done by OpinionWay 60% of the French would support cutting government in France in order to enhance growth, Les Echos reports. Cutting government spending is thus the means the French think is by far the most efficient way to get the economy back on track with only 29% favouring decreasing the tax burden on companies, the paper explains. France has one of the highest rates in government spending in relation to GDP in Europe. Nevertheless Francois Hollande has not promised to cut that level down during his election campaign. Instead he has pledget to raise a number of taxes with a 75% tax on the wealthiest French being the landmark measure.

  

Collignon: Time for a real political change

 

The verdict of the elections in France, Greece and North Rhine Westphalia is clear: citizens rejected the idea that austerity alone will reduce public debt, writes Stefan Collignon in Die Zeit.  Francois Hollande wants a growth pact alongside the fiscal pact, a ‘no’ in the Irish referendum could help him. But what is needed is a real political change. A growth strategy that does not shy away of stimulus programmes in a recession. A study by Centro Europa Ricerche showed that a 1% stimulus package in Greece could increase GDP growth by 2pp and reduce public debt by 4pp, and EU investment programmes could stabilize the European economy. A second element of this growth strategy is a fiscal pact that prevents pro-cyclical budget policy. In the end we need a European economic policy, with a European government with a European finance minister accountable to the European citizens rather than blocked by vetoes of member states. Europe is not private property of the states, it belongs to its citizens.

 

Aghion: No time for a real political change

 

This is a deeply depressing column for anybody who hopes that President Hollande is going to make any difference at all. It is from Philippe Aghion, his economic adviser. Aghion says that Merkel has nothing to worry about, as Hollande fully agrees with everything on virtually everything. The 75% tax is a suck to the left is likely to be temporary. And Hollande is the first Socialist to have dumped Keynesianism. He is a convinced supply-sider.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

Carnage all over.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.288

1.375

1.387

Italy

4.163

4.530

4.527

Spain

4.511

4.796

4.833

Portugal

9.520

9.660

9.879

Greece

23.435

26.569

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.428

5.545

5.735

Belgium

1.780

1.889

1.916

Bund Yield

1.518

1.456

1.459

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.288

1.2827

 

Yen

103.100

102.46

 

Pound

0.802

0.7971

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.84

1.8

 

2 yr

1.78

1.75

 

5 yr

1.85

1.84

 

10 yr

2.15

2.01

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

28.307

28.407

 

1 Month

 

 

 

3 Months

 

 

 

1 Year

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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Segunda-feira, 14 de Maio de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 14 de Maio de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti

High Noon in Athens

  • Talks with President Karolos Popoulias ended in an impasse, as Syriza refused point-blank to join a government;
  • talks continue as New Democracy and Pasok are pondering alternatives;
  • one option is for a coalition to include the small Democratic Left, which wants to remain in the eurozone, but cancel the EU/IMF memorandum after two years;
  • but DL so far refuses to enter a coalition with the participation of Syriza;
  • another option under discussion is for the Independent Greeks, a rightwing splinter group, to join the coalition;
  • a poll shows 78.1% of Greeks want to stay in the euro;
  • the two big parties are expected to use the upcoming election campaign as a referendum on euro membership;
  • European central bankers have been threatening for the first time that Greece might be leaving the euro;
  • Paul Krugman says the euro might end within a few months from now;
  • Wolfgang Munchau writes that the Greeks face four choices, of which the best would be to stick with the programme until primary balance is reached, and then default inside the eurozone;
  •  CDU suffers a catastrophic defeat in Northrhine-Westphalia;
  • German commentators see the result as having serious implications for Merkel and her coalition;
  • the markets’ reaction to the restructuring of Spanish banks has been underwhelming, as investors remain convinced that Spain needs an EFSF/ESM programme;
  • French Socialists attack Angela Merkel ahead of tomorrow’s meeting with Francois Hollande;
  • a poll shows that the united front of the French left has a clear lead but the Socialists trail the UMP;
  • Vincent Reinhart and Ken Rogoff, meanwhile, show that debt overhangs have massively negative implications on growth.

It looks like Greece is heading towards new elections, as SYRIZA rejected the coalition talks. After a dramatic meeting with Karolos Papoulias and the conservative and socialist leaders, SYRIZA leader Alexis Tsipras said of their coalition offer: "They are not asking for agreement, they are asking us to be their partners in crime and we will not be their accomplices".  Kathimerini quotes sources saying that Evangelos Venizelos and Antonis Samaras asked Tsipras to either join a unity government or to at least give it a vote of confidence.

 

 

There are still some options on the table though none is straightforward. One is for New Democracy and PASOK to form a government with the small Democratic Left party led by Fotis Kouvelis, which would give them 168 seats in the 300-seat parliament. Kouvelis’s proposal is for parties to combine their forces in a unity government that would aim to keep Greece in the euro, draw up a plan for its gradual decoupling from EU-IMF loan agreement and which would remain in place until 2014. But Kouvelis said it will not join the government unless the coalition also includes SYRIZA and there is a clear fear that SYRIZA would seek to capitalize on the anti-memorandum sentiment in Greece. Polls show he would now place first if the vote is repeated, benefiting from 50 extra seats in the 300-seat parliament. 

 

 

Another option cited by the FT is that some lawmakers from Independent Greeks, a rightwing splinter group, could return to New Democracy and give the two pro-euro parties a slim overall majority. But Evangelos Venizelos  is expected to refuse to serve in a government that did not include either Syriza or the Democratic Left.

 

 

The constitution sets no deadline for Papoulias to complete his search for a deal and he has given no indication how long he will spend trying before he calls a new election. 

 

 

Polls show an overwhelming majority of Greeks reject the bailout but want to keep the euro - a position widely regarded as untenable. As many as 78.1% want the new government to do whatever it takes to keep their country in the currency, Reuters quotes a poll by Kappa Research for To Vima daily.  If we are heading for new elections, the two main parties are likely to campaign as guarantors of Eurozone membership.

 

 

The European reaction is predictable. The EU has now reverted to threats. Various central bankers yesterday raised the prospect for the first time that Greece might have to exit the euro. Patrick Honohan, the Irish central bank governor, said in a speech that the eurozone would withstand a Greek exit, calling it “not necessarily fatal”. The FT has an interview with Luc Coene, the Belgian central bank governor, who spoke of an “amicable divorce”. Jens Weidmann of the Bundesbank said the consequences would be worse for Greece than for the eurozone.

 

 

The idea is to scare the Greeks into following the agreed line. Politically, this is not working well.

 

Greece will continue to get money from the EFSF after a euro exit

 

 

According to Der Spiegel, Greece will get money from the EFSF even if it leaves the eurozone. Plans of the German finance ministry foresee that only the part of the EFSF transfers to Greece will be scrapped in the case of an exit that go directly to the Greek budget. The part of the EFSF billions that are used to service the Greek government bonds that are being held by the ECB will continue to paid. This will help to prevent losses of the ECB that would have to be supported by the national budgets, the magazine explains. According to the German plans Greece would remain part of the EU after a euro exit and thus be eligible to EU assistance that would have to be paid by all 27 EU members and not only the Euro 17 as currently the case. According to a poll done for Welt am Sonntag, 78% of all Germans favour suspending all aid payments until Greece has formed a government that clearly commits itself to the EU/IMF program and its reforms.

 

Paul Krugmann on Eurodämmerung

 

 

Paul Krugman sees a scenario in which the euro may collapse within a few months. Here is how it will play out. We quote in full:

“1. Greek euro exit, very possibly next month.

2. Huge withdrawals from Spanish and Italian banks, as depositors try to move their money to Germany.

3a. Maybe, just possibly, de facto controls, with banks forbidden to transfer deposits out of country and limits on cash withdrawals.

3b. Alternatively, or maybe in tandem, huge draws on ECB credit to keep the banks from collapsing.

4a. Germany has a choice. Accept huge indirect public claims on Italy and Spain, plus a drastic revision of strategy — basically, to give Spain in particular any hope you need both guarantees on its debt to hold borrowing costs down and a higher eurozone inflation target to make relative price adjustment possible;

or:

4b. End of the euro.”

 

Wolfgang Munchau says the Greek choice is between a default right now, or a default postponed

 

 

In his FT column, Wolfgang Munchau says the Greeks face four options. Follow the programme;

follow the programme until primary balance is reached, and then default; default now, and hope to remain in the euro; default and leave the euro. Munchau says the worst of all options is number as it will end in a political and economic catastrophe. Leaving the euro would not make much sense either. That leaves the two default-inside-the-eurozone options. Munchau says it would be better for Greece to reach a primary balance first, and then default. The plan by Syriza to default now, and hope the EU is bluffing, is too risky. It would trigger a cessation of the loan payments, and an immediate collapse of the Greek state. The dynamic of that situation may well push Greece out of the eurozone, though Tsipras is right when he says that this outcome is not in the eurozone’s own best interest. Munchau says he agrees with that point, but argues that eurozone leaders have made numerous misjudgements before.

 

CDU suffers heavy defeat in Northrhine-Westphalia

 

 

Angela Merkel’s CDU suffered a heavy defeat yesterday in Northrhine-Westphalia, Germany’s most populous state. The CDU got 26.3%, way behind the SPD’s 39.1%. Together with the Greens (11.4%) the SPD will form a red-green government with a clear majority of 128 out of 237 seats in the state parliament. The FDP got 8.6% - due to the performance of its state party leader Christian Lindner, who now becomes a serious rival for FDP chief Philipp Rösler. The Pirates got 7.8% and thereby managed to get elected into a state parliament the fourth consecutive time. The left did not pass the 5% threshold. For graphics with the exact results go to tagesschau.de. The SPD’s clear victory is the result of the popularity of the state prime minister Hannelore Kraft and the poor campaign of Norbert Röttgen, the CDU’s front man in NRW, and also a minister in Merkel’s government. Röttgen immediately resigned as state party leader, trying to shield Merkel from the consequences of this defeat.

 

Heavy consequences for the federal government

 

 

German commentators agree that the results will have serious consequences for the federal government. “On a federal level the crash of the CDU has more significance than the victory of Hannelore Kraft and her SPD”, Süddeutsche Zeitung’s Heribert Prantl writes. “Once again a potential successor to Angela Merkel has destroyed himself. Once again a potential party chairman and chief whip in parliament has gotten himself out of the way.” The mass circulation daily Bild’s deputy editor Nikolaus Blome writes. “The ambitious Norbert Röttgen will never be chancellor. He can be happy if Merkel keeps him as a minister.” In its unsigned editorial Financial Times Deutschland writes: “The reinforced SPD will not only make the remaining time of this legislature more difficult for Angela Merkel – already the upcoming vote on the fiscal pact will be a real test of courage.”

 

Spanish banking crisis not over yet

 

 

The EU and the IMF were reassuring about the recent steps taken by the Spanish government to clean up the banking sector, but no one else seems to believe it for the simple reason that the ultimate write-offs will be too large for the Spanish banks and the Spanish government to handle.  On Friday the Spanish government forced banks to take losses against doubtful assets, to put property assets into a separately managed property company, and to provide high interest loans to banks in trouble, but this package failed to convince the financial markets, which had been looking for more direct help by the Spanish government, according to Reuters. The announcement triggered further falls of Spanish bank stocks. The problem is the Spanish government’s reluctance to ask for money from the EFSF and the IMF. Reuters talked to several bankers, one whom call the programme “a series of erratic, rushed decisions rather than a real plan”.

 

French Socialists attack Merkel ahead of meeting with Hollande

 

 

Ahead of tomorrow’s meeting of Angela Merkel with the newly sworn in French president Francois Hollande, France’s socialists attacked the chancellor, Le Figaro reports. She needs “to understand that she cannot decide on her own about Europe’s future”, Benoit Hamon said, the socialist party’s spokesman. “We have not voted for a president of the EU whose name is Ms Merkel who takes a sovereign decision about the future of all the others” he said.

 

United left clearly leads polls for French parliamentary elections

 

 

According to a poll for Le Journal de Dimanche the united left clearly leads with around 45.5% for the upcoming French parliamentary elections on June 10 and 17. But this comprises all the left leaning parties. Francois Hollande’s socialist party on its own would only get 30% and thus slightly trail the conservative UMP with 32.5%. According to this BVA poll for Orange, the Front National would around 16%.

 

Vincent Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff say debt overhangs produces massively negative growth performance

 

 

Vincent Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff (hat tip Philip Lane of the Irish Economy Blog) have a paper in which they built on recent work by Carmen Reinhart and Rogoff – looking at episodes where debt-to-GDP exceeded 90%. This results show that the economic growth effects are massively negative. We quote from the abstract:

 

“Among the 26 episodes we identify, 20 lasted more than a decade. Five of the six shorter episodes were immediately after World Wars I and II.  Across all 26 cases, the average duration in years is about 23 years.  The long duration belies the view that the correlation is caused mainly by debt buildups during business cycle recessions.  The long duration also implies that cumulative shortfall in output from debt overhang is potentially massive.”

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

 

The euro is now under $1.29, and no reprieve for Spain.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.280

1.288

1.305

Italy

4.145

4.278

4.286

Spain

4.460

4.511

4.567

Portugal

9.579

9.520

9.672

Greece

22.758

23.435

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.414

5.428

5.615

Belgium

1.786

1.780

1.813

Bund Yield

1.539

1.518

1.51

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.292

1.2891

 

Yen

103.100

103.08

 

Pound

0.802

0.8024

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.82

1.84

 

2 yr

1.78

1.78

 

5 yr

1.74

1.85

 

10 yr

2.15

2.15

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

 

 

 

1 Month

 

 

 

3 Months

 

 

 

1 Year

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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Sexta-feira, 11 de Maio de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 11 de Maio de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

Venizelos may just pull it off

  • Pasok leader is in a desperate last-ditch attempt to form a government of national unity with New Democracy and the small Democratic Left;
  • that would establish Fotis Kouvelis, leader of the pro-euro, anti-austerity DL, as the kingmaker in Greek politics;
  • Kouvelis wants a government that stays in office until 2014;
  • the push for a unity government comes as the latest polls give the hard-left Syriza party a large lead over all the other parties;
  • but platform of a new unity government would still include “disengagement” from the EU-IMF memorandum;
  • Alexis Tsipras, Syriza leader, toned down his demands from rejection to re-examination of the memorandum;
  • Bankia’s auditors discovered another black hole, relating to tax credits of €2.5bn, which may need to be charged against equity;
  • the governing PP has embarked on a blame game campaign to deflect attention from its own role in the collapse of Bankia;
  • among those under attack from the government is the chief of Spain’s central bank;
  • the European Commission is ready to grant Spain an extra year to meet the deficit target,  but demands a number of quid-pro-quos, including an external supervision of the bank restructuring process;
  • the German government is expected the highest tax revenues in the country history, due to falling unemployment and rising wages;
  • Angela Merkel categorically rules out any debt financed growth measures;
  • Francois Hollande wants to impose his tax on the rich as of June;
  • Daniel Cohn-Bendid warns of a return of military dictatorship in Greece;
  • Germany’s Bild is freaking out over the Bundesbank’s acknowledgement that German inflation may temporarily exceed the eurozone average;
  • Samuel Brittan, meanwhile, proposes a nominal GDP target (for the umpteenth time), this time as an alternative to austerity.

Evangelis Venizelos is in talks with SYRIZA and ND today, after he gained the support on Thursday from Democratic Left leader Fotis Kouvelis – a pro-European critical of the bailout, Kathimerinireports. Kouvelis, who strongly favours Greece remaining within the euro, won 6.1% of the vote, and his 19 parliamentary seats make him a king-maker for a coalition government. Kouvelis said “I propose the formation of an ecumenical government made up of trustworthy political figures that will reflect and respect the message from the elections. This government’s mission, which will have a specific program and time frame that will last until the European elections of 2014, will be twofold: firstly, to keep the country in the European Union and euro and, secondly, to gradually disengage from the [EU-IMF] memorandum.”

 

 

A PASOK-ND-Democratic Left administration would have a total of 168 seats, but there are fears that SYRIZA’s growing popularity, along with opposition from the other parliamentary parties, all opposed to the EU-IMF memorandum, would make governing difficult. SYRIZA’s initial reaction suggests that it is unlikely to join a unity government. If new elections were held, SYRIZA is likely to win more votes.  An opinion poll conducted by Marc for Alpha TV indicated on Thursday suggests that SYRIZA would come in first. It put SYRIZA in first place on 23.8%, followed by ND on 17.4, PASOK on 10.8, Independent Greeks on 8.7, KKE on 6, Chrysi Avgi on 4.9 and Democratic Left on 4.2.

 

 

SYRIZA leader Alexis Tsipras also seem to have softened his stance when he wrote to EU officials on Thursday arguing that the election result had taken away political legitimacy from the memorandum and that the terms of the agreement should be “re-examined”, rather than rejected.

 

Another black hole for Bankia

 

 

Ooops, they found another hole of €2.5bn in the accounts of Bankia. As El Pais reports this morning, Bankia’s auditors noted that Bankia booked estimated future tax credits  as a real assets to the tune of €2.5bn. But to save these taxes, Bankia would need to achieve a certain level of savings, which the auditors do not think as realistic. The auditor said without these savings, the money will have to be charged against equity of BFA, Bankia’s holding company. The meaning of all of this is that Bankia will need more equity capital on top what is being pledged by the Spanish government. The new CEO said he would present a restructuring plan for the bank by the end of June.

 

The blame game starts in Spain

 

 

The Spanish government spent most of the day yesterday trying to blame somebody else for failure of Bankia, according to El Pais. Not a word of criticism of Rodrigo Rato, the former IMF chief who led Bankia into a state of near-bankruptcy, but instead the PP criticises Miguel Angel Ferandez Ordonez, the central bank chief, for having forced Caja Madrid to merge with Bancaja and several other smaller cajas in 2010. (The situation is, of course, very different. Bankia was essentially controlled by the PP, who has been appointing most of its council members. Passing the blame onto other is absurd in this case, and it shows the mindset of what has turned out to be one of the most incompetent governments in the eurozone. In a few months, Rayoy managed to mess up an ECB nomination, trigger a bond market attack because he postponed his budget until after the Andalusia election, and now mismanages the Bankia situation.)

 

Spain is playing hard to get

 

 

We cited an El Pais story yesterday, according to which the EU Commission was ready to grant Spain an extra year to get the deficit down to 3%. The FT has more details of this story this morning. The offer includes a quid-pro-quo,  an independent audit of the restructuring plan for its banks. The Commission also wants to strengthen fiscal control of the autonomous regions. The article says the Spanish government was divided, as some members feared that such a delay would be perceived in markets as evidence of creeping fiscal indiscipline.  The FT quoted an EU official as saying: “I do not understand the Spanish government as wanting an additional year.” The paper said it was likely that Spain would accept the key demand of external supervision of the restructuring of the banking sector.

 

 

This Friday, the Spanish government will also announce another bank restructuring plan to force banks to write off another €30bn in property losses. That will bring total provisions to €120bn, about 40% of the entire portfolio of real estate assets. The Bank of Spain classified €184bn as problematic at the end of last year.

 

Record tax revenues for the German government

 

 

The German government’s tax revnues will be higher in 2012 and 2013 than ever before, Süddeutsche Zeitung reports. According to independent tax estimates the revenues in 2013 will above €618bn. Compared with the past projection from last fall the municipalities, länder and the federal government will have additional tax revenue of around €30bn. The reasons are the good economy, low unemployment and wage rises. For Wolfgang Schäuble, the good figures are a mixed blessing, as SZ points out. Because of the elections next year many members of his coalition, especially within the FDP, will want tax breaks.

 

Merkel says categorically no to debt financed growth measures

 

 

In her government address ahead of her first meeting with Francois Hollande next Monday and of next week’s G8 summit, Angela Merkel categorically ruled out all debt financed growth measures, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung writes. “Growth financed by debt would bring us back to the beginnings of the crisis”, the chancellor said. Merkel said that debt reduction and enhancing growth and jobs were part of the strategy to overcome the sovereign debt crisis. But growth measures only made sense if they were based on structural reforms. The opposition SPD and the Greens said they would only vote for the fiscal pact if more was done for growth.

 

Hollande prepares his stand-off with Merkel by meeting Van Rompuy and Juncker

 

 

Le Monde reports on how Francois Hollande is already in the middle of the euro crisis management before even having taken over his office by meeting with Herman Van Rompuy and Jean-Claude Juncker ahead of his crucial encounter with Angela Merkel next Monday. The paper points out that by meeting Van Rompuy and Juncker, Hollande wants to drive home the point that he wants to end the impression the eurozone is run by a Franco-German directorate and give more weight to the Euro institutions and their representatives. The report also stresses that Hollande met with the European Council president and the eurogroup chairman before even scheduling a meeting with José Manuel Barroso, who is seen by the French socialists as having been very close to Nicolas Sarkozy. Meanwhile in an interview the former French prime minister Michel Rocard warned Hollande against provoking “a clash” with Merkel on the fiscal pact, Lemonde.fr writes. He urged the incoming president instead to engage into patient negotiations with the German chancellor.

 

Hollande wants to tax the rich as of June

 

 

In a symbolic measure destined to convince the left leaning voters that he is their man, Hollande wants to raise taxes of great fortunes as of June, Les Echos reports. The additional tax is supposed to give the government additional revenues in the magnitude of €2.3bn, the report says. The paper also writes that the Banque de France foresees a 0% growth rate in France for Q2 in 2012.

 

Cohn-Bendit warns of a return of military dictatorship in Greece

 

 

In an interview with Le Monde, Daniel Cohn-Bendit warned that if things deteriorated as they were in the past months in Greece, there would be a return of military dictatorship. “The political process has broken down there”, the European parliamentarian said. “If we leave the Greek to themselves we risk a military coup”.

 

Bild stirs fears of runaway inflation in Germany

 

 

Reacting to the Bundesbank’s announcement on Wednesday that the German inflation would be above the eurozone average mass circulation daily Bild runs a story this morning under the headline: “Inflation alarm – Bundesbank softens the euro – How quickly our money will be eaten away?” The story is illustrated with the photography of a 1bn mark bill of the Weimar Republic in the 1920s when much of Germany’s private wealth was destroyed by runaway inflation. The story has a reassuring quote from Jens Weidmann who says that eurozone price stability target of just below 2% remained valid but that German inflation “could temporarily be above the (eurozone) average.” But the paper has a separate editorial comment by deputy editor Nikolaus Blome who accuses the Bundesbank of “cowardly” behaviour because it lets inflation re-emerge in Germany because inflation steals the citizens “optimism for the future”.

 

 

Samuel Brittan on nominal GDP target

 

People have been known to bet on when Samuel Brittan would write his next column on nominal GDP targeting, a demand he has persistently upheld in many columns over many decades. We feel the time may have arrived for this idea, especially as an alternative to austerity (which is likely to fail anyway). The idea is for policymakers to adopt a nominal GDP target of, say, 5%, which would allow for growth, while keeping an upper bound on inflationary expectations. He acknowledges the main criticism – which is the quality and frequency of the data – but this problem would be easily fixed, once such targets are adopted.

 

 

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

 samuel 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.339

1.280

1.308

Italy

4.256

4.308

4.321

Spain

4.582

4.460

4.504

Portugal

9.948

9.579

9.832

Greece

22.308

22.758

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.402

5.414

5.648

Belgium

1.860

1.786

1.826

Bund Yield

1.522

1.539

1.526

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.297

1.2925

 

Yen

103.390

103.2

 

Pound

0.803

0.8015

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.201

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.78

1.84

 

2 yr

1.62

1.78

 

5 yr

1.73

1.86

 

10 yr

2.15

2.15

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-7.800

-6.6

 

1 Month

-0.250

-1.65

 

3 Months

26.807

29.507

 

1 Year

96.750

96.95

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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Quinta-feira, 10 de Maio de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 10 de Maio de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

 

 

 

Spain takes 45% in Bankia

  • The Spanish state nationalises the holding company of Bankia, the mega-caja, which leaves the state with an effective 45% stake in the banking group;
  • El Pais says the dismissal of Rodrigo Rato as head of Bankia was an attempt to recover credibility;
  • Rato has been replaced by Ignacio Goirigolzarri, a former CEO of BBVA;
  • the nationalisation occurs through a conversion of state aid from the bank bailout fund into equity;
  • Deloitte has refused on sign off on the accounts, having concluded that BFA overvalued its assets by €3.5bn;
  • more state capital injections likely as banks are forced to write of real estate losses;
  • there are signs that depositors in Bankia were getting nervous;
  • Spanish equity markets had a bad day, and bond spreads rose sharply;
  • European Commission does not expect Spain to hit its latest deficit targets;
  • Nouriel Roubini writes that Spain is heading for a catastrophic collapse;
  • Syriza may be ending up with more votes in the next elections;
  • baton to form a government has been passed on to Evangelos Venizelos, but chances are slim;
  • Germany threatens end of rescue payments for Greece if reforms are stopped;
  • Bundesbank signals acceptance of higher inflation in Germany;
  • Mark Schieritz welcomes the new flexibility of German policymakers;
  • the Irish Yes campaign for the fiscal treaty is gathering speed;
  • the EU will not grant the Netherlands any leeway over the 3% deficit target;
  • Angela Merkel’s chief whip, meanwhile, warns Hollande not to implement his domestic programme, or risk a further ratings downgrade.

Yesterday began a new phase in the crisis with the Spanish nationalisation of Bankia, the large caja that emerged from the merger of Caja Madrid and the Valencia-based Bancaja. The Spanish State nationalised the holding company BFA, and thus becomes a 45% shareholder in Bankia. El Pais said the dismissal of Rodrigo Rato as head of Bankia was an attempt to recover the credibility of the system, as Spain has acted far too late in cleaning up the real estate mess. The new chief is Jose Ignacio Goirigolzarri, a former CEO of BBVA. Spain will hold the share through the Frob, the bank recapitalisation fund. Technically, this has been accomplished by converting state aid into equity capital. The holding company BFA is a bad bank, which means that the taxpayer is left to cover its losses. The group has €31.8bn in troubled real estate assets, while Bankia contains the clean parts of the business.

 

As we reported yesterday, Deloitte has refused to sign off on the account. The El Pais article contains more details. Deloitte believes that BFA overvalued its assets by €3.5bn. If that loss had been realised, the banks equity capital would have been wiped out.  The article said another state capital injection may occur once the government proceeds with its plan to force banks to write off a small part of the country’s real estate losses. El Pais also makes the point that the restructuring of BFA effectively eliminates the seven cajas that make up BFA. Their capital has now been wiped out.

 

 

And Bankia’s depositors are getting nervous. In another article, El Pais has talked to some, with views splits between those who say Bankia is too big to fail, and those who will move their savings to other institutions.

Even though the nationalisation of Bankia was well flagged, the Spanish stock markets yesterday react with steep losses for the entire Spanish banking sector. Spanish bond spreads rose sharply.

 

European Commission believes Spain will not meet the deficit targets

 

 

Of course, Spain is not going to meet the deficit targets. To achieve a correction of 5.5% net, you have to aim for a correction of some 8-10% in order to meet this moving target, because of the negative growth dynamic. Spain could abolish its armed forces, or the welfare state. As this is not going to happen, a slow process of public realisation is setting in that the speed of deficit reduction has to be slower than planned.

El Pais reports that the latest official estimates of the European Commission suggest that current policies will set Spain on a trajectory of a 6% this year, and 4% next year, as opposed to official targets of 5.3% and 3% respectively. (We think even this is too optimistic).

 

Nouriel Roubini on Spain

 

 

Writing in the FT, Nouriel Roubini says the recapitalisation of Bankia was the beginning of a process to raise the capital stocks of Spanish banks by what he estimates €100bn-€250bn. The Spanish government cannot conceivable meet that challenge alone, and will require a bailout

“A bailout package would buy some time for Spain, but time will only help if it is used to generate economic growth. By making private claims on the sovereign junior to the claims of the troika … even a bailout risks reducing the chances of it regaining market access. Moreover, with economic indicators showing Spain sinking further into recession, a turnround in the country’s economic performance would require a significant shift in policy: monetary easing by the ECB, a weaker euro, fiscal stimulus in the core, less front-loaded austerity in the periphery, more international firewalls and debt mutualisation.

 

 

The only way for there to be a happy ending in Spain is if action is taken swiftly in Brussels, Frankfurt and other European capitals. But that is not likely to happen. The eurozone periphery and Spanish crisis look like a slow-motion train wreck.”

 

Confident SYRIZA could emerge even stronger in new elections

 

 

As expected, Alexis Tsipras hit the wall trying to forge a coalition with other left parties, saying that he would hand in his mandate. "We cannot make true our dream of a left-wing government", Kathimerini reports him as saying. Despite this failure, Tsipras said his party had succeeded in bringing fundamental change to the political scene with foreign creditors now more open to renegotiate the bailout’s onerous terms. “We have forced all of Europe to speak about the great change brought about by the Greek vote,” he said.  It looks like SYRIZA might win even more votes in the next elections.

 

 

As for the procedure: It is now up to Evangelos Venizelos to try and form a government. He said “We can’t reach a solution now but we will keep trying.” Should Venizelos also fail, then President Carolos Papoulias would call in leaders to form a "unity" government. If this is not achieved by May 17, new elections will be called.

 

Germany threatens end of rescue payments for Greece

 

 

Germany became the first euro member to explicitly threaten Greece with an end of rescue payments should the country not stick to the reforms agreed in the program with the EU and the IMF, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung writes. “Should Greece stop its reforms, then I don’t see that remaining tranches (of EU/IMF credits) will be paid”, Guido Westerwelle said. “We want Greece to remain in the eurozone but the agreed reforms have to be implemented.” Wolfgang Schäuble went along the same lines. “The majority of the Greek people wants to remain part of the euro”, he said. “We must clarify that the precondition for this is the implementation of the aid program’s reforms. One cannot have one without the other.” Neither minister wanted to elaborate on the risks of a Greek state insolvency for the eurozone. But according to FAZ the German government thinks those risks have diminished significantly compared with 2010 or 2011. 

 

Bundesbank signals acceptance of higher inflation in Germany

 

 

For the first time the Bundesbank signalled that it was ready to accept higher inflation in Germany than in the eurozone as a result of the good domestic economy and the rebalancing efforts in the eurozone, Financial Times Deutschland reports. “In this scenario Germany could in the future have an inflation rate somewhat above the average within EMU”, the German central bank wrote in comment to a hearing in Bundestag. The Bundesbank stressed however that monetary policy would have to ensure that inflation overall in the EMU remained consistent with the gaol of price stability and the inflation expectations must remain firmly anchored. With this position the Bundesbank accepts that a rebalancing of the eurozone economies will not be possible without temporarily accepting higher inflation in Germany while peripheral countries undergo severe reforms that entail deflationary tendencies. In a recommendation to Germany, the IMF wrote that the country should accept “a pick up of salaries and some asset prices”. The new position of the Bundesbank on inflation is a further indication of a change in mentality among the German leadership after Angela Merkel’s recent willingness to do more to enhance growth in the eurozone and Wolfgang Schäuble’s appeal to social partners to bring about significant wage increases.

 

Mark Schieritz applauds the Bundesbank’s flexibility

 

 

Writing in Herdentrieb, Mark Schieritz applauds the flexibility of the Bundesbank and the German government. “As a fundamental principle I observe that many Anglo-Saxon analysts underestimate the flexibility of German politics”, Schieritz explains. “German finance politicians have to be seen as tough guys in domestic political debates. That is what the population expects. And most certainly the political mainstream is more dogmatic in Germany than in France or the USA – from my point of view often too dogmatic. But the Germans are not stupid. Another fitting example of this are Wolfgang Schäuble’s comments according to whom salaries in this country must rise more significantly once again after years of wage moderation in order to decrease the imbalances.”

 

The Irish ‘Yes’ campaign is gathering pace

 

 

Another three weeks until the next landmark event for the Eurozone, the Irish referendum on the fiscal treaty on May 31st.  The editorial in the Irish Times writes that while the government coalition did leave the platform to campaigners for a No vote to make much of the initial running, there is a good chance of a yes vote to succeed. A majority of Irish consumers believe their employment and financial prospects will improve during the coming year and they are unlikely to jeopardise those expectations. Within the EU Commission, attitudes are changing with a greater emphasis being placed on growth. These positive strands can create a narrative that will appeal to the electorate on May 31st. 

 

No relaxation of fiscal rules for the Netherlands

 

 

Netherlands gets no exception from the European Union in respect of its 3% target. 'Rumours about a relaxation [of the rules] are unfounded,' Commissioner Olli Rehn said. The Dutch economy is not in such trouble that an exception would be possible, ANP quoted Rehn as saying. The Volkskrant says Rehn's comments are significant because there have been signs that Brussels may be more relaxed about the Dutch deficit, which threatens to reach 4.6% this year.

 

 

Radio Netherlands cites the outgoing minority government coalition emphasizing that great steps have been made fleshing out the 2013-budget-deficit deal struck with opposition parties a fortnight ago.  The deal - ensuring the Dutch 2013 budget deficit stays within the 3% of GDP limit and was agreed by coalition members, the conservative VVD and the Christian Democrats, and opposition parties, the D66 democrats, Green Left and the Christian Union.   The parties reached the deal just in time to deliver the outline accord to the European Commission before the 30 April deadline.

 

Kauder tells Hollande to check if markets want to borrow him money for debt financed programs

 

 

Angela Merkel’s chief whip in Bundestag Volker Kauder told Francois Hollande not to count on Germany to agree to European project bonds or any other stimulus programs that would be financed with debt. “If Hollande wants to initiate a debt financed stimulus programme, then he should look where he can get the money from on the markets”, Kauder told Handelsblatt. “The chancellor’s close ally warned that France’s competitiveness will not be strengthened by increasing taxes and by unwinding past structural reforms. The markets would severely punish France, Kauder warned. He said France cannot afford another downgrade.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

 

Getting much worse again, across the board. At these levels, neither Spain nor Italy are solvent. Euro down at $1.2946.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.268

1.339

1.363

Italy

4.091

4.406

4.393

Spain

4.324

4.582

4.636

Portugal

9.799

9.948

10.153

Greece

21.883

22.308

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.341

5.402

5.545

Belgium

1.728

1.860

1.899

Bund Yield

1.542

1.522

1.535

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.299

1.2946

 

Yen

103.670

103.14

 

Pound

0.804

0.802

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.201

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.78

1.78

 

2 yr

1.72

1.62

 

5 yr

1.78

1.73

 

10 yr

2.05

2.15

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-6.759

-8.559

 

1 Month

-0.514

-1.414

 

3 Months

27.743

28.743

 

1 Year

97.164

97.064

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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Quarta-feira, 9 de Maio de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 9 de Maio de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

Greek insurrection takes shape; European response makes it worse

  • It was a day of panic in the markets, as the world digested the enormity of the results of the Greek elections;
  • European shares, peripheral bonds, and the euro all tumbled together;
  • Alexis Tsipras, leader of the anti-reform Syriza party, proposed a five-point plan to cancel the austerity programme, default on the debt, and nationalise the banks;
  • the most likely outcome now is another round of elections in June;
  • he is about to write a letter to the EU authorities to tell them that the Greek electorate has rejected the terms of the agreement;
  • Jörg Asmussen yesterday became the first eurozone official to threaten Greece with a euro exit;
  • he says the troika has no appetite to renegotiate the deal;
  • the troika has cancelled all meetings in Athens;
  • Herman van Rompuy is considering hold a special informal summit;
  • the Bankia recapitalisation is turning into a nightmare for the Spanish government – and raises memories of Northern Rock;
  • Rato jumped the gun through this resignation, which was supposed to be announced as a package deal on Friday;
  • board meeting has been brought forward to today, as retail investors are starting to panic;
  • according to news reports, the auditors of the parent company have refused to sign off on the accounts;
  • Asmussen tells Hollande that he has no choice to ratify the fiscal pact, and to fulfil France’s obligations to meet the 3% deficit target;
  • Angela Merkel’s lieutenants are trying to suppress the Hollande effect by reminding the world that France’s public finances are in perilous state;
  • Bild writes that Germany will end up paying for Hollande’s generous programme;
  • Belèn Romana Garcia is to become the head of the ESM, as part of a package deal that leaves Klaus Regling back in the private sector;
  • the CDU candidate likely to lose Sunday’s elections in North-Rhine Westphalia already tries to shift the blame to Merkel’s euro policies;
  • Die Welt calls the SPD alignment with the position of Hollande on the stability pact “treason”;
  • Martin Wolf, meanwhile, says Hollande must tell Merkel that policy should focus on the end game scenarios.

Panic everywhere. European shares fell, spreads rose across the board, and the euro was down below $1.30 again. The panic set in as the outside world started to comprehend the enormity of the Greek election results. The trigger was the speech by Alexis Tsipras, the young leader of the anti-austerity Syriza party that ended up in second place in Sunday’s elections. Kathimerini writes that Tsipras yesterday proposed a five point plan: immediate cancellation of the austerity programme, cancellation of the law to end collective contracts, proportional representation, nationalisation of the banks, and the formation of a committee to investigate whether Greece can pay its debts.


Tsipras has three days to form a government. He spent Tuesday in talks with leftist parties but had mixed success. He is due to meet the heads of PASOK and New Democracy on Wednesday. It is expected Tsipras will be unable to reach any agreement by Thursday, leading to PASOK taking over the mandate to form a government. After that, Papoulias will call in the party leaders to try to broker a deal. If that fails, a caretaker government will be appointed and new elections called.


Kathimerini writes  that Tsipras is to send a letter to Jose Manuel Barroso, Herman Van Rompuy and Mario Draghi to argue that the fact that PASOK and New Democracy received just 32% of the vote means that the terms of the bailout can no longer apply. Tsipras wants PASOK and New Democracy to do the same in a letter to the IMF and the EU. This prompted Antonio Samaras to accuse Tsipras of risking Greece’s membership of the eurozone. The conservative leader said his party would be prepared to back a minority government “as long as it secures the country’s position in the eurozone and its national interest.” But, he said, the leftist leader’s statement left no doubt “that he has no intention of safeguarding Greece’s European identity and future” and revealed “unbelievable arrogance.”

 

Jörg Asmussen became the first eurozone official to link Greek membership of the eurozone to the reform programme. He told Handelsblatt that there was no readiness from the troika’s side to re-engage in negotiations Asked if Greece should get out of the eurozone if it does not implement the program he replied that it was up to them to decide whether they want to remain a member. According to Süddeutsche Zeitung, the troika has cancelled all meetings it had planned to hold in Athens in May in order to wait for a clarification of the political situation.

 

Informal summit on growth agenda


Herman Van Rompuy has called EU leaders to discuss the fallout from the Greek and French elections and the increasing clamour for new measures to boost growth in Europe’s recession-struck economies at an informal meeting on May 23, according to the Irish Times. Enda Kenny said that he had urged Van Rompuy to hold a summit meeting on a growth agenda, “but there are issues that are clearly not in Ireland’s interests, including changes to corporation tax rates.” Preparations for the summit are overshadowed by the uncertain political outlook in Greece.

 

Bankia is threatening to become the next Northern Rock


The Bankia recapitalisation is turning out to be one of the more important developing stories of the eurozone crisis. This is an affair that looks increasingly like an Iberian Northern Rock story.


Following on from our briefing yesterday, in which we quoted an El Pais linking the resignation of Rato to the capital injection, it turns out that the Spanish government totally cocked up the transition. Mariano Rajoy started the avalanche with a rare radio interview he gave on Monday, in which he talked in vague terms about the need to recapitalise the banking system. Then Rato’s resignation letter came out. While Rajoy and Rato had earlier agreed on Rato’s eventual departure, this sudden shift came as a surprise. This was not supposed to happen this way. Rato must have realised he was being set up as fall guy, and wanted to pre-empt the news flow. The government attempt to micromanage the process clearly came unstuck. The result: denials everywhere, and worried retail investors, who are beginning to get out. The parallels to Northern Rock are obvious.


Further delevopments: El Confidencial reports that BFA, the parent group of Bankia, and Bankia are to push forward their board meetings to today. And here is their article about the retail investors starting to panic. And finally, here is El Confidencial article about the now inevitable nationalisation of Bankia, to be announced on Friday. That articles includes the detail that Deloittes, the auditors of BFA, refused to sign off on the accounts. The original plan had been to do announce the entire package on Friday – Rato successions, the recapitalisation etc.

 

Asmussen tells Hollande to respect fiscal pact and to get deficit down in time


In Handelsblatt interview Asmussen also said Francois Hollande would need to respect France’s obligations within the eurozone, including the ratification of the fiscal pact. “Also I expect that the new government will stand by its promise to bring the deficit below the 3% limit.” Asmussen stressed that “it must be clear to everyone that the fiscal pact that is complemented by a growth element must not be weakened in its substance”.

 

Merkel prepares her counter-offensive on Hollande


According to Le Figaro Angela Merkel and her lieutenants are preparing a counter-offensive to Hollande’s request to re-orient the eurozone’s crisis strategy and to keep the currency union on her path of fiscal consolidation and structural reform. The chancellor’s advisor quoted by the paper said that should growth be financed by new debt it would be Germany in the end who would have to pay for socialist’s victory. “The French economy and her finances remain in a precarious state”, Peter Altmaier, one of Merkel’s closest confidents, said. “France has no room for manoeuvre”, he added warning that all increase of deficit and debt in France would at once be sanctioned by the markets.

 

Bild fears Germany will have to pay for Hollande’s victory


Germany’s mass market daily Bild has an article enumerating a long list of Francois Hollande’s electoral presents. The story runs under the headline “The French will retire at age 60 … and we at age 67!”. It lists among other items the promise to freeze gas prizes for three months, to cut VAT back from 21.2% to 19%, to raise school subsidies for poor families by 25%, to lower the retirement age back from 62 to 60 years for certain categories and raise the minimum salary to €1398 per month. In a separate editorial comment Jän Schäfer explains Bild’s 10m daily readers that this is a “beautiful expensive dream”. Schäfer argues: “For years Europe has lived above its means and it has wasted billions of euros. Therefore it is no longer the time for presents but for painful reforms and consolidation programs. Otherwise others will have to pay the bill for France. And most probably that will be the Germans …”.

 

Spaniard to replace Regling at the helm of the ESM


The Spanish top official Belèn Romana Garcia is likely to replace Klaus Regling at the helm of the ESM, Handelsblatt reports. Regling’s departure would be a consequence of Wolfgang Schäuble’s nomination as the new eurogroup chairman which is almost certain according to the paper. Jean-Claude Juncker’s departure from the eurogroup’s chairmanship would open the way to the nomination of Yves Mersch, currently governor of Luxemburg’s central bank, to succeed to the José Manuel González-Páramo at the ECB’s executive board. The French however may lose out in the game of musical chairs, Handelsblatt points out, since their candidate to succeed to Thomas Mirow at the EBRD is encountering resistance.

 

CDU candidate Northrhine-Westphalia calls state elections a referendum on Merkel’s euro policy


The CDU candidate for the state elections in Northrhine-Westphalia Norbert Röttgen said next Sunday’s vote in Germany’s most populous state was a vote to strengthen Angela Merkel’s stability policy during the eurozone crisis, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. By transforming the election into a referendum on the chancellor’s European policy, he wants turn attention away from himself and blame the chancellor for his likely failure, Merkel and other CDU officials in Berlin think who were surprised and angry by Röttgen’s strategy. The current environment minister who was once considered to be very close to Merkel claims his strategy was agreed with the party at a recent meeting but other participants denied this was the case. Röttgen is expected to lose to the outgoing SPD state prime minister Hannelore Kraft.

 

Treason!


Much of the crisis commentary is about narratives. The German narrative is well known to our readers here. A quite shocking example, even to us, has been a commentary in this morning’s Welt in which the author argues that the SPD’s repositioning on the fiscal pact – falling in line with Francois Hollande – was bordering on treason (“Vaterlandsverat”). The argument, by a Dorothea Siems, is the usual one: a growth pact would cost so much money that Germany (!) would be crippled under its debt burden. We were intrigued by the word “treason” because the author clearly portrays this as a fight between French and German interests, and see the SPD trying to align itself with the enemy. (Die Welt is an awful newspaper in general, which is why we have not included it in our press review, but it is now qualifying to make it into our rogue’s gallery, along with Bild.)

 

What Hollande must tell Merkel


Back on earth again, this is a good column by Martin Wolf in which he outlines what Hollande has to say to Merkel. First, he must forget his domestic promises. No one will take him seriously if he does not. Second, he must embark on a serious discussion on endgame scenarios, which including five components: symmetrical adjustment, permanent transfers; external surplus for the eurozone; semi-permanent depression; total break-up. Of those five, the only sensible course is number one. Wolf concludes that the chances that Hollande can deliver are small. But he is the only chance the eurozone has got.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois


Getting significantly worse for Italy and Spain (but not France!);

euro again below $1.30.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.195

1.268

1.290

Italy

3.979

4.214

4.207

Spain

4.162

4.324

4.365

Portugal

9.627

9.799

9.952

Greece

21.408

21.883

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.268

5.341

5.587

Belgium

1.692

1.728

1.773

Bund Yield

1.604

1.542

1.549

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.302

1.2974

 

Yen

104.030

103.49

 

Pound

0.805

0.8038

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.83

1.78

 

2 yr

1.78

1.72

 

5 yr

1.8

1.78

 

10 yr

2.07

2.05

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-8.071

-7.471

 

1 Month

-1.514

-0.014

 

3 Months

29.950

29.45

 

1 Year

96.179

96.179

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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Terça-feira, 8 de Maio de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 8 de Maio de 2012

Samaras and Venizelos want Greek debt deal to be renegotiated

  • The Greek elections have already changed the politics of the eurozone crisis strategy: the two pro-austerity parties are now saying the Greek debt deal must be renegotiated;
  • Venizelos wants the cuts to be phased in over three years, as opposed to two;
  • Samaras handed back his mandate to form a government, a task that has now passed to Syriza, the left-wing anti-reform party;
  • chances of forming a new government are slim, as a result of which new elections are now considered the most likely outcome;
  • Francois Hollande wants either eurobonds or ECB primary market participation to be explicitly included in the fiscal treaty;
  • the economics spokesman of Italy’s PDL has made exactly the same request, criticizing Monti’s cosy relationship with Angela Merkel;
  • Hollande wants to open up the Franco-German relationship, and make it less exclusive;
  • Merkel reminds Hollande that agreed pacts have to be honoured;
  • Holger Steltzner says pressure on Merkel to open her wallet will become unbearable;
  • Mariano Rajoy has forced out Rodrigo Rato as head of Bankia ahead of a state capital injection;
  • Spanish PM yields to pressure to restructuring the worst parts of the Spanish banking system;
  • Brussels is currently considering whether to give Spain an extra year to comply with the fiscal target;
  • arrears of Portuguese creditors have been rising strongly this year;
  • Bundesbank criticizes the trend towards risk sharing in the monetary union;
  • Sebastian Dullien and Mark Schieritz, meanwhile, argue that Germany’s rising Target 2 balances constitute a significant protection of private sector creditors.

It looks like we are up for new elections in Greece, after Antonio Samaras failed his attempt to form a government and the chances of SYRIZA to form a left wing coalition are slim. But the really interesting development yesterday is the change of positioning among the two pro-austerity parties: Samaras said ND had been the first party to call for a renegotiation of Greece’s debt deal with creditors. “We’re glad others have understood the importance of renegotiating the deal,” Samaras was cited by Kathimerini. But even PASOK leader Evangelos Venizelos, who as finance minister arranged Greece's second bailout, said according to Reuters that the deal should be renegotiated to lessen the burden on Greeks by spreading the cuts over three years instead of two. And SYRIZA is to talk to smaller leftist parties that didn’t make it into Parliament in a bid to bolster SYRIZA’s chances in the next polls.

 

 

After Samaras declared his efforts to form a government as failed, the task to form a government was passed on to the leader of the Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA), Alexis Tsipras. Kathimeriniwrites that Tsipras looks for a leftist government with other small left groups. “We want to create a government of leftist forces in order to escape the bailout leading us to bankruptcy," said Tsipras. But his chances are slim. Tsipras’s key goal is to win round the Communist Party (KKE) and Democratic Left, a moderate, pro-Europe grouping. If this fails - which is likely as KKE has already ruled out any cooperations - Tsipras will reach out to other parties. But without the KKE, the other anti-bailout parties of the left cannot bring enough parliamentary seats to produce a majority. If Tsipras fails to cobble together a coalition, Socialist PASOK party is next in line to give it a go with zero chances of success. New elections are thus looming, we can expect a different campaign this time.

 

Hollande wants either Eurobonds of direct ECB bond purchases on the primary market

 

 

Talking to the slate.fr Francois Hollande replied to a question about Germany’s opposition to Eurobonds: “On this question we will have discussions with our partners and in particular with our German friends, but they cannot put into place two deadlocks at once: one on the Eurobonds and the other on the direct financing of debt by the ECB”. On his demands to stimulate growth the French president elect said that he did not aim at a Keynesian deficit spending program as he is committed to reducing the French deficit. Rather he was aiming at “putting into place instruments at the European level, which means increasing the capital of the European Investment Bank, mobilising structural funds and the financial transaction tax which would allow financing of infrastructure works. Also Europe could at last decide to borrow which is all what the Eurobonds or the project bonds are about”.

 

Italy’s PDL also wants ECB bond purchases and eurobonds inserted into the fiscal pact

 

 

This is a potentially interesting development. Italy’s PDL (Berlusconi’s party) wants ECB bond purchases firmly integrated into the fiscal pact. The Financial Times has the story from Rome that Renato Brunetta, a former minister under Silvio Berlusconi, and now PDL economics spokesman, said he wanted the possibility of eurobonds and participation of the ECB in primary debt auctions to be explicitly included into the fiscal pact. Mr Brunetta said this was the party’s agreed line. He also expressed deep frustration over Mario Monti’s decision to allow himself to be co-opted into Merkozy alliance.

  

 

Hollande wants to end the “Franco-German duopoly”

 

In a further reply to slate.fr Francois Hollande said that he wanted to reorient France away from her tight relationship to Germany. “While I do believe in the Franco-German motor, I do contest the idea of a duopoly”, the president elect said. Citing former French presidents and German chancellors Hollande said that they had always been careful to combine “an intergovernmental approach with a community process which was the best way to avoid that our partners felt being locked out or even worse to be subordinated”. According to the incoming president this equilibrium has been modified in the last few years. “The Franco-German relation was exclusive. The European authorities have been neglected and certain countries, especially the most fragile ones had the unpleasant impression to be faced with a directorate.”

 

Merkel shrugs off Hollande’s demand to renegotiate the fiscal pact

 

 

Angela Merkel politely said she would receive Francois Hollande “with open arms” when he comes to Berlin on May 15, the day of his inauguration, Süddeutsche Zeitung writes. But the chancellor warned the president elect that she was not prepared to renegotiate the fiscal pact as he had requested during the election campaign. It was “a basic approach in Europe that after elections, be it in big or small countries, we don’t put everything into question that we have decided previously”, Merkel said. The chancellor referred to her acceptance of the decision taken by her predecessor Gerhard Schröder to engage into accession negotiations with Turkey which she stuck to despite the fact that she had opposed Turkey’s EU membership during her election campaign in 2005. However Merkel is prepared to allow Hollande to score a public victory on his request to do more on growth. Advisors said that there were about €80bn of money from EU funds that were available. Also they said Germany would support making it easier for poor countries to get money from the EU’s structural funds by lowering the co-financing requirement from currently 50% to 5 to 10%. Also Berlin would support increasing the EIB’s capital by €10bn with to €2bn to €3bn provided Bundestag agrees.

 

Holger Steltzner says pressure on Merkel will become unbearable

 

 

“The pressure on the chancellor will increase to finally completely open up her wallet”, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung’s economic editor Holger Steltzner writes. “After the growth pact the banking licence for the crisis fund or the communitarization of all debt via Eurobonds will be on the summit agenda. The same will be the case the forbidden monetary financing by the ECB, perhaps even its prize stability mandate because the Germans will have to surmount their fear of inflation which most others think is exaggerated.”

 

Rajoy forces Rato out of Bankia in return for a recapitalisation

 

 

El Pais has the story this morning that Mariano Rajoy has forced Rodrigo Rato to resign as chairman of Bankia to pave the way for a state injection of funds into Spain’s most troubled caja. Bankia is said to have toxic assets of more than €30bn. Bankia is one of the cajas most closely associated with the ruling Popular Party, and Rajoy felt it was necessary to force a change in the chairmanship of the bank if public money is injected into the bank. El Pais talks about a range of €7-10bn. The paper said it was not an easy decision to take, given the importance of Rato to the party. The article also said that one of the reasons was the public pressure mounted by the IMF, which had cited Bankia by name in its recent stability report as a bank in dire need of restructuring.

 

 

(This is a tiny amount of what will be needed to save the sector, or even Bankia itself, and much more in recapitalisation will ultimately be required, and it most likely to come from the ESM, as the Spanish does not have the resources to do this.)

 

Brussels considers giving Spain an extra year to meet the 3% target

 

 

El Pais has the story from Brussels that the European Commission is considering given Spain an extra year to meet the 3% deficit target target. The target was always an exercise in delusion, and a failure to recognise the economic dynamics of a country following such a severe financial shock. The article quoted unnamed sources as saying that it would be premature to conclude that an extra year would be granted, but added that economists in the Commission were already working on various scenarios. The article also seems to suggest that the election of Francois Hollande had an impact on the decision.

 

Credits in arrears are rising rapidly in Portugal

 

 

The number of Portuguese with their loans in arrears is increasing more rapidly since the beginning of the year, Jornal de Negocios reports. Over 27,800 individuals have been delaying payments during the first quarter, equivalent of 100 individuals per day,. This is three times more than the average of last year. Most are unpaid mortgage payments.  End of March there are 700.000 Portuguese who have their credits in arrears.

 

Bundesbank criticizes fiscal pact and ESM

 

 

In an opinion for yesterday’s public hearing of Bundestag’s budget committee on the fiscal pact and the ESM the Bundesbank harshly criticized the trend towards European risk sharing without any European control over national budgets, Financial Times Deutschland reports. “All in all the trend towards a an increasing communtarization of risks continues”, the German central bank warned. The Bundesbank contradicted the IMF and others who had argued that the fiscal pact provided for sufficient common control over the eurozone’s national budgets to justify the progressive introduction of Eurobonds. “The fiscal pact does not lay out the basis for a ‘fiscal union’ and it does by no means justify common liability as would be the case for example with Eurobonds”, the central bank said. Also the Bundesbank warned that the ESM while potentially beneficial in a situation of existential crisis also weakened the sense of responsibility of individual euro governments for their national public finances.

 

Why Germany’s Target 2 surplus may be good news for savers

 

 

In a column in VoxSebastian Dullien and Mark Schieritz argue that there is a highly welcome side effect to Germany’s large Target 2 surplus. A significant share of the changes in the Target 2 balances is effectively a transfer of risk from the balance sheets of the private sector to the Bundesbank. The assumption by Hans-Werner Sinn had been that in case of a euro exit the private sector would honour its liabilities, while the public sector would not. That is against the experience in other financial crises. Without this protection, large parts of the private sector in the core of the eurozone would be bankrupted by a member state’s euro exit overnight.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

Markets remain nervous.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.247

1.195

1.238

Italy

3.869

4.129

4.135

Spain

4.180

4.162

4.223

Portugal

9.492

9.627

9.594

Greece

19.130

21.408

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.272

5.268

5.525

Belgium

1.745

1.692

1.752

Bund Yield

1.584

1.604

1.598

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.301

1.3038

 

Yen

103.900

104.29

 

Pound

0.806

0.8059

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.83

1.83

 

2 yr

1.78

1.78

 

5 yr

1.8

1.8

 

10 yr

2.07

2.07

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

 

 

 

1 Month

 

 

 

3 Months

 

 

 

1 Year

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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Segunda-feira, 7 de Maio de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 7 de Maio de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti

Insurrection

  • The eurozone’s  anti-crisis strategy is in shambles this morning, as the two pro-austerity parties in Greece fail to achieve a majority among them;
  • New Democracy is the largest party with 18.9% and Pasok comes in third with 13.2%;
  • Syriza, a left-wing party that opposes the bailout comes in second with 16.8%;
  • even the rule that gives the largest party 50 additional seats fails to secure a majority;
  • political analysts say the most likely outcome are new elections (though not clear why the result should be any different);
  • Syriza’s leader says the vote means the defeat of austerity;
  • in France, Francois Hollande wins the presidential elections with 51.67% of the votes;
  • the outcome is unsurprising, but closer than what was predicted by the last polls;
  • Hollande hails his victory as an end to austerity;
  • the German reaction is outwardly polite, but nervous;
  • German commentators argue that Hollande will soon fall in line with Angela Merkel;
  • in Germany, the CDU is likely to lose power in Schleswig-Holstein, following yesterday’s state elections;
  • the big news there is the surprisingly strong performance of the FDP, which is now openly discussing a coalition with the SPD and the Greens in Berlin;
  • Wolfgang Schäuble says there is no problem with higher wages in the engineering industry;
  • Wolfgang Münchau argues that crisis resolution will ultimately occur through a default into the ESM, something that will naturally give rise to eurobonds;
  • Paul Krugman, meanwhile, says the eurozone faces a choice between breakup or inflation. 

Of the two elections, the Greek turned out to be the more important. What happened in France is what the polls had been predicting for more than a year now. Francois Hollande is going to be the next president of France. But the Greek elections were the real  shocker – not predicted by the polls. The combination of New Democracy and Pasok have failed to obtain a majority – and this despite the fact that the largest party gains an extra 50 seats. No matter how you do the maths, it is impossible to achieve both a stable government, while maintaining a broad-based coalition in support of the programme.

 

 

The Greek vote will be interpreted as a popular vote against austerity. The election of Francois Hollande is part of an anti-incumbent trend, and a rejection of the centre-right crisis narrative. All eyes are now on the September elections in the Netherlands – which promises to be quite possibly the single most important election during the entire eurozone crisis. The outcome of the Greek elections, with populist parties of the left and the right making huge gains at the expense of central parties, will no doubt encourage the Dutch Socialists and the Freedom Party of Geert Wilders. What we saw last night may have been the beginning of a broad-based insurrection. As one of the consequences of these elections, we would expected to see an effort by the European Union to scale back austerity, but probably not enough to reverse the trend.

 


The overnight market reaction was strongly negative. The euro dropped to below $1.2983. Spreads were up, and Asian stock markets took a hit.

 

The Greek insurrection

 

 

With 98.6% votes counted it becomes clear that the two pro-bailout parties have lost their parliamentary majority in the election. The two large parties lost out dramatically, New Democracy is leading with 18.9% (33.5% in 2009), while PASOK came in only third with 13.2% of the votes (43.9% in 2009), according to Reuters. Together they only have 149 out of 300 seats in parliament.  Syriza, the coalition of the radical left opposing the bailout programme, came in second with 16.8%. The Independent Greeks party, founded by ousted ND MP Panos Kammenos, who believes that Greece was the victim of an international conspiracy, received 10.6% of the votes and the neo-fascist party Chrysi Avgi (Golden Dawn) enters parliament for the first time with 7%. The Communist KKE, the only party to openly favour a Greek exit from the eurozone, received 8.5% of the votes and the pro-euro but anti bailout Democratic Left received 6.1%...

 

 

Analysts say the unprecedented fragmentation of the vote will bring weeks of instability and force another election. Under the constitution, Greek President Karolos Papoulias will give the biggest party three days to form a government. If it fails, the next largest group gets a chance and so on down the line. If they all fail, new polls would be called about three weeks later.

 

 

In order to renew their uneasy partnership, New Democracy and PASOK would have to woo other reluctant parties. Any coalition is expected to be short-lived, writes Reuters. The small parties that gained in the election are all against the bailout, but they are too divided to form an alternative coalition.  Syriza’s Left Coalition leader Alexis Tsipras, at 37 Greece's youngest political leader, hailed a peaceful revolution and said German Chancellor Angela Merkel should understand that austerity policies had been defeated. 

 

 

Germany has warned there would be "consequences" to an anti-bailout vote and the EU and IMF insist whoever wins the election must stick to austerity if they want to receive the aid that keeps Greece afloat. But many voters bitterly dismissed such threats.  "I don't think that voting for a small party will make us go bankrupt. We already are," Reuters quotes 53-year-old Panagiotis, a craftsman, after voting for the conservative Independent Greeks. 

 

The French insurrection

 

The final outcome is: Francois Hollande 51.67%, Nicolas Sarkozy: 48.33%. The margin is narrower than in any of the pre-election polls though Friday’s Ipsos poll came close with a 52/48 prognosis. For details on the results go to Lemonde.frLefigaro.fr or Lesechos.fr. Nicolas Sarkozy acknowledged his defeat and hinted at leaving the political scene by saying the he was going “to become a French among the French”. The main political emphasis is now on the forthcoming parliamentary elections.

 

 

Speaking to thousands of supporters on Place de la Bastille in Paris at almost one in the morning Francois Hollande said: “In all the capitals there are people who thanks to us hope and want to end austerity. This is my message: You are a movement that is rising everywhere in the world”, Lemonde.fr reports. Speaking earlier his political base in Tulle in the Corrère department the president elect also said that among his priorities was to reduce France’s deficit. Angela Merkel congratulated Hollande in a phone call and invited him to come to Berlin as early as possible after taking over office, Spiegel Online reports. Andreas Schockenhoff, the deputy chief whip of the CDU/CSU in Bundestag said everybody wanted sustainable growth but not at the expense of stability and budgetary discipline. “Otherwise a new phase of market nervousness is ahead of us”, he warnd. “Hollande now has to clarify quickly and without ambiguity that the fiscal pact will not be changed.” However SPD chairman Sigmar Gabriel and European Parliament president Martin Schulz, also a German social democrat, wrote to Hollande that “France will decisively contribute that next to the necessary consolidation measures for the national budgets there will also be strong steps for growth and jobs in Europe”.

 

Hollande will pick prime minister and appeals for majority in parliament

 

 

Francois Hollande appealed to the French “to give him a majority at the French assembly” in the parliamentary elections on June 10 and 17. After taking office Hollande will choose a prime minister who will run an interim government until the elections. According to Lefigaro.fr, the two politicians most likely to get the job are Jean-Marc Ayrault, a moderate socialist until now the parliamentary group’s chief whip and Martine Aubry, the former employment minister who is considered more left leaning.

 

The German response: Hollande will disappoint

 

Commenting in Handelsblatt, Thomas Hanke criticized that Hollande had acted during the campaign as if France could take a leave from globalization. “Whoever listened to Hollande was able to forget that France is among the worrying countries in the eurozone and that it is in danger of catching the interest rate virus: No other country has lost many market shares and has seen its current account deficit deteriorate as quickly”, Hanke writes.

 

 

Commenting in Spiegel Online under the headline “The president who will have to disappoint his voters” Mathieu von Rohr argued: “Hollande will probably not be a socialist crazy about expenditure. He will have to bitterly disappoint his voters. Hollande is becoming the president of a country that is economically sick. The debt level is at 90% of GDP, it has not had a balanced budget since 1974 and the public expenditure level is 57%, one of the highest in the eurozone. Unemployment is at 10% and there is a whole generation of immigrant’s children who are growing up in ghetto-like suburbs without ever coming into contact with the labour market.”

 

Merkel’s Christian Democrats likely to lose control of Schleswig-Holstein

 

 

On a normal Sunday, this would have been big news. At the state elections of Schlewsig-Holstein, the Christian Democrats remained the strongest party with 30.8% (-0,4%), according to faz.net. But the SPD came in a close second with 30.4% (+4.9%). The SPD candidate Torsten Albig last night announced that he will want to lead a coalition with the Greens (13.2%) and the Danish minority’s party SSW (4.6%). Representing a national minority, the Danes are exempt from the 5% threshold that other parties have to surpass in order to make into the regional parliament. The biggest surprise, however, was that the liberal FDP got in with 8.2% of the votes thanks to its strong regional chairman Wolfgang Kubicki. The Pirates confirmed that they were a lasting presence in Germany by scoring also 8.2%.

 

Schäuble pleads for higher salaries in Germany

 

 

In an interview with Focus, Wolfgang Schäuble pleaded for higher salaries for Germany’s 3.6m metal industry workers. “It is ok if salaries rise more quickly here than they do in other EU countries”, the finance minister said. According to Schäuble, Germany had done its homework and was able to afford higher pay rises than its neighbours. “But we have to pay attention not to exaggerate”, he cautioned. IG Metall currently insists on a rise by 6.5%.

 

Wolfgang Münchau on the mechanism of a eurozone crisis resolution

 

 

In his FT column, Wolfgang Münchau writes that the mechanism of the crisis resolution in the eurozone will have to work through existing institutions. In the absence of an ECB bailout, this can only mean a default into the ESM - by Greece, Portugal, Spanish banks -  that will ultimately give rise to eurobonds. Munchau makes the assumption that governments will prefer to issue new eurobonds to settling ESM losses through direct transfers. This is also the best way to create a bank resolution fund. Let the Spanish banks default into the ESM, and then separate the ESM into two – a resolution fund backed by eurobonds, and into a classic anti-crisis mechanism.

 

Paul Krugman on macroeconomic adjustment

 

 

Paul Krugman says the eurozone is facing a choice between break-up or adjustment. The Germans misunderstand the nature of their own adjustment of the last decade. If others emulate Germany, it would mean higher inflation everywhere.

“[The]  German success story was based on a (modestly) inflationary boom in much of the rest of Europe. Give the peripheral countries a comparably favorable external environment — or actually a more favorable one, since they’re much deeper in the hole — and maybe there is a way to make this work. Let Spain regain competitiveness by inflating more slowly than Germany, rather than by deflating, and this whole thing might, might, become feasible.

But this means, yes, overall inflation in the euro area significantly higher than the less than 2 % target. It certainly means a lot higher than the 1.5% the market currently expects.

Don’t like that? OK, so no euro. It’s that stark.”

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

 

Interesting to see the improvement in French spreads, but a deterioration of Italian spreads;

euro at $1.2983.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.304

1.247

1.260

Italy

3.893

4.188

4.169

Spain

4.188

4.180

4.228

Portugal

9.225

9.492

10.032

Greece

18.967

19.130

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.224

5.272

5.253

Belgium

1.734

1.745

1.722

Bund Yield

1.614

1.584

1.603

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.315

1.2983

 

Yen

105.450

103.6

 

Pound

0.812

0.8055

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.2009

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.86

1.83

 

2 yr

1.81

1.78

 

5 yr

1.8

1.8

 

10 yr

2.06

2.07

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-8.100

-7.3

 

1 Month

-2.114

-1.414

 

3 Months

27.771

27.371

 

1 Year

99.521

99.421

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 15:30
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Sexta-feira, 4 de Maio de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 4 de Maio de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

 

Bayrou will vote for Hollande, but the polling gap is closing

  • Francois Bayrou said he will vote for Francois Hollande, marking another setback for Nicolas Sarkozy;
  • Bayrou said it was his personal choice, and did not constitute a recommendation;
  • some of latest polls suggest that the gap between Hollande and Sarkozy may have narrowed to 5 points, but other polls disagree;
  • Hollande is considered to have been the winner of the debate;
  • Philip Stephens says there is no need to fret about a victory by Francois Hollande;
  • Merkel says (implausibly) that she looks forward to working with Hollande;
  • Süddeutsche Zeitung asks whether France will become another Italy after Sunday;
  • Mario Draghi calls for a ten-year strategy for the eurozone;
  • there was no policy change at the ECB yesterday;
  • Fitch has a complex chart showing what will be happen to the eurozone under different scenarios;
  • the FDP’s chairman’s popularity has sunk to new lows ahead of a crucial set of state elections;
  • Antonis Samaras makes a desperate last ditch plea to his country ahead of Sunday’s elections;
  • Austria agrees a national stability pact;
  • Martin Wolf says that austerity policy that lack credibility will collapse dismally;
  • Seamus Coffey says the fiscal treaty’s debt reduction rule is no big deal;
  • John McHale, meanwhile, proposes a 4% inflation target.

This is our last briefing before Sunday’s elections in France, where Francois Hollande remains the clear favourite to become the first Socialist president after Francois Mitterrand. Yesterday’s big news was the declaration of Modem leader Francois Bayrou, who said he would vote for Hollande, Le Figaro reports, which marks a further setback for Nicolas Sarkozy. Bayrou said it was his personal choice and he did note appeal to the 9.13% of the French who had voted for him in the first round to follow his lead. Nevertheless people around Sarkozy were furious since there is a strong likelihood that Bayrou’s choice will influence at least some of his voters and cement Hollande’s lead.

 

However some of the polls suggest that the gap between Sarkozy and Hollande has been tighenting. Two opinion polls, from BVA on May 4, and OpinionWay on May 3, had results of Hollande 47.5%, Sarkozy 52.5%, while TNS-Sofres had Hollande leading Sarkozy by 7pp (53.5/46.5). It is hard to depict any trend from the data, though the BVA and OpinionWay polls show the narrowest outcome since the beginning of the campaign. The polls were all conducted before Bayrou’s declaration yesterday. According to initially polling, Hollande is thought to have performed better during the televised debate.

 

Philip Stephens on Francois Hollande

 

 

Philip Stephens has picked up on last week’s editorial of the Economist, which had a cover story on the “dangerous” Mr Hollande. Stephens makes the point that there is nothing dangerous about Mr Hollande, or any other more or a less centrist politician standing for office in Europe. He says European democracy has a new organising principle. Citizens may change their leaders from time to time, but only as long as they don’t change direction. Stephens says the rise of the extreme right and left in France means nothing, except that it serves as a reminder that extremists are on the rise in times of depression.


(The question we would pose: what happens if the recessions/depression take an unusually long time, which is something you might expect after a financial crisis of such gigantic proportions?)

 

Merkel says she looks forward to working with Hollande


Angela Merkel claims that she is looking forward to working together with Hollande, Süddeutsche Zeitung writes in its leading front page story. According to the paper, advisors and diplomats close to the socialist candidate have sought to downplay fears that Hollande would be confrontational and risk a break in the close Franco-German relations. SZ quotes from protocols it has seen according to which Hollande is looking for a “pragmatic solution” in his demand to renegotiate the fiscal pact. Hollande’s advisors have already worked out proposals how to complement the pact in order to enhance growth which they want to show Merkel as soon as he is elected so that the additions could be agreed at the next EU summit in June. Hollande’s advisors also reassured the Merkel team that the new president would stick a responsible fiscal policy and abide to his goal to present a deficit of 3.0% of GDP by 2013. Hollande is conscious, according to the protocol that he will have to tell the French “hard truths at the very beginning of his mandate”.

 

Will France be another Italy, Süddeutsche Zeitung asks


In a separate story in the economics section, Süddeutsche Zeitung writes about the fragile economic and fiscal situation in France under the headline “Will France be another Italy?” The paper quotes bank analysts who are downbeat because of the fragile public finances, the loss of competitiveness, weak growth and a potential downgrade.

 

Mario Draghi calls for a ten year strategy


This sounds good, but we are still not entirely clear what he means. Mario Draghi called on government to present a 10-year strategic plan for the eurozone. Speaking at the ECB’s out-of-town junket in Barcelona, where nothing was substance was decided or uttered in public, Draghi said the fiscal pact can only be a starting point in bring the member states of the eurozone closer together. He said the world needed “clarity of vision for the next 10 years”, according to El Pais, something similar to three-stage process in the 1990s which led to the adoption of the euro.

 

Otherwise, he was non-committal on policy. He left the door open for further unconventional measures, and said the majority were against exiting right now. He stuck to the ECB’s view that the economy would improve in the second half.

 

Fitch presents the full bifurcation scenarios


This story fits in nicely with Draghi’s ten-year strategy. Fitch has drawn up a massively complex bifurcation chart, showing what will happen to the eurozone in various scenarios. The whole table is too complex to reproduce, but you can find it on FT Alphaville.  The scenarios include a Greek exit – orderly and disorderly varieties, a quasi-fiscal union, a German/core exit, a full political union, and a full break-up. (Draghi’s 10-year plan would have the advantage that it would narrow down some of these wild scenarios. This is also why Angela Merkel’s short term strategy is so dangerous.)

 

Historic popularity low for liberal FDP chairman


Ahead of next Sunday’s state election in Schleswig-Holstein and election in Germany’s most populous state Northrhine-Westphalia the liberal FDP party chairman Phililpp Rösler hit a historic low in his popularity ratings, Spiegel Online reports. Only 16% of the Germans still believe that the party boss and economics minister is doing a good job. His survival at the party’s head and possibly the stability of Angela Merkel’s coalition in Berlin will crucially depend whether the FDP will pass the 5% threshold in both elections, which is not certain.

 

Samaras steps up rhetoric in last days of campaigning


New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras toughened his language regarding illegal immigrants and right-wing parties on Thursday as he made his penultimate campaign speech in Athens, during which he said that Greece would enter a period of “instability” if voters do not give the conservatives a clear majority on Sunday, Kathimerini reports. About the three parties on the right, Popular Orthodox Rally (LAOS) and Chrysi Avgi, all of which opposed the bailout programme, Samaras said  “They are water carriers for PASOK, they have nothing to offer, they simply put obstacles in the way of us achieving a strong popular mandate… they promise paradise with material from hell. They are devils” The ND leader insisted that forming a coalition government with PASOK after the elections was not an option worth considering.

 

Austria agrees a national stability pact


In Austria, the federal government and the Länder finally agreed on a federal stability pact including a sanction mechanism, a weaker version of the EU blueprint, Der Standard reports. The pact is to ensure that all contribute to the efforts to save €5.2bn to reach a balanced budget by 2016 and to reduce the debt level thereafter. Länder who repetitively violate the pact risk losing the solidarity of the community. If Länder or communities fail the deficit target in two consecutive years, it triggers the sanction mechanism to be agreed unanimously by a committee with representatives of federal, Länder and local communities.

 

Martin Wolf on credibility


Martin Wolf’s column is about the UK, but it is just as relevant for the eurozone. He says what he learned from 1992 was that credibility collapses when everybody thinks that the pain policymakers inflict is ultimately not sustainable. The same holds now for the policies of austerity.

 

“Yet the fiscal squeeze has barely begun. According to the Office of Budgetary Responsibility, net borrowing fell by just 1.8 per cent of GDP between 2009-10, just before the coalition government came into office, and 2011-12. A further tightening of 7.2 per cent of GDP is due by 2016-17. The assumption that this will coincide with economic expansion is, in today’s economic conditions, bordering on the heroic.”

 

(You could say the same about Spain. The current policies are consistent with a decade of economic depression.)

 

 

Seamus Coffey on the debt reduction rule


There is, understandably, a big discussion in Ireland about the technical aspects of the fiscal pact, including about whether it will require additional fiscal consolidation in the future. Seamus Coffey, writing in the Irish economy blog, has a very use article that explains how the rule works in practice (including the formula use to determine compliance with the 1/20 debt reduction rule). He comes to the conclusion that Irish economic forecast would keep Ireland strictly on a path that is compliant with the framework of the rule, and indeed Ireland may reduce its debt faster than the rule suggests. (We would caution against this assessment as it depends crucially on relative optimistic growth assumptions. If these are not met, the debt reduction rule still kicks in.)

 

 

John McHale on monetary vs fiscal


Writing in the Irish economy blog, John McHale argues that monetary policy are more effective than fiscal policies in dealing with the recession. He advocates an increase in the ECB’s inflation target of 4%.

 

“While there are downsides, this revised target could accomplish a number of things: (i) with a clear mandate to achieve this single target, it is compatible with a reasonable definition of price stability;

(ii) it would allow for lower real interest rates, thereby boosting interest-sensitive spending;

(iii) given inevitable nominal rigidities, it would allow for a more feasible route to real exchange rate depreciations in the periphery relative to the core;

(iv) it should lead to a nominal depreciation of the euro, allowing further  trade-weighted real depreciation for the periphery;

(v) it would help ease real debt burdens;

and (vi) it would help ease the overall euro zone budget constraint through higher seigniorage revenues.”

 

 

Ryan Avent says austerity also bad for integration

 

This is a wise comment by Ryan Avent, hat tip Paul Krugman. Avent mades the point that one should step away from the country-level perspective, and look at the eurozone as a whole. The picture that emerges then is not pretty:

 

“I think the reaction to Mr Hollande’s success is telling. The overwhelming criticism is a sort of ‘look how inappropriate fiscal expansion would be for the French economy’ take. The point is that the economy that matters is that of the euro zone as a whole. And when one steps back and looks at the dynamics in play, it becomes clear that the robotic push for national-level austerity across the euro zone is undermining integration and thereby exacerbating the crisis.”

 

 

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

Sideways.

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

France

1.358

1.304

Italy

3.938

#VALUE!

Spain

4.253

4.188

Portugal

9.093

9.225

Greece

18.931

18.967

Ireland

5.261

5.224

Belgium

1.819

1.734

Bund Yield

1.615

1.614

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

Dollar

1.316

1.315

Yen

105.560

105.44

Pound

0.813

0.8122

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.2013

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

1 yr

1.82

1.86

2 yr

1.82

1.81

5 yr

1.8

1.8

10 yr

2.06

2.06

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

1 Week

-7.114

-7.014

1 Month

 

 

3 Months

 

 

1 Year

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 



publicado por João Machado às 21:30
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Quinta-feira, 3 de Maio de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 3 de Maio de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

Hollande remains favourite after debate

  • After 170 minutes of an angry debate between Nicolas Sarkozy and Francois Hollande, the prospects for Sunday remains unchanged;
  • Sarkozy accused Hollande of spreading lies;
  • Hollande calls Sarkozy “arrogant”, “unpleasant”, and “self-righteous”;
  • Guillaum Tabard said the debate was too long, too tense, and too technical;
  • Hollande came out in favour of eurobonds;
  • Sarkozy said he was opposed as only France and Germany could guarantee them;
  • French conservative are already positioning themselves for the succession of the UMP after Sunday’s expected defeat;
  • the eurozone is sliding deeper into recession, with the latest purchasing managers index showing a surprising strong fall;
  • eurozone unemployment reaches its highest level in 15 years;
  • the yields on German 10-year bunds fall to the lowest level in history;
  • Werner Hoyer has asked for €10bn capital increase in the EIB;
  • Wolfgang Proissl calls for a broad debate on the mandate of the ECB;
  • Evangelos Venizelos calls on voters not to support parties opposed to the bailout;
  • S&P raises its Greek credit rate from selective default to CCC;
  • Michael Noonan denies scaring Irish voters into supporting the fiscal pact;
  • Austria plans 70-year bond;
  • Bill Clinton says there can only be a long-term solution to the eurozone crisis;
  • Wolfgang Munchau, meanwhile, says the issue is short-term, not long-term: the eurozone needs to get out of the crisis first. 

After 170 minutes of  debate between Francois Hollande and Nicolas Sarkozy the situation appears to be unchanged between the two contenders for Sunday’s run-off in the French presidential election. According to an online conversation on Lemonde.fr with the paper’s editorialist Francoise Fressot “Hollande came in as the favourite and he remains the favourite”. In an exchange that seemed hostile and aggressive at times, Sarkozy accused Hollande repeatedly of spreading “lies” while Hollande portraid Sarkozy as “arrogant”, “unpleasant” and “self-righteous”. In an editorial for Les Echos Guillaume Tabard said the debate had been “too long, too tense and too technical”.

 

On the euro crisis, the socialist candidate and the conservative incumbent reiterated their diverging positions. While Hollande advocated the issue of euro bonds guaranteed Sarkozy reiterated his opposition to such securities. “Who will guarantee them if it’s not France and Germany?”, he said. “Should we raise our debt to pay the debts of others? It’s irresponsible.” Sarkozy said the ECB had done “pretty well” in fighting the region’s sovereign debt crisis given the constraints of its mandate. “This is a global crisis”, Sarkozy said. “You think it was easy? I’m not sure you’d have done much better than us. Europe has got out of the crisis.”

 

Conservative leaders position themselves for the time after Sarkozy’s defeat

 

 

According to Le Journal de Dimanche’s website le lejdd.fr, leaders of Nicolas Sarozy’s conservative UMP party start to positions themselves for the time after the president’s expected defeat in the run-off elections on Sunday. In an interview with Le Figaro, UMP chairman Jean-Francois Copé he thought it important that in the future different schools of thought should be allowed to express themselves forcefully but he warned the worst case scenario after May 6 would be a return to “a divided right” when there was the right wing RPR and the center UDF. While some leading UMP figures welcomed Copé’s initiative others like his predecessor Xavier Bertrand suspected him of positioning himself for the war of succession after Sarkozy’s defeat. Bertrand called everyone to focus on nothing else than Sunday’s election.

 

Eurozone is sliding deeper into recession

 

 

Yesterday’s big economic news was the surprise fall in the eurozone purchasing managers’ index from   from 47.7 in Marh in 45.9 in April, the lowest level since June 2009. There are also signs that the slowdown is affecting Germany (which is usually late in the cycle), as the downturns becomes more broadly based. Yesterday saw the release of the March eurozone unemployment figures, which reach a 15-year record of 10.9%, up from 10.8% in February. The drivers of this increase were Italy and Spain. Ten year German bunds were trading at just over 1.6% - an alltime low.

 

German job miracle seems to come to an end

 

In its leading front page story Financial Times Deutschland claims that the German job miracle seems to have come to an end. According to yesterday’s seasonally adjusted figures unemployment rose by 19.000 in Apri to 2.88m, the highest rise since spring 2009. According to FTD this is a likely new trend because of the deep recession in which much of eurozone is in and that is increasingly being felt in the German economy. From mid 2009 until January 2012 the number of unemployed had dropped by roughly 20.000 each month.

 

Hoyer asks for €10bn for EIB capital increase

 

 

Talking to Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, EIB president Werner Hoyer called for a €10bn capital increase in order to raise enough private capital to finance infrastructure projects in the order of €60bn. The EIB’s financing will be an important part of the European growth strategy that will be first discussed at a leader’s dinner by the end of May and most likely formally adopted at a growth summit in June. But the biggest challenge will be according to Hoyer for the EU governments to find enough projects worthy of support. The bank will not damage its reputation by supporting doubtful projects. Hoyer insisted the capital increase must come from paid in capital. The Austrian finance minister Maria Fektor came out against a capital increase. “The EIB is well equipped”, she said. “The member states cannot do consolidation packages and call for more money at the same time.”

 

Wolfgang Proissl predicts the eurozone’s economic and social situation will provoke a debate on the ECB’s mandate

 

 

Commenting in Financial Times Deutschland, Wolfgang Proissl argues that the dire economic and social situation in many euro member states will lead to a debate if the ECB’s mandate with a strong focus on inflation is still appropriate or if it should be extended growth enhancement. According to Proissl this debate will be fuelled to the likely election of Francois Hollande in France and possible changes in the power balance in Germany after two important Länder elections in Germany on Sunday. On top of that unemployment in Spain, Portugal and Greece will reach heights that look increasingly similar to the levels Germany had during the Weimar Republic and which may pose a threat to the young democracies in these three countries that where ruled by dictators only a few decades ago. Proissl calls on euro central bankers to accept a debate about the ECB’s mandate and to make their case instead of brushing off any mentioning of a changed mandate as totally unreasonable as they had done in the past. 

 

Venizelos warns not to vote for anti-bailout parties

 

 

Evangelos Venizelos warned Greek voters on Wednesday that they should not take the country’s eurozone membership for granted and should avoid voting for parties that might put Greece’s future at risk, Kathimerini reports. Venizelos warned that some parties were creating a front that could lead Greece back to the drachma. “This works in favour of corruption and all those who took their money out of the country and are waiting to buy up everything if we return to the drachma,” he said. Venizelos went on to say that it was a “lie” to suggest that Greece could simply reject the terms of its bailout after the May 6 elections without suffering any consequences. He said it was also a “lie” to suggest there was no danger of Greece being forced out of the eurozone. He said that the EU and the IMF could choose to provide Greece with money only to cover the servicing of its loans and forcing it to pay its public expenditure costs.

 

S&P raises credit rating for Greece

 

 

Standard & Poor's raised Greece's credit rating to CCC from SD (selective default) after the country completed its distressed debt exchange, the Wall Street Journal reports, with stable outlook on the country's long-term rating. The CCC rating reflects the reduction and the improved maturity of Greece's sovereign debt, taking into account the significant stress Greece's economy faces. S&P said the austerity programme has implementation risks due to the deep recession, which will result in persistent social pressures. Parliamentary elections May 6 are likely to render Greece's path to fiscal adjustment more uncertain, the rating firm also warned.

 

Noonan denies scaring voters

 

 

Michael Noonan has rejected claims that he is trying to scare voters in Ireland into voting Yes to the fiscal treaty, saying the Irish people are entitled to know the truth, according to the Irish Times. He said his comment that next year’s budget would be more difficult if the treaty is rejected was a “considered statement”. A No vote would oblige him to reduce his forecast for economic growth for next year, he added. Enda Kenny backed his Minister yesterday warning that if Ireland was excluded from the European Stability Mechanism, the budget deficit might have to be dealt with “in an accelerated fashion”.

 

Austria plans 70 year bond

 

 

Austria plans to issue bonds with a 70 years maturity from next year on, Der Standard reports.  The draft law is already with the parliament. Triple A countries are currently exploring ways on how to benefit from the low interests and this is one way to insure. The head of the debt management agency Martha Oberndorfer said a 70y bond issue is in line with rising life expectancy and a refocusing on long term rather than short term debt. Austria would be the first Eurozone country to issue such long maturity bonds. The UK and the USA are also discussing even 100-year bonds.

 

Spanish borrowing costs to go up at auction

 

 

Reuters reports that Spain’s borrowing costs are likely to rise by more than a percentage point at an auction of three and five year bonds today, as markets are now wondering at what point will Spanish banks lose their appetite for their country’s sovereign debt. It is the first auction since the latest downgrade by S&P, to BBB+. The Spanish treasury hopes to raise between €1.5bn and €2.5bn.

 

Bill Clinton criticises austerity

 

 

In a speech to the Milken Institute Global Conference, Bill Clinton criticised the European crisis response strategy. The EU should stop squabbling over austerity measures, and focus on solving the deep-seated long-term economic problems. "The prescription of austerity continues to be pushed in the face of evidence that it won't work…,” he is quoted by Reuters. He called leaders to work on a strategy "of what would work in a five-year period, a 10-year period, instead of three or six months." 

 

Wolfgang Munchau on why long-term solutions are not what you need in a financial crisis

 

 

In his column in Spiegel OnlineWolfgang Munchau argues that long-term solution will not get us out of a financial crisis. They will only work once the crisis is over. Munchau says he is not even sure whether structural reforms will produce as much as growth as its advocates are claiming, but even if they do, the focus now should be to avoid a debt trap, which is an imminent prospect for several eurozone countries, including Spain. And the one thing that is not sustainable in the long-run is a debt trap. Munchau concludes that the structure growth initiative by Angela Merkel and other EU leaders is likely to be another diversion from the crisis.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

Spreads rising again, euro falling.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

 

France

1.308

1.358

 

Italy

3.873

3.945

 

Spain

4.106

4.253

 

Portugal

8.861

9.093

 

Greece

18.676

18.931

 

Ireland

5.101

5.261

 

Belgium

1.772

1.819

 

Bund Yield

1.666

1.615

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.322

1.3144

 

Yen

106.470

105.36

 

Pound

0.815

0.812

 

Swiss Franc

1.202

1.2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.92

1.82

 

2 yr

1.86

1.82

 

5 yr

1.82

1.8

 

10 yr

2.07

2.06

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-7.129

-6.929

 

1 Month

-1.164

-1.064

 

3 Months

29.429

29.529

 

1 Year

101.093

100.893

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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Quarta-feira, 2 de Maio de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 2 de Maio de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti

Europe’s anti-austerity day

  • Labour Day turned into an occasion of mass protests against austerity programmes all over southern Europe;
  • even Germany’s trade union leaders said this was no time for austerity but stimulus;
  • Italy kickstarted the next austerity phase with a programme €4.2bn of spending cuts;
  • the campaign for the fiscal treaty in Ireland has started;
  • Gideon Rachman says there is no alternative to austerity, as the financial markets won’t have it any other way;
  • Philip Lane cites five reasons in support of the fiscal pact;
  • a German new report says EIB’s capital is to be increased by €10bn, which would raise the headroom for lending by €60bn;
  • Merkel says there must no extra fiscal spending to fund growth initiatives;
  • Ecofin starts discussions on implementation of Basel III today;
  • there was more statistical evidence of a faster-than-forecast decline in Greek economic activity during February and March;
  • Samaras promises to halve unemployment in three years;
  • a study shows that Irish house prices are undervalued by 12-26%;
  • Angela Merkel provokes her coalition partner by proposing to extend the minimum wage;
  • Cyprus’ new central bank chief, meanwhile, withdrew comments that Germany should exit from the eurozone.

Labour day is a bank holiday in most parts of the eurozone – usually an occasion for trade unions to press home their demands. Yesterday it turned into a day of mass protests against austerity all over southern Europe. May protests also in Greece, where several thousands marched through the streets of Athens to protest against austerity measures that have pushed their country further into recession. Even Germany’s trade union boss said this was not time for austerity, but stimulus. Reuters reports that Italian demonstrators had clashed with police in riot gear in Turin, while French trade unions organised about 290 demonstrations all over the country.

  

Austerity, meanwhile, continues…

 

Italy uses labour days to kickstart next austerity phase


At a special cabinet meeting on Monday night, the Italian government decided to implement savings cuts of €4.2bn that were recommended in a spending review, according to Il sole 24 ore. The meeting ended with the decision to entrust Enrico Bondi, an administrator who restructured Parmalat, as an extraordinary commissioner to oversee the implementation of the cuts. The article says the exercise will involve a lot of ministries and aims at improving spending efficiency of the public sector.

  

Fiscal Treaty campaigning started in Ireland

 

Campaigning for the fiscal treaty has started in Ireland ahead of the referendum on May 31. Opposition MPs from Sinn Fein and the Socialist party accused the government of holding a gun to voters' heads to force them into a Yes vote in the referendum, the Irish Independent reports, after  Finance Minister Michael Noonan issued a stark warning that refusing to accept the European fiscal treaty would result in a much tougher budget next year.  The Referendum Commission will launch its public information campaign on Thursday, which will include TV adverts and leaflets outlining the facts of the treaty. 

 

The austerians strikes back

 

In his Financial Times column, Gideon Rachman says there is no alternative to austerity. He says the market reaction to the collapse of the Dutch coalition shows that even the richest countries are not in a position to spend their way out of the crisis. There is simply no alternative to austerity as the markets won’t lend to the countries otherwise. He says even the left understands this, as Francois Hollande’s main disagreement with Nicolas Sarkozy seems to be over the speed of deficit reduction, not the fact itself, similar to the British Labour Party’s criticism of UK fiscal austerity as “too far, too fast”. “This is small-scale quibbling – masquerading as a major doctrinal dispute.”

 

Writing in the Irish economy blog, Philip Lane makes the following points in defence of the fiscal treaty. He writes that eurozone countries will get out of this crisis with high debt level. This can be destabilising in itself, and is best addressed by cyclically-sensitive fiscal rules. Second, high public debt and high deficits are a barrier to the development of a truly European banking system; third, each flavour of a eurobond (that might result from the fiscal pact later) would require fiscal discipline at national level; fourth, national governments are more likely to yield revenues to a central budget if national fiscal positions are stable;

and fifth, national fiscal discipline means that backstop funding can be reserved to deal with shocks rather than fiscal malfeasance. The Fiscal Treaty thus provides one pathway to a more stable European system.

 

More details on that “Marshall Plan”


The EU member states are preparing a growth pact of which a capital increase of the EIB by €10bn is a key element, Süddeutsche Zeitung reports. Such a capital increase would enable the EIB to grant credits over €60bn which in turn could stimulate investments of an even much larger scale. Angela Merkel supported the initiative. „It is important that we don’t fall for the idea that growth always costs a lot of money and can only be the result of expensive stimulus programs“, she told Hamburger Abendblatt.

 

On top of the EIB capital increase the chancellor pleads for opening the labour markets in Europe, for lowering the entrance barriers for young workers and for using money out of the EU’s structural fund in a more focussed manner. Herman Van Rompuy is planning a dinner by the end of May to prepare for an EU growth summit in June. According to SZ earlier reports were denied by the German government according to which the EU was preparing a „Marshall plan“ in the magnitude of €200bn.

 

EU to start discussions on implementation of Basel III rules today


Reuters has a curtain raiser on today’s Ecofin, which will discuss the difficult issue of implementing the Basel III capital adequacy rules into European legislation. Britain and Sweden are not yet on board, both insisting on more domestic flexibility to raise capital standards above the minimum if needed. France wants a single regime, also to prevent a situation in which the UK government forces London-based banks to cut back on eurozone lending to meet capital standards. The article says no agreement is likely to be reached today.

 

Greek retail plunged 11.8% in February


The Wall Street Journal writes that more than one in five Greeks is now jobless, and more than 60,000 retailers have closed in the past two years. On Monday, the latest data showed retail sales volumes in February plunged 11.8% in inflation-adjusted terms as consumer spending slumped and the Greek economy continued its decline. Other data showed bank lending shrinking 4% in March. The cutbacks have also led to steep reductions in pensions and public service salaries, crimping consumer spending and pushing many Greeks to the verge of outright poverty.

 

Samaras promises to half unemployment in three years

 

These are the last days of campaigning ahead of the elections on May 6, where the leaders of the main parties focus on growth and employment issues, Kathimerini reports. Antonio Samaras promised that with ND’s growth strategy, Greece would reduce its unemployment rate to less than 10% within the next three years, down from currently 21%. Samaras suggested that the economy, currently in its fifth year of recession, could grow by 9% over this period. He said that by using just half of the €14bn in European Union structural fund due to Greece, the country could boost the economy by 7% of GDP and create 300,000 new jobs. Evangelos Venizelos also pledged to focus on job creation in the private sector. Sources said that Venizelos would this week stress the need for the next government to have at least 50% of the vote as he attempts to deter traditional PASOK supporters from voting for other parties.

 

Irish house prices undervalued

 

House prices in Ireland were undervalued by 12-26% as of the end of last year according to a study of the Irish Central Bank cited by the Irish Times. The bank’s researchers used four models to assess property prices. One model found prices were 26% below what economic fundamentals in the economy would suggest. Two other models found prices were undervalued by 16-18%. A fourth model suggested they were undervalued by 12%. The Central Bank researchers analysed the period up to the final quarter of last year. More recent figures show the decline in prices continued into 2012.The authors attributed the continued decline in house prices to a lack of investor confidence, negative future house-price expectations and an uncertain macroeconomic outlook. The deleveraging in the economy has also a significant effect on the decline.

 

Merkel provokes FDP by proposing minimum salary

 

Despite the explicit objection of the FDP, Angela Merkel proposed to set up a commission with union and employers to discuss a nationwide minimum salary, Financial Times Deutschland reports. On May 1st the chancellor said she „wanted to end those white spots on the map where workers had to live on low wages“. She pointed out that she was not in favour of a national legal minimum salary but she asked that minimum salaries should be fixed for yet unregulated sectors. FTD points out that those remarks were timed with next weekend elections in Northrhine-Westphalia and Schleswig-Holstein in mind. The chairman of Germany’s trade union federation DGB, Michael Sommer, said the unions want a national minimum wage of €8.50.

 

New Cyprus central bank president backs off German euro exit demand

 

Panicos Demetriades, the new president of the Central Bank of Cyprus backed off his earlier demand on Germany to leave the eurozone in order to solve the currency union’s problems, Financial Times Deutschland reports. As an economics professor at the university of Leicester, Demetriades had written a letter to the FT a year ago in which he said: „The departure of Greece and Portugal is not the best solution to the currency union’s troubles. In my view, the rebirth of the D-Mark makes more sense.“ Asked whether this was still his view, Demetriades told FTD that he had made those comments as an „independant academic”. Demetriades will take over from the current central bank governor Athanasios Orphanides, who failed to secure political support for a second term.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

A little better on Friday, getting worse again.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.302

1.308

1.289

Italy

3.863

3.966

3.925

Spain

4.129

4.106

4.134

Portugal

9.102

8.861

9.157

Greece

18.825

18.676

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.204

5.101

5.289

Belgium

1.775

1.772

1.764

Bund Yield

1.662

1.666

1.707

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.325

1.3223

 

Yen

105.660

106.27

 

Pound

0.817

0.8145

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.2014

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.92

1.92

 

2 yr

1.86

1.86

 

5 yr

1.82

1.82

 

10 yr

2.07

2.07

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

 

 

 

1 Month

 

Not available

 

3 Months

 

 

 

1 Year

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 11:00
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Segunda-feira, 30 de Abril de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 30 de Abril de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

 

On to the next diversion: The EU now plans a Marshall Fund

  • El Pais reports that the European Commission is planning a €200bn Marshall Fund type project by bundling and redirecting resources from the European Investment Bank;
  • goal is to focus on infrastructure and green technologies;
  • there is no fiscal component to the plan, and it involves no change whatsoever of the austerity policies;
  • Angela Merkel puts her weight behind the plan, but says the opposes any attempts to water down the fiscal pact;
  • says she wants to pursue growth through structural reforms;
  • the latest poll in France shows Francois Hollande at 55% against 45% for Nicolas Sarkozy;
  • Mediapart says Ghaddafi had offered $50m to help finance Sarkozy’s 2007 campaign;
  • French billionaire Francois Pinault, a former Sarkozy supporter, says the president was losing his mind, as he is now lurching towards the right;
  • Holger Stelzner accuses Hollande of a failure to understand globalisation, Stephan Cornelius is shocked that Hollande wants to challenge the carefully crafted euro rescue strategy;
  • Wolfgang Munchau welcomes Hollande because he is going to challenge that consensus;
  • Dominique Moisi says Hollande is going to win, but his impact in Europe is going to be incremental;
  • economists are calling for direct ESM capital injections in banks;
  • Le Monde says the ECB should tolerate higher inflation;
  • the latest polls in Greece put Pasok at 20% and New Democracy at 25% - enough for a majority of parliamentary seats;
  • Mario Draghi says he has no plans to relax attitude on Irish promissory notes;
  • Larry Summers, meanwhile, says the eurozone government have misdiagnosed the crisis, and are now pursuing policies that will lead to a debt explosion.

Eurointeligence Comment and Analysis

The half-life of solutions to Europe’s debt problem is getting ever shorter.

In anticipation of a victory by Francois Hollande, eurozone leaders have now engaged on a verbal growth blitz – proposing a series of quack remedies to mask the effects of austerity. El Pais had the story in its Sunday edition that the European Commission is planning what the paper called a €200bn Marshall Plan to speed up investments in infrastructure and green technology, by refocusing the resources of the European Investment Bank, and using higher leverage. The goal is to do this without a single cost to the taxpayer – an effort the articles described the squaring of the circle.

 

(Please note that this policy does not reverse the austerity programmes, or constitute a fiscal stimulus of any kind. It is the typical case of the European Commission seeking a microeconomic answer to a macroeconomic problem.  What this exercise does is to tell us that the EU is treaty the current economic crisis as a PR challenge first and foremost.)


In this spirit, Angela Merkel announced that she was preparing a European growth agenda for the June European Council, according to Leipziger Volkszeitung on Saturday, confirming that this might include a stronger and re-focused European Investment Bank. But Merkel also stressed the fiscal pact war non-renegotiable and that a classical fiscal stimulus package was out of question. The chancellor pointed to policies that enhanced the euro countries’s competetiveness like structural reforms or labour market reforms as Germany had undertaken them 10 years ago. At a large electoral meeting on Saturday, Hollande told his supporters according to Le Monde: „For months the people of Europe have been watching France. I feel that the positions of conservative heads of government evolving as a result of the polls“.

 

Weekend polls confirm Francois Hollande’s solid lead


The most recent poll for Le Journal de Dimanche confirmed Francois Hollande’s position as the most likely next French president giving him a 55% to 45% lead over the incumbant Nicolas Sarkozy. There were a number of bad and embarassing reports for Sarkozy over the weekend. According to the news website Mediapart.fr Gaddhafi had offered to $50m in 2007 in order to support Sarkozy’s election campaign. The president’s advisors rebuked the story, accusing Mediapart of campaigning on behalf of the left. Also over the weekend the French billionaire Francois Pinault, a former supporter of Sarkozy, „crucified“ the president over his attempt to lure voters of the extreme right in his desperate belief that he can still win, as Le Monde put it. „He is losing his mind“, the paper quotes Pinault. „People close to him think he can still win. He is cooked! It’s like in the bunker in 1945.“

 

Holger Steltzner warns Hollande’s plans will lead France nowhere


Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung’s ultra-orthodox economic editor Holger Steltzner has a very bleak assessment of Francois Hollande’s electoral proposals. „The Socialist suggests to the voters that under his leadership France can be sheltered from the storms of globalization“, Steltzner writes. „Debt, youth unemployment, disappearing competitiveness of the French industry, the lack of SME’s, the weaknesses for job training in companies, the highest government spending level within the eurozone, the high taxes and social contributions and the bloated state sector were hardly a topic in the campaign. There was much more insistence on Hollande’s plans to raise income taxes on high revenues to 75% and to return to the retirement age of 60 years.“

 

Stefan Kornelius warns that Hollande will break the euro rescue consensus


This is a comment that tells us how frightened Germany’s establishment is over Francois Hollande. Süddeutsche Zeitung’s foreign policy editor Stefan Kornelius warns that Francois Hollande will break the euro rescue consensus that Angela Merkel has built over the past two years. „What Nicolas Sarkozy has helped to build and what even technical governments in Greece and Italy have supported would then be put into question“, Kornelius writes in an editorial. „After months of detailed work on the rescue package for the euro, Hollande questions its foundation: consolidation and reform against spending and maintaining. The euro rescue is becoming once again the topic of quasi-religious beliefs.“

 

Wolfgang Munchau makes the case for Francois Hollande


In his FT column, Wolfgang Münchau says the French are likely to get rid of Nicolas Sarkozy on the simple grounds that they despise him. Munchau estimates that Francois Hollande’s impact on the French economy is likely to be neutral, while it is highly positive on the eurozone, because he will mount the most powerful challenge to the centre-right consensus that reigns in Brussels, and that is in the way of an effective eurozone crisis resolution. He said Hollande is right to challenge Angela Merkel on the fiscal pact, and to change the narrative towards economic growth. Munchau also noted that the forthcoming elections in the Netherlands are effectively a referendum on austerity. Munchau sees the beginnings of a popular insurrection against the current policy that it likely to cost each incumbent leader their job.

 

Dominique Moisi on Hollande vs Sarkozy


Writing in cnn.comDominique Moisi writes that Francois Hollande is the very likely winner of next Sunday’s final round of the French election. He lacks charisma, but the overriding concern of the French is to get rid of Sarkozy, who would have done better if he had focused on his economic crisis management than to the right with an anti-immigrant campaign. Moisi also makes the point that in 2007, modernity meant structural reforms. Now it means policies to address inequality. But Moisi is sceptical about Hollande’s impact on European policies. He calls him a Social Democrat – “an accelerating factor in the slow evolution of the EU away from a strict austerity policy, which the Germans themselves have started to question.”

 

Economists plead for direct ESM capital injections into banks


In the monthly rate survey of Financial Times Deutschland prior to the ECB’s meeting on Thursday in Barcelona a majority of leading bank economists pleaded for the EFSF/ESM to be able to inject capital directly into banks instead of first lending the money to governments. Direct capital injections are supported by the ECB, the IMF and money euro governments because think it would be the only way to break the bad feedback loop between banks and the sovereign in Spain and potentially in other countries in the future. But this is vehemently opposed by Germany which considers it would be a way to circumvent conditionality. The rate survey also finds that of the 38 economists no one expects a change of interest rates on Thursday and that 37 think that the ECB will either hold its current policy rate of 1.0% over the next 12 months or lower rates to 0.75% or even 0.5%. Most economists are deeply worried about the situation in Spain with some thinking that the country will be forced to ask for some sort of a bail-out and a EU/IMF program.

 

Le Monde calls on the ECB to tolerate higher inflation


In its front page editorial Le Monde warns of the situation in Spain and that the country’s financial and social situation is becoming a threat to the entire eurozone. But the paper says other policies are possible to overcome the crisis more easily. „They are monetary: The European Central Bank (ECB) could allow the crisis countries to finance themselves at lower costs and thus offer a support that they have earned. Some experts argue for the injection of a small dose of inflation in order to relieve the most indebted countries.“

 

Venizelos urges voters to vote for pro-euro parties


The leader of Greece’s socialist party has urged voters to back pro-euro parties to boost the country’s chances of remaining in the eurozone. “Over 75% of our people say they are for Europe and the euro – this must be expressed [at the election],” said Evangelos Venizelos in interviews published on Sunday. The latest polls suggest that PASOK gets 20% of the votes and New Democracy 25%. Even if they capture less than 50% of the vote, New Democracy and PASOK could still together control an overall parliamentary majority, thanks to an extra 50 seats awarded to the front-running party under a revised electoral law.  But with Antonio Samaras likely to become the new prime minister the grand coalition would also be more fragile. “The strain of co-operating again with the socialists without the calming presence of Lucas Papademos [the outgoing technocratic premier] could tip the coalition over the brink and force another electoral contest,” the FT quotes a PASOK analyst.

 

ECB has no plans to relax terms of promissory notes


The ECB reiterated yesterday that it has no plans for now to relax the payment terms on more than €30bn of promissory notes to the former Anglo Irish Bank, the Irish Independent reports.  "As to whether the ECB plans to do anything about the existing terms of the contract, the answer is no -- the existing terms of the contract are the existing terms of the contract," ECB president Mario Draghi told MEPs in the European Parliament in Brussels yesterday. "We will continue to reflect on this issue with a forthcoming attitude but at the present time we have these terms of the contract," he said.

 

Larry Summers on the eurozone


Larry Summers gives a damning indictment of the eurozone’s crisis policy, accusing European policy makers of misdiagnosing the nature of the crisis, and thus embarking on the wrong strategy. The LTRO has turned out to be a short-lived reprieve, and may even have made things worse.

“Europe’s problem countries are in trouble because the financial crisis under way since 2008 has damaged their financial systems and led to a collapse in growth. High deficits are much more a symptom than a cause of their problems. Treating symptoms rather than causes is usually a good way to make a patient worse. So it is in Europe. Its financial problems stem from lack of growth. In any financial situation where interest rates far exceed growth rates, debt problems spiral out of control. The right focus for Europe is on growth. In this context increased austerity is a step in the wrong direction.”

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

Sideways, miserable.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.294

1.301

1.303

Italy

3.953

4.075

4.060

Spain

4.160

4.201

4.278

Portugal

9.406

8.949

9.727

Greece

19.430

19.054

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.184

5.186

5.249

Belgium

1.808

1.783

1.889

Bund Yield

1.688

1.705

1.72

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.318

1.325

 

Yen

106.610

106.15

 

Pound

0.815

0.8136

 

Swiss Franc

1.202

1.2012

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.93

1.92

 

2 yr

1.88

1.86

 

5 yr

1.93

1.82

 

10 yr

2.19

2.07

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-7.043

-7.143

 

1 Month

-1.614

0.286

 

3 Months

31.014

31.614

 

1 Year

101.650

101.85

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 23:50
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Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 27 de Abril de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti

S&P downgrades Spain by two notches

  • Spain’s sovereign rating has been cut to BBB+ with a negative outlook;
  • S&P is concerned about the possibility of a deeper than expected recession, and its impact on the deficit and debt;
  • S&P also warns that Spain may have to provide more fiscal support to the banking system;
  • S&P says eurozone efforts to solve the crisis continue to lack effectiveness;
  • under an adverse scenario, Spain’s GDP could drop by 4% this year, which would then lead to further downgrades;
  • the Spanish government said S&P had failed to take into account the economic reforms;
  • El Pais reports that the Spanish government released a misleading translation of an IMF report on Spanish banks that downplayed the effects;
  • the original report said Spanish banks would mask risks through refinancing non-performing loans;
  • El Pais article noted that the Bank of Spain discouraged such practises, but investors were concerned because of a lack of data;
  • the Dutch government agree a deal with small, centrist opposition parties on a series of budget cuts and tax increase to meet the 2013 deficit target of 3%;
  • deal includes cuts to healthcare and education, and increase in VAT, and reductions in tax relief;
  • Angela Merkel rejects the call by Francois Hollande to renegotiate the fiscal pact, saying it has been agreed by 25 governments;
  • Wolfgang Schäuble says growth is already a component of the pact;
  • Mario Draghi has become the latest eurozone official to endorse the idea of a eurozone-wide bank resolution authority;
  • French unemployment registered its nine consecutive monthly increase;
  • Robin Wells, meanwhile, argues that the eurozone’s mishandling of the crisis could play into the hands of President Obama in his election campaign. 

Eurointeligence Comment and Analysis

 
The neglect of finance in macroeconomics has left us badly unprepared for a credit crisis. Central bankers and top academics united in saying that ‘no one saw this coming’. That is patently false:  there are alternatives ways of doing economics and clear forewarnings of crisis had been issued by many in fact. Significantly, none of them adhered to the cutting-edge models, and all include the economy’s financial structure in their analysis.

 

The downward ratings spiral is now starting again, as the recession looms. S&P downgraded Spain by two notches to BBB+, with a negative outlook on the obvious grounds that the Spanish economy is about to fall into a black hole. The official wording is a bit different, but meaning essentially the same. In its statement, S&P said Spain will miss the deficit target as the economy contracts, and at the same time will need to provide fiscal support to the banks. As a consequence there is now an acute risk that Spanish debt would increase further.  

 

 

S&P was fairly complementary about the Spanish current account adjustment and the new government’s labour and financial reforms, which should support growth in the long-term. But S&P noted:

“In our view, the strategy to manage the European sovereign debt crisis continues to lack effectiveness. We think credit conditions, and hence the economic outlook for Spain, could now deteriorate further than we anticipated earlier this year unless offsetting eurozone policy measures are implemented to support investor confidence and stabilize capital flows with the rest of the world. Such measures at the eurozone level could include a greater pooling of fiscal resources and obligations, possibly direct bank support mechanisms to weaken the sovereign-bank links, and a consolidation of banking supervision or a greater harmonization of labor and wage policies.”

Under S&P main scenario, Spanish GDP would decline by 1.5% this year, but under an adverse scenario the decline could be as high as 4%. Under this scenario, the current account deficit would adjust faster, but the fiscal position would deteriorate further. In that case further ratings downgraded would be expected.

The Spanish government reacted with the same alienation as other governments have done before: They are not taking into account our reform effort. (If you read S&P’s statement, one discovers that they actually have taken the reforms into account. The problem is that the reforms are irrelevant in dealing with the country’s short-term problems.)

 

Spanish government releases a falsely translated IMF report with the intent to downplay the risks inherent in the Spanish banking sector

 

 

El Pais was in good form this morning, with a story that the preliminary findings of an IMF report on the Spanish banking sector includes a warning of a potential solvency problem as a result of hidden risks in Spanish bank balance sheets. The paper noted that the Spanish translation, released by the government, has softened the language of the report, which said that Spanish had “masked” the risk, while in the Spanish version this had been translated into a warning a “hidden” risks in relation to assets that had a downside, but no potential for an upside. The most important example of such risks is the refinancing of loans to companies and individuals who have no means of repaying them. By refinancing a non-performing loan, it is turned, technically, into a performing loan. The article quoted other examples of euphemisms contained in the Spanish version of the report. The IMF noted that the Bank of Spain has been trying to prevent the abuse of such refinancing tricks, but the lack of concrete data has fed the suspicions of international investors.

 

Dutch parties agree budget deal

 

 

Just three days ahead of a European deadline, the Dutch centre-right minority government was able to agree a budget deal with opposition parties that sets the country on a trajectory for a 3% budget deficit in the 2013. The two main government parties – the Liberals and Christian Democrats – managed to coopt the Green party, in addition to several small central parties, thus giving prime minister Mark Rutte a needed majority. The Dutch paper De Volkskrant reports that the agreement has an expiration of September 2012, which means that the Rutte caretaker administration can proceed normally as planned. The deal consists of cuts to education and healthcare – which one of the opposition parties immediate said it will use as a base for the upcoming election campaign. The paper also included some hilarious quotes by Geert Wilders, whose reluctance to accept the agreement brought the premature end of the coalition. He said the “Kunduz coalition” had surrendered to Brussels. Wilders promised an electoral campaign to safeguard “our sovereignty, our borders, and our future.”

 

The measures in full

 

 

The Volkskrant has another article listing the measures in detail. The cuts total €14bn. They include the following:

 

  • VAT is increased by 2% to 21%.
  • Tax deductions for travel are reduced, bringing €1.4bn
  • No pay increase for public sector workers
  • No mortgage interest rate relief for new interest-only mortgages
  • Healthcare cuts of €1.6bn
  • Gradual increase in the retirement age
  • Increase in excise duty on alcohol and tobacco
  • No indexation of tax brackets (a hidden income tax increase through fiscal drag)

 

Merkel rebukes Hollande on fiscal pact

 

 

Angela Merkel rebuked Francois Hollande over his request to renegotiate the fiscal pact. The pact was signed by 25 governments and thus was „not up for a new renegotiation“, the chancellor told WAZ-Mediengruppe, Germany’s biggest regional newspaper group, according to dpa newswire. Merkel stressed that growth had been for a long time „the second pillar of our strategy“ and nothing needed to be changed with this strategy. Also Wolfgang Schäuble said growth had always been part of what the government promoted and there was no need for strategy changes. „Of course we will continue to talk very intensely with the Europeans and with the future French president about what can be done in order to give more impulses for sustainable growth on this basis and in order to overcome the horribly high youth unemployment in some countries“, the finance minister told Südwestpresse, another regional daily.

 

Draghi wants common eurozone bank rescue authority

 

 

Mario Draghi wants euro governments to create a body that would manage bank rescues in the currency union. „In particular in the euro area, the case for strengthening banking supervision and resolution at a euro area level has become much clearer,“ Draghi said at a conference on financial integration according to Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. „Work on this would be most helpful at the current juncture“, he continued.

 

Unemployment surges in France

 

 

For the 11th consecutive month unemployment surged in France according to national data released yesterday. Le Figaro reports that the number of unemployed registered by the French employment agency rose by 16.600 last month bringing the total number of the jobless to 2.9m. The newspaper which normally goes out of its way to support the outgoing president stressed that in 59 months at the Elysée palace Sarkozy presided over 44 months of rising unemployment. On a year on year basis unemployment has risen by 7.2%, the highest level since 1999, Le Figaro writes.

 

Franco-German anti euro advocates ask for return to national currencies

 

 

A group of anti-euro advocates in Germany and France have drawn up a 3-page memorandum, in which they ask for a rapid return to national currencies and the status quo ante 1999, Handelsblatt reports. Among the signatories are the four plaintiffs against the rescue measures for Greece at the German constitutional court. On the French side there is a Gaullist group called „Débout le Republique“.

 

Robin Wells on the impact of the eurozone on the US

 

 

An interesting article in the Guardian by Robin Wells on the impact of the likely-to-fail European austerity experiment on the US. She writes that the direct impact is relatively small in terms of trade. There are some indirect factors that are bigger, such as a potential shift in the exchange rates. But the most important is probably political, and it may be good for President Obama.

“The reality of the eurozone's troubles should lend support to President Barack Obama's campaign against GOP presidential nominee presumptive Mitt Romney and congressional Republicans. It provides a demonstration that austerity is self-defeating, that fiscal stimulus is needed in a deeply depressed economy, that recovery from a financial crisis is a slow and halting process, and that by grasping the nettle immediately, the Obama administration has succeeded in stabilizing its financial sector – while the Europeans have made a hash of it.”

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

 

A little better, especial for France, but Italian and Spanish ten-year spreads still above 4%.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.342

1.294

1.293

Italy

3.992

4.030

4.028

Spain

4.158

4.160

4.202

Portugal

9.765

9.406

9.604

Greece

19.838

19.430

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.222

5.184

5.336

Belgium

1.852

1.808

1.828

Bund Yield

1.659

1.688

1.69

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.323

1.3199

 

Yen

107.370

107.13

 

Pound

0.818

0.8153

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.2014

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.93

1.93

 

2 yr

1.94

1.88

 

5 yr

1.82

1.93

 

10 yr

2.18

2.19

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-6.529

-6.829

 

1 Month

0.757

-1.643

 

3 Months

31.343

31.243

 

1 Year

102.136

99.836

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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Quinta-feira, 26 de Abril de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 26 de Abril de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

ECB and several euro states prepare for direct lending of the EFSF to banks

  • The ECB and several member states prepare proposals to enable the EFSF/ESM to directly lend money to troubled banks;
  • A working group meeting is to come up with proposals next week;
  • Mario Draghi called for a growth compact in his hearing at the European Parliament;
  • According to Asmussen one option would be to redirect money from the EU’s structural or regional funds to program countries;
  • Another option would be labour market reforms as the Agenda 2000;
  • German newspapers and interprets the ECB’s proposal as a further sign that Angela Merkel’s consolidation approach is increasingly contested;
  • Mark Schieritz says the proposal offers nothing new, just more of the same;
  • Francois Hollande proposes his own 4-point growth compact;
  • it includes eurobonds to finance infrastructure projects, EIB involvement, a financial transaction tax and redirection of unused EU funds;
  • Sarkozy under pressure after comments that Le Pen was compatible with the principles of the republic;
  • FTP party leader and Bundesbank urges ECB to exit loose monetary policy;
  • German Christian democrats agree on minimum wage for all sectors not covered by collective wage agreements;
  • though collective wage bargaining agreements that foresee wages below the minimum wage shall nevertheless stay valid;
  • Zaki Laidi writes that Sarkozy’s lack of political coherence and action is the reason why he lost support;
  • IMF says Spanish banks need more money;
  • German tourists, meanwhile, have been avoiding Greece, fearing anti-German reprisals.

According to Süddeutsche Zeitung the ECB and several euro states are preparing to form a working group in the next weeks to prepare proposals to enable the EFSF/ESM to directly lend money to troubled banks. The aim is to avoid that a whole country has to request a program with the rescue funds in order to help its ailing banks. The reason for hurry is the deteriorating situation in Spain and the worry that there may be contagion to other euro countries. „Once Spain is under the rescue umbrella the markets will concentrate on Italy“, the paper quotes an unnamed source. Until now the fund’s rules clearly state that it can only lend to governments in return for a program with strict conditionality. Germany, Austria, Finnland and the Netherlands insist that this rule be kept.

 

After fiscal compact Draghi calls for growth compact

 

 

After having initiated the fiscal compact past December Mario Draghi yesterday called for a growth compact in his hearing at the European Parliament, Financial Times Deutschland reports. „We've had a fiscal compact. Right now what is most present in my mind is to have a growth compact“, he said. The ECB president did not spell out any details but the German board member Jörg Asmussen told the paper: „The unchanged fiscal pact could be complemented by growth enhancing measures on the level of member states or the eurozone“. According to Asmussen one option would be to redirect money from the EU’s structural or regional funds to program countries so that it could enhance jobs there. Another option would be labour market reforms as the Agenda 2000 had shown in Germany. „It is important not to soften the fiscal pact, but to strengthen it“. FTD interprets the ECB’s proposal as a further sign that Angela Merkel’s consolidiation first approach is getting increasingly contested. The German government was on the defensive yesterday with deputy finance minister Thomas Steffen insisting that in government there were no „consolidation taliban“.

 

Hollande to propose his pro-growth initiative

 

 

With his appeal for a growth compact Mario Draghi launched a European wide debate on pro growth policies, Les Echos writes in ist leading front page story. In an interview with Les Echos Jean-Marc Ayrault, the Socialist’s current chief whip and a potential future prime minister, points out the isolation of Angela Merkel in her resistance to complementing the fiscal pact with pro growth measures. „How much longer will Germany be able to stick to this position?“, he asks. „She is isolated“.

 

 

In a press conference Francois Hollande yesterday announced that once elected he would quickly send a memorandum with four points to his European partners, Le Figaro reports. First he would ask for the creation of eurobonds earmarked to finance infrastructure projects. Second he would ask that the EIB’s possibilities to finance European projects should be „liberated“. Third he would ask for the introduction of a financial transacation tax together with those countries willing to introduce them. Fourth he would ask to for all money not used in the EU’s structural funds to be employed for growth enhancement.

 

 

According to Michel Sapin, one of his senior advisers, Francois Hollande is not seeking to unpick the European fiscal pact but wants to complete it with tools to promote economic growth. “What concerns us is not what is in the treaty, it is what is not in the treaty,” Sapin told the FT in an interview. Francois Hollande said yesterday that Germany had to accept a European growth pact as it was the only way to solve the eurozone crisis, writes the FT.

 

Hollande and Draghi mean different things when they talk about growth

 

 

Mark Schieritz on Herdentrieb  finds that Draghi’s proposal is not a deviation from the austerity thrive, but its complement. It is essentially about structural reforms, i.e. more of the same. It will not stimulate growth in the short run. When Mario Draghi or Angela Merkel talk about a growth compact they mean something different than Francois Hollande and Christine Lagarde.

 

Sarkozy under pressure after comments that Le Pen was compatible with the principles of the republic

 

 

Nicolas Sarkozy came under pressure yesterday after Libération reveiled that he had said that the extreme right candidate Marine Le Pen were compatible with the principles of the republic, Le Monde reports. Sarkozy first denied he ever said that but then tv footage with the sentences quoted by Libération proved him wrong. In a front page editorial Le Monde warned the incumbent president and candidate that in his attempts to court the 18% who had voted for Le Pen „the end does not justify all means“.

 

Rösler and Bundesbank urges ECB to exit loose monetary policy

 

 

The German economics minister and liberal FDP party chairman urged the ECB to exit its loose monetary policy. „Rising prices could become a risk fort he upswing“, he said presenting the government’s economic forecasts according to Reuters. „The ECB has our support in order to return to the normal monetary policy stance and to concentrate on ist mandate which is price stability“. Seperately Bundesbank board member Andreas Dombredt also asked for the ECB to return to normality in its monetary policy.

 

Christian democrats agree on minimum wage

 

 

Angela Merkel’s CDU and the Bavarian sister party CSU yesterday agreed on the principles of a general minimum wage for Germany, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. According to the plans the minimum wage which the two parties call the „lower wage limit“ shall apply to all sectors which do not have any collective wage bargaining agreements. An independant commission will be charged with fixing the level of the minimum wage. Awkwardly collective wage bargaining agreements that foresee wages below the minimum wage shall nevertheless stay valid. According to the paper it is unclear whether the christian democrat’s plans will ever become government policy because Merkel’s liberal FDP coalition partner vehemently opposes minimum wages. The president of the German employer’s federation BDA Dieter Hundt criticized the plan and said that examples in other European countries with minimum wages proved that they contributed to definitively shut out long term unemployed and young people from the labour market.

 

Laidi: Sarkozy’s failure is due to lack of strategy and action

 

 

In the FT Zaki Laidi writes that Sarkozy’s lack of political coherence and strategic vision is the reason why he is the first incumbent French president to trail in second place after the first round of voting. He writes “While the French are willing to elect a monarchical president, in exchange they expect him to wear a royal mantle of distance and levelheadedness that they might turn to in difficult times.” Sarkozy became embroiled in all problems and yet led only to a few actions. “Mr Sarkozy’s political decline reflects both his personal failings and the failure of his policies. It is also the collective expression of France’s struggle to develop a new political identity in response to globalisation.”

 

Venizelos suggests three party coalition

 

Kathimerini reports that PASOK chief Evangelos Venizelos said there would be a “huge problem” if the next government -- most likely to be a coalition -- does not have at least 50 % of the vote. Venizelos said three parties may need to join forces in a coalition government after the May 6 polls. Last week’s Public Issue survey indicated that PASOK and New Democracy would get a combined share of the vote totaling 35.5%, which could be enough for a slim parliamentary majority. But a possible third coalition partner has not been forthcoming so far.

 

IMF says Spanish banks need public money

 

 

El Pais reports on the IMF's stress test of Spanish banks, which calls for more public money to recapitalise the sector. The IMF says that 10 state-supported Spanish banks and cajas, though the largest banks are sufficiently solid to withstand shocks.  The article says the IMF did not, however, criticise the quality of bnak supervision.

 

German tourists boycott Greece

 

 

Reuters has a well-researched story from Corinth, Greece, which says German tourists have been avoiding Greece, fearing anti-German reprisals. The absence of Germans is notable in the tourist hotspots like Corinth. The lack of German tourist is significant because tourism accounts for 15% of GDP (the export sector is less than half of that), with Germans traditionally constituting the largest tourist group in the country. The article quotes an estimate that overall tourism revenues are expected to fall 5% this year. Data for the main summer holiday season shows pre-bookings from Germany down by some 30%. (Tourism has been one of the few hopes for Greece, and this really bad news. The Greek tourism industry has not regained competitiveness, and it will take a few years until the Germans return.)

 

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.420

1.342

1.256

Italy

4.065

4.079

3.986

Spain

4.256

4.158

4.127

Portugal

10.043

9.765

9.934

Greece

19.927

19.838

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.274

5.222

5.341

Belgium

1.933

1.852

1.798

Bund Yield

1.62

1.659

1.752

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.319

1.3222

 

Yen

107.370

107.29

 

Pound

0.818

0.8178

 

Swiss Franc

1.202

1.2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

2.02

1.93

 

2 yr

1.96

1.94

 

5 yr

1.83

1.82

 

10 yr

2.06

2.18

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-7.600

-7.5

 

1 Month

-1.786

-1.786

 

3 Months

28.886

30.786

 

1 Year

100.564

100.964

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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Quarta-feira, 25 de Abril de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 25 de Abril de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti

Will the eurozone’s most self-righteous finance minister miss the target?

  • It is not clear whether the Dutch finance minister will be able to meet an April 30 European Commission deadline, in which he needs to set out how to achieve the 3% deficit target;
  • the government is talking to centrist opposition parties, hoping to reach an agreement to pass the budget, but this may not come in time for the deadline;
  • the Dutch labour party said the Netherlands should forego the target and aim for 3.6% in 2013, citing “exceptional circumstances”;
  • an FT editorial says that the Netherlands is one of the few countries in the eurozone with some margin for manoeuvre, which it should use now;
  • Marine Le Pen is planning a big campaign for the French parliamentary elections, where she will put up an unprecedented 335 candidates with the goal to weaken Nicolas Sarkozy’s UMP;
  • member of Germany’s IG Metall have voted in favour of holding warning strikes in support of a 6.5% pay claim;
  • the financial crisis has added more debt in Germany than anywhere else in the eurozone, due to the large bad bank programmes;
  • the European Banking Authority plans to ask banks about their strategy once the LTRO runs out;
  • the German government is expected to forecast a growth rate of 0.7% this year;
  • Yves Mersch says the IMF is way too pessimistic on eurozone growth, and too optimistic on eurozone inflation;
  • the Greek central bank forecasts a larger than expected fall in GDP this year;
  • Spanish tax revenues fall by 2.5% in the first quarter;
  • a Spanish debt auction succeeds, but at the cost of much higher interest rates;
  • John Plender, meanwhile, says the eurozone is headed for a vicious circle of debt deleveraging, and even further central bank policies are likely to have little effect.

This will be interesting. The eurozone’s most self-righteous political class is discussing whether or not to modify the deficit target. The Dutch government maintains that it is still sticking to the 3% target for 2013, and is hoping to secure a majority in the next few days to be able to send a submission to the European Commission to explain how this can be done. But, as Reuters reports, the leader of the Dutch opposition labour party, Diederik Samsom, says the country should aim for a deficit of 3.6%, which it says is justified if one takes recourse to the rule of exceptional circumstances. (We agree that the 2013 is crazy, not just for the Netherlands, but we find it hard to see how the use of an exceptional circumstance can apply here. The craziness lies in the inflexibility of the target itself.)

 

Not clear yet whether Dutch government can flesh out budget cuts in budget submission to European Commission

 

 

It is not clear whether the Dutch government will be able to present a workable deficit reduction plan to the European Commission ahead of the April 30 deadline. The FT reports that the outgoing government is trying to scramble a small majority behind its 2012 budget proposal, to include three small central parties. The article quotes Alexander Pechthold of the Liberal D66 party, who said there will be a majority of 78-80 votes, out of a total of 150. But the FT noted it was extremely unlikely that the agreement would come ahead of the April 30 deadline.

 

Why the Netherlands should not opt for austerity right now (in other words: why Wilders is right)

 

 

In an editorial, the FT writes that markets have been rattled by the inability of the Netherlands to do what it demands from others. Worse, austerity at this moment makes no economic sense either:

 

 

“The Dutch case is a horrific display of Europe’s self-harming. In pressurised states with no fiscal space, deficit cuts are of course imperative, but countries that can should let deficits widen to buoy aggregate demand in the eurozone until the recovery is firm. There is no reason for the Netherlands, whose 65 per cent debt to output ratio puts it among the eurozone’s most solvent, to fear moderate deficits in a recession. But Europe’s policy of austerity for all is dragging one economy after another back into recession – and the effect is not limited to the periphery.”

 

Le Pen wants to capitalize on her success for the parliamentary elections in June

 

 

Marine Le Pen intends to capitalize her 18% score in the presidential elections first round in order to score another success at the parliamentary elections due to be held on June 10 and 17, Le Mondereports. Le Pen’s ultimate aim is to „let (Sarkozy’s) UMP explode“ because she will put up Front National candidates in as many as 335 electoral districts which will diminish the chances of the conservative deputies to be elected. Le Pen wants to continue to de-diabolize her party and is even considering changing the party’s name which is strongly opposed by her fater Jean-Marie Le Pen, the party’s founder. Marine Le Pen’s success in making the extreme right party part of the French mainstream is confirmed by a poll done by OpinionWay – Fiducial for Les Echos according to which 64% of the French favour electoral agreements between the UMP with the Front National.

 

IG Metall decides warning strikes for higher salaries

 

 

Germany’s 3.6m members of IG Metall decided on warning strikes in several states because the union considers the employer’s offer to raise salaries for 3.0% over the next 14 months as „inacceptably low“, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. IG Metall is asking for 6.5% over 12 months, more co-decision power over the use of temporary workers and permanent work contracts for all current trainees. The warning strikes will take from May 3 to 9. In parallel, data released yesterday by Eurostat showed that average work cost in Germany is at €34.40 while the EU average is €23.40, FAZ reports in a separate article. However, the average German work cost is 12% lower than that of France. Also wage rises in Germany since 2001 were only 19.4% while the European average wage rise in the same period was 39%.

 

Financial crisis has added more debt in Germany than anywhere else in the EU

 

 

Eurostat figures show that the financial crisis has added more debt to public finances in Germany than in any other EU country, Handelsblatt reports. According to the data, the financial crisis has added public debt in the EU in the magnitude of €603bn of which roughly the half was in Germany. The countries equally heavily affected – albeit considerably less than Germany – are the UK, Ireland and the Netherlands. The main reason is the bad banks that had to be put up for Hypo Real Estate and WestLB. According to Bundesbank data, Germany had to put aside roughly €300bn for „financial market support measures“. According to Handelsblatt the WestLB is planning to outsource another €100bn of bad debt which will have to be added to that sum.

 

EBA increases pressure on addicted banks

 

 

According to Financial Times Deutschland, EBA has started to question eurozone banks how they intend to refinance themselves once cheap ECB liquidity from 3y LTRO is no longer available. „We ask the banks how they intend to get out of this. We want them to think about their return to normal and what sources of refinancing they will use“, FTD quotes an unnamed source familiar with the matter. The paper stresses that EBA’s pressure is not yet systematic and only certain banks are being asked. But according to FTD EBA is getting increasingly worried that banks from the euro crisis countries rely heavily on cheap central bank money and fail to restructure their business in order to ensure viability in normal times.

 

German government expects 0.7% growth this year

 

The German government is today expected to issue a 0.7% growth forecast for 2012, Süddeutsche Zeitung reports. That is a little more than the IMF projection (0.6%) and a little less than the German economic institute’s spring forecast (0.9%). The shadow council of Financial Times Deutschland expects 0.8% growth, the paper reports. According to the government’s economic forecast the number of unemployed will fall further by another 130.000 this year.

 

Yves Mersch says IMF too pessimistic about economic growth

 

 

We are not reporting this because we have any confidence in the judgement of Yves Mersch, but because his thinking reflects that of others, including that of the Bundesbank and parts of the ECB itself, whose directorate he may join soon. The Luxembourg central bank president said, according to Reuters, that the IMF was too pessimistic about growth, and too optimistic about inflation, in other words: he favours a harder policy than the IMF. (We expect the ECB to follow this line.

 

Greek economy to shrink by more than expected

 

 

The news is familiar. Greece undershoots whatever target is set – which is not at all a statement about Greece, but the lack of realism of the targets themselves. Kathimerini reports that George Provopoulos, head of the Greek central bank, said the country will contract by more than envisaged – 5% against a 4.5% forecast. This is early in the year, so expect further downward revisions as the year goes on. He also said the current account deficit would sink to 7.5% from 9.8% last year. He also said the country’s future in the eurozone was at stake if the new government failed to follow through the pledge of reform. He expressed optimism about the improvement in Greek competitiveness. ”The expected drop in unit labour costs in 2012-13, coupled with the projected price trends will lead to a marked improvement in competitiveness, contributing to a rise in exports and import substitution,” he said. But the country suffers from continued savings outflows. He put the fall at private sector bank deposits at €70bn since the beginning of the crisis, about one third of GDP.

 

Spanish taxes fall 2.5%

 

 

El Pais has a large technical article on the difficulty Spain is facing reversing the trend of falling tax revenues, which have dropped by 2.5% in the year to March. The article says the Spanish treasury still hopes to meet the gap between the trajectory set by the first quarter trend and the year-end target, as most of the recently announced revenue measures have yet to be activated.

 

Interest rates at Spanish auction shoot up

 

 

Spanish auctions continued to be successful, but this success comes at a cost of higher interest rates. Reuters reports that the average yield on the 3-month bill was 0.63%, up from 0.381% last time, while it was 1.580% on the 6-month bill compared with 0.836% a month ago.

 

John Plender on the danger of disorderly deleveraging

 

 

In his FT column, John Plender gets to the heart of the problem in the eurozone. Looking at the IMF’s stability report, he says the eurozone is trapped in a vicious circle out of which there is no escape.

 

 

“The risk is of a vicious circle whereby eurozone economic conditions deteriorate, so depressing bank earnings and weakening asset quality, which in turn requires increased provisions. That erodes bank capital, creating more pressure for yet more deleveraging. A further risk is that deleveraging becomes disorderly if synchronised sales of bank assets cause a downward spiral in prices, which leads not only to capital shrinkage but funding shortages as interbank lending is cut back.”

 

 

He concludes that more central bank action will be needed, but it will have a dwindling impact. And it does not address the underlying solvency issues.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

Spreads narrow in France, but remain above 4% in Spain and Italy, as bund yields rise again. As we pointed out before, the Euribor-Ois spread is stuck at around 100bp at the one year end (having reached a peak of 150bp in November). There seems to be resistance to a further decline.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.545

1.420

1.429

Italy

4.190

4.178

4.162

Spain

4.472

4.256

4.318

Portugal

10.112

10.043

10.141

Greece

20.336

19.927

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.343

5.274

5.429

Belgium

2.065

1.933

1.966

Bund Yield

1.558

1.62

1.636

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.317

1.3195

 

Yen

106.620

107.43

 

Pound

0.816

0.8174

 

Swiss Franc

1.202

1.2016

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.93

2.02

 

2 yr

1.88

1.96

 

5 yr

1.94

1.83

 

10 yr

2.18

2.06

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-7.129

-7.129

 

1 Month

0.214

0.714

 

3 Months

29.671

31.571

 

1 Year

100.336

99.736

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 18:30
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Terça-feira, 24 de Abril de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 24 de Abril de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti

Shocked, shocked

  • Financial markets react badly to the dual whammy of an Hollande victory in the first round of the French elections, and the offer of resignation by Dutch PM Mark Rutte;
  • French 10-year spreads were approaching 1.6% last night, and Dutch spreads rose to their highest levels in over three years;
  • Italian and Spanish were well over 4%, while German 10-year yields fell to 1.558%;
  • Dutch finance minister Jan Kees de Jager spent part of his day yesterday explaining why the Netherlands was not a basket case after all;
  • some commentators are now concerned that the now likely defeat of Sarkozy, political instability in the Netherlands, and uncertainty about the Irish referendum make the fiscal pact more uncertain;
  • Nicolas Sarkozy and Francois Hollande are luring Le Pen voters promising that they will take up their concerns;
  • Erik Izraelewicz in Le Monde argues Marine Le Pen is the real winner of the first round; 
  • Bild sees the Eurozone curse bringing down one government after the other;
  • June 27 is considered to be a possible date for the Dutch elections;
  • Bundesbank writes that Germany will need between 150.000 and 200.000 immigrants per year if the country wants to maintain its growth;
  • Spanish GDP contracts 0.4% in Q1; a third Irish trade union has called for a rejection of the fiscal pact;
  • Eurostat included for the Irish deficit last year some €5.8bn or 3.7% of GDP of capital injected into the two State-controlled banks;
  • Hans-Werner Sinn, meanwhile, says Greece would have a very quick recovery if it left the eurozone.

Readers of Eurointelligence would not have been surprised that Francois Hollande had done well in the first round of the French election, and that the Dutch government was heading for the rocks. The markets, however, seemed shocked, shocked by these events. Thus, the some of the most predictable events in European politics have triggered a market rout.

 

As of last night, French spreads were approaching 1.6%, with Spanish and Italian both above 4%. The euro held up at over $1.31, which suggests that investors took flight into the safety German bunds, the proto risk-free security in the eurozone now. Dutch spreads (the first time we ever felt the need to report them) rose to 78bp, the highest level in three years. German 10-year yields are now at a vertigo-inducing 1.558%. Oh, and equities also dropped across the board.

 

The big event yesterday was the offer of resignation of Mark Rutte as Dutch prime minister, the logical consequence of the collapse of his minority government after Geert Wilders decided that he can get more political leeway out of campaigning against the EU and the eurozone. Rutte offered his resignation to Queen Beatrix, who is still pondering her options.

 

The really funny bit about the events in the Netherlands was the attempt Jan Kees de Jager, probably Europe’s most self-righteous finance minister, to defend his country against allegations that it has joined the ranks of Greece. "There is no correlation whatsoever between the Netherlands and the countries of southern Europe. [Our] sovereign debt is in the region of 65 percent, which is way below the euro zone average," De Jager told Reuters. (He omitted to say that Spain’s debt to GDP is also below the eurozone’s average.)

 

Reuters also quoted an analyst from Nomura who said that the events in the Netherlands would make it more difficult to pass the fiscal pact – which may also now become a factor in the calculation of investors.

 

The Netherlands is now likely to head for general elections, with June 27 named as one possibility.

 

(Given the fragmentation of Dutch politics, and Wilder’s discovery of a new populist subject other than immigration, it is not clear at all what the outcome of a Dutch election will be. We also believe that a shift away from the austerian political centre – to both the right and the left – is likely to make the passage of the fiscal pact harder to achieve, at least without further amendments.)

 

Hollande and Sarkozy are luring the Le Pen’s voters


Nicolas Sarkozy and Francois Hollande were back on the campaign trail yesterday trying to win over the 18% of the French that voted for the extreme right and anti euro candidate Marine Le Pen,Lemonde.fr reports. „This is a vote of suffering“, Sarkozy said in his campaign headquarter in Pairs. „When one suffers one has the right to make the choice one wants to make“. And the conservative incumbant went on to conclude: „I tell you: I hear you.“ Hollande was campaigning in Brittany where Le Pen had come in first of all candidates in many places. „We need to listen to them (Le Pen’s voter)“, the socialist challenger said stressing that „those men and women don’t know anymore where to look for solutions“.

 

Marine Le Pen is the real winner, Erik Izraelewicz says


Le Monde’s editor Erik Izraelewicz thinks the major event of France’s first round is the impressive result of the extreme right candidate Marine Le Pen. „The historic performance of the National Front’s boss (more than 18% of the votes) ist he major event of this Sunday“, he writes. „With her personality, her style and her proposals the daughter of the FN’s founder has managed to dediabolize her party as she has tried to do for a couple of years. Better than Jean-Luc Mélenchon she has managed to benefit from the fears of the most vulvernable part of the population that is affected by the crisis and to benefit from a protest vote which is looking for a strong expression. Certainly she will not stop at this. Whoever wins May 6 will have to take this into account.“

 

Concern across Europe after Le Pen’s strong results


The strong 18% vote for France’s extreme right candidate Marine Le Pen caused concern across Europe, Lefigaro.fr reports. Angela Merkel’s spokesman said the chancellor was „preoccupied“ with the result but added that she thinks that the problem will „be solved in the second round“. Foreign minister Guido Westerwelle said he was satisfied that „two certified democrats“ had made it to the run-off thereby indirectly denying Le Pen the label of a democrat. José Manuel Barroso’s spokesperson appealed to the French not to give in to the „populist temptation and to continue to advance a Europe of peace and growth“. Also the governments of Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Austria, Luxemburg and Belgium expressed worry and unease about Le Pen’s electoral success.

 

Bild sees a „euro curse“ bringing one eurozone government after the other down


The mass market daily Bild is talking about a „euro curse“ that is bringing down one eurozone government after the other. Referring to Nicolas Sarkozy the paper tells its 10m daily readers: „The closest partner of chancellor Angela Merkel could be the next European top politician who falls over the crisis. It will be a weak consolation for Sarkozy that before him many others in Europe have known the same fate“. Bild then enumerates all the euro countries that saw there governments fall as a result of the crisis: Ireland, Portugal, Italy, Greece, Spain, Slovakia and Slovenia.

 

Bundesbank argues for strong economic immigration to Germany


In its monthly report for April the Bundesbank argues that Germany will need between 150.000 and 200.000 immigrants per year over the next years to fill jobs if the country wants to maintain its growth potential, Financial Times Deutschland writes. The German central bank also argues that child care must be improved so that people with „family obligation“ can better participate in the labour market. The Bundesbank also argues for a longer working hours. The central bank argues that scarcety in the labour market also threatens price stability since it will very likely „lead to a stronger wage growth“.

 

Spanish economy contracts 0.4% in Q1


El Pais reports that Spain is now officially in recession, according to the often used measure of two consecutive quarters of negative growth. In the latest economic bulletin, the Bank of Spain estimates that the quarterly rate of GDP has fallen by 0.4% between January and March, after a 0.5% fall in Q4, 2011. Official confirmation by the National Statistics Office is due within a week. Forecasts for the current year decline in GDP are for -2%. A breakdown of the data shows that the decline is due mostly to domestic demand. Exports, which held up well until recently,  decreased slightly by the slowdown in growth across Europe, while imports were down more substantially. The governing body of the Spanish central bank express dismay at the salary increase of 2.2%, given the present economic conditions.

 

Eurostat includes bank capital injection into deficit calculation


EU statistics office Eurostat said Ireland’s headline deficit was 13.1% last year, including some €5.8bn or 3.7% of GDP of capital injected into the two State-controlled banks. Its inclusion in the deficit figure was a surprise, writes the Irish Times.  Eurostat expressed a specific reservation that the banks’ restructuring plans have yet to be finalised and the office calculated €5.8bn of the €15.4bn injected into the two banks as a “deficit-increasing capital transfer”. The Department of Finance said the State bank recapitalisations in July, totalling €16.5bn, had been reflected in the general government debt reported by Eurostat in September so Ireland was “no worse off”. “This is simply a statistical reclassification from financial transaction to capital transfer for deficit purposes. There is no impact on our debt position.”


The underlying deficit, excluding bank bailouts, was 9.4%, compared with the 10.6% target set under the EU-IMF programme.

 

Third Irish union calls for 'no' vote in EU referendum


Reuters has the story that the Technical Engineering and Electrical Union has became the third union to reject the fiscal pact in an upcoming EU referendum. The union said it was becoming increasingly obvious that austerity is not working. “The right-wing agenda of Chancellor Merkel might make sense in Germany but it is a death sentence for our economy and people," Reuters quotes TEEU General Secretary Eamon Devoy as saying. The other two unions to oppose the pact are the UNITE crafts union and the Mandate retail union. Ireland’s largest union SIPTU, which represents around 10% of the workforce, is supporting the pact.

 

Hans-Werner Sinn says Greece and others should quit the eurozone for their own good


Helpful as ever, Hans-Werner Sinn said Greece will never restore its competitiveness while it remains in the eurozone, and the same was true of other indebted countries. He said if Greece stayed in the euro, there will be continued mass unemployment. But if they exit, all will be well. “They will see a very sudden recovery," he said, according to Reuters. Sinn also made the point that there are limits to internal devaluation.

 

 

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

 

The crisis is back full force.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.490

1.469

1.545

Italy

4.008

4.124

4.190

Spain

4.311

4.346

4.472

Portugal

10.682

10.275

10.112

Greece

20.001

19.956

20.34

Ireland

5.254

5.275

5.343

Belgium

1.962

1.976

2.065

Bund Yield

1.611

1.624

1.558

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.321

1.3136

 

Yen

107.800

106.48

 

Pound

0.820

0.815

 

Swiss Franc

1.201

1.2017

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

2.04

1.93

 

2 yr

1.98

1.88

 

5 yr

1.95

1.83

 

10 yr

2.2

2.06

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-7.600

-7.7

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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Segunda-feira, 23 de Abril de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 23 de Abril de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

Polls hold up for Hollande after first round victory

  • Francois Hollande wins first round of French presidential elections – 1.5pp ahead of Nicolas Sarkozy;
  • Marine Le Pen is surprisingly strong, Jean-Luc Mélenchon and Francois Bayrou is surprisingly weak;
  • latest polls show Hollande ahead in the second round with 54% against 46%;
  • Le Pen now styles herself as France’s opposition leader;
  • Günter Nonnenmacher says France is in real trouble with one third of the voters against the EU;
  • Thomas Hanke says new French president will have a nightmare job;
  • Olli Rehn’s calls on the next French president to respect deficit rules;
  • so does Jens Weidmann;
  • Geert Wilders rejected the budget cuts,  a decision likely to trigger new Dutch elections;
  • Wilders is likely to return to his anti-establishment roots, political analysts say;
  • latest poll suggests the country is likely to remain politically fragmented;
  • Antonis Samaras promises lower taxes, and higher social spending;
  • Olivier Blanchard appeals to Germany to accept higher inflation and eurobonds;
  • Spain has taken a decision to set up real estate companies to manage the banks’ property portfolios;
  • Paul Krugman says a euro exit would be similar to the abandonment of the gold standard in the 1930s;
  • Wolfgang Münchau warns against underestimating the politics of eurozone-wide bank resolution regimes;
  • Gavyn Davies, meanwhile, says the eurozone may have lost its ability to shock, but ability may soon return.

Please note, due to a technical error, the link to the article of Yanis Varoufakis displayed no text. This is now fixed. We are reposting the link:

Eurointeligence Comment and Analysis

 
An ECB debt redemption bond, a programme to address investment and internal imbalances, and the creation of a genuine single banking market is all that it takes to solve the eurozone crisis. And it is doable without Treaty changes.

 

The surprise of the first round of the French was not Francois Hollande’s relative victory, but the position of the loosing candidates, with the right significantly ahead of the left. For details and French analysis see Lefigaro.frLemonde.fr and Lesechos.fr. The latest official figures are: Hollande 28.59% and Sarkozy 27.09%, Marine Le Pen (Far Right), 18.06%, Jean-Luc Mélenchon (Communist) 11.11%, Francois Bayrou (centrist) 9.11%, and Eva Joly (Greens) 2.27%. Mélenchon and Joly urged their supporters last night to vote for Hollande in the second round.

 

Hollande will beat Sarkozy by 54% to 46% on May 6, according to a poll done after the first round

 

 

According to a poll by Logica Business for Le Monde and other media undertaken after the first round’s results were announced Francois Hollande will win the run-off elections against Nicolas Sarkozy in two weeks with a margin of 54% to 46%. The poll found that 60% of Marine Le Pen’s voters will cast their ballot for Sarkozy, 18% for Hollande with the rest abstaining. 86% of Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s voters will vote for Francois Hollande and almost all the rest will abstain. One third of Francois Bayrou’s voters will vote for Hollande, one third for Sarkozy and one third will abstain.

 

Le Pen calls herself France’s real „opposition leader“

 

 

After a result that surpassed all polls, the extreme right and anti-euro candidate Marine Le Pen called herself France’s real „opposition leader“, Lemonde.fr reports. According to the paper Le Pen has now solidly established herself and her Front National party as the country’s third political power. With last night’s result she even surpassed her father’s result when he made it into the run-off elections with 16.86%. The article says that she is now in a position to become a real danger for Nicolas Sarkozy’s centre right UMP party in the next presidential elections in 2017. The paper quote Marie-Christine Arnautu, the Front National’s vice president who says: „This was a professional campaign compared to 2002. In 2002 it was a protest vote. Today this is no longer the case.“

 

Some comments from Germany

 

 

Commenting the first round’s results in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung political editor Günther Nonnenmacher says that France has a „scary political landscape“, with one third of voters united in extremely nationalist anti European basic beliefs. Handelsblatt’s Paris correspondent Thomas Hanke writes that Hollande is due to take over a country that is about to slip into the second division. He will have catch up with Germany in terms of reforms, convince the impatient investors, and satisfy his voters at the same time.“

 

Euro policy makers think that France’s new president will be litmus test for the new fiscal rules of the currency zone

 

 

Speaking to Financial Times Deutschland Olli Rehn indirectly warned France’s next president to respect the eurozone’s new fiscal rules. „It is very important that the new economic governance rules are used and produce results“, Rehn said on the margins of the IMF spring meeting. „We have had several cases like Belgium, Cyprus, Malta und Poland where the governments have adopted additional measures in order to reach their fiscal targets. Hungary has decided to do otherwise. The Commission then recommended the suspend payments from the cohesion fund and the council of ministers followed that recommendation.“ Although Rehn did not mention explicitly France, it was clear from the questions that this was what he was referring to, FTD writes. The paper also quotes Jens Weidmann who said at the IMF meeting that it was crucial that France sticks with its obligation to get the deficit down to 3.0% in 2013. According to the IMF, France will only be at 3.9% if it does not take decisive additional measures.

 

New Dutch elections likely after Wilders rejects budget

 

 

Budget talks in the Netherlands collapsed over the weekend, with elections now likely to happen, creating uncertainty over the pace of budget cuts and the Dutch support for the fiscal pact.  The catalyst for the crisis was Geert Wilders, who refused to agree to €14bn-to-€16bn of budget cuts needed to bring the budget deficit under the 3% limit. Seven weeks of budget talks, Wilders suddenly backed out just when a deal appeared close.  Attempting to explain why he walked out, Wilders lashed out at the European Union, saying the Netherlands should not blindly obey commands from Brussels. The PVV is 'against Europe, against the 3% and against the euro,' Wilders told reporters following the collapse of the negotiations on Saturday.  

 

Reuters reports that prime minister Mark Rutte will first try to reach an agreement with the opposition, including the pro-Europe Labour Party, on crucial budget cuts after his ally Geert Wilders refused to do a deal.  But even if Rutte does manage to stave off an immediate budget crisis, elections within weeks or months are most likely.   "Elections are to be expected now. I will talk to parliament (on) how to get through this situation," Rutte told reporters on Saturday. The events also put a question mark over whether parliament will approve a new fiscal pact in the euro zone.

 

 

Uncertainty over whether the Netherlands can now push through crucial budget cuts and much-needed reforms of its labour and housing markets, as well as the prospect of elections, is likely to rattle financial markets. Last week, ratings agency Fitch warned that the Netherlands, one of just four euro countries with a coveted triple-A rating, was on the verge of a downgrade in its credit status due to high debt. 

 

Commentators say Wilders must realise he will be alone and not be part of any future coalition government, even with the VVD. The Volkskrant said in its analysis that Wilders now has his hands free to do what he wants - carry out an election campaign but that he is paying a high price for his freedom. Radio Netherlands says Wilders might be back to the anti-establishment profile he became popular with in the past, but his party’s lack of structure and its complete reliance on one-man rule makes it ineffective. An opinion poll published on Sunday showed the Netherlands remains highly fragmented politically, suggesting that it could prove difficult to form a new coalition quickly and that Wilders' chances of forming a new government were slim. 

 

Samaras pledges tax cuts and social spending increases

 

 

Greek conservative leader Antonis Samaras promised on Sunday to cut taxes and increase social spending, without missing the targets set by international lenders, if he wins the May 6 national election, Reuters reports. Samaras, presenting his economic programme two weeks before the vote, said taxes should start falling, starting with a single corporate tax rate of 15%, down from 23% now, to stimulate consumption and hiring and spur economic recovery after five straight years of recession. At some point in the future, the top VAT rate should be cut to 19% from 23% now, and the top income tax rate to 32% from 45%, he said. This would reverse some of the austerity measures the country agreed to last month. But Samaras said he would respect the aim of cutting the budget deficit to 7.3% of GDP this year and further beyond. He promised spending increases of €550n on low pensions, farmers and child benefits to be paid for by savings in state-run companies and a tax on new games. Samaras insisted that he would not accept the scrapping of the 13th and 14th monthly salaries, according to Kathimerini.

 

Blanchard appeals to Germany to accept eurobonds and higher inflation

 

 

Olivier Blanchard appealed to Germany to accept the progressive introduction of eurobonds and temporarily higher inflation as a means to resolve the crisis and to stabilize the currency union. „When there was no fiscal pact and other instruments to ensure fiscal discipline the Germans had good reasons not to want to accept responsibility for irresponsible budgetary decisions of other countries“, the IMF’s chief economist told Financial Times Deutschland. „Now we have the fiscal pact. Therefore the Germans should accept a movement towards eurobonds.“ Blanchard also advocated temporarily higher inflation in Germany than in the rest of the eurozone. „Should the Germans wish to continue to produce at potential but with reduced current account surpluses they must accept a price level that rises more quickly than in the rest of the eurozone“, he said.

 

Spain’s real estate resolution company take shape

 

 

We reported about the idea of real estate resolution companies in Spain last year, but El Pais now reports that the decision to move in this direction has been taken. El Pais said the measure is undertaken to ensure foreign investors, who believe that the €53bn in property-related write offs are not sufficient, given the recession and the likely increase in non-performing loans, and further falls in house prices. The article said the Bank of Spain does not agree with that assessment, but accepts that it cannot go against the market, and have consequently drawn up the guidelines. Many details have yet to be worked out.  The model to be followed is to create several real estate companies, depending on the type of assets that are transferred: land, housing under construction, completed developments, etc. The article has lots of details of how the scheme would work. The most important aspect is that it is not a true bad bank – in other words the government is not guaranteeing its losses.

 

Paul Krugman compares eurozone exit with an exit from the gold standard in the 1930

 

 

 

In his New York Times column, Paul Krugman writes that the policy imposed on Spain were “insane”. His main point is that the present policy are more inconveivable than a eurozone exit.

 

“What is the alternative? Well, in the 1930s — an era that modern Europe is starting to replicate in ever more faithful detail — the essential condition for recovery was exit from the gold standard. The equivalent move now would be exit from the euro, and restoration of national currencies. You may say that this is inconceivable, and it would indeed be a hugely disruptive event both economically and politically. But continuing on the present course, imposing ever-harsher austerity on countries that are already suffering Depression-era unemployment, is what’s truly inconceivable.”

Wolfgang Münchau on the politics of a eurozone-wide bank resolution scheme

 

 

In his FT column, Wolfgang Münchau writes that a consensus has been emerging among experts that a combined eurozone-wide bank resolution, supervision, and deposit insurance scheme is what it would take to eliminate one important element of the crisis. He says advocates of such a scheme make the mistake to think that this would be much more acceptable politically than a eurobond. Münchau says he also favours such an approach, but adds the political obstacles are at least as big, if not bigger, than those to a eurobond because of the political nature of European banking, and in Germany’s case also because of the role of the banks in the supplying generous finance to the corporate sector.  He also makes the point that this could only ever be a partial solution if the agreement is unfudged, which again is very unlikely to happen.

 

Gavyn Davies says eurozone has lost capacity to shock – for now

 

 

Writing in the FTGavyn Davies says the eurozone has lost its capacity to shock the rest of the world, as the link between eurozone bond spreads and global asset prices, which was strong last year, seems to have broken down. The reason is the perception of a significantly reduced liquidity crisis, as the ECB is likely to inject further liquidity into the system, having already revealed its preferences through the LTRO. But Davies warns of two negative trends. First, the LTRO has a potentially negative effect on bank balance sheets, leaving banks exposed to a further sell-off by international investors. Second, banks have every incentive to reduce their assets, and bring about a credit crunch that turns a mild recession into a depression. The capacity to shock would then return quickly.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

 

Not good at all. Italian and Spanish spreads above 4%, and also notice the gradual creep of French spreads.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.490

1.469

1.471

Italy

4.008

4.133

4.134

Spain

4.311

4.346

4.412

Portugal

10.682

10.275

10.489

Greece

20.001

19.956

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.254

5.275

5.460

Belgium

1.962

1.976

2.000

Bund Yield

1.611

1.624

1.623

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.314

1.319

 

Yen

107.140

107.32

 

Pound

0.818

0.8184

 

Swiss Franc

1.202

1.2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.94

2.04

 

2 yr

1.89

1.98

 

5 yr

1.86

1.95

 

10 yr

2.08

2.2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-7.600

-7.5

 

1 Month

-1.286

-1.986

 

3 Months

28.536

28.236

 

1 Year

97.929

97.829

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 19:00
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Sexta-feira, 20 de Abril de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 20 de Abril de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

IMF says Spanish GDP will reach 2008 levels only by 2017

  • The fund’s latest forecast says it will take Spain until 2017 for GDP to recover to 2008 levels;
  • the loss of Spanish jobs is unlikely to be reversed before 2022 or 2023;
  • the Bank of Spain is discussing a proposal to set a quasi-bad bank that hives off property-related activities in a separate company;
  • Luis de Guindos tells Germans that Spain needs no EFSF programme;
  • the Spanish and French bond auctions went well, but Spanish yields rose after the auction;
  • Nicolas Sarkozy is showing signs of frustration over his failure to close the polling gap with Francois Hollande;
  • president complains that all candidates get the same air time on French TV;
  • Hollande wants to tap the savings of French households to fund the French sovereign debt;
  • Greek banks get funding pledge but recapitalization terms delayed;
  • Evangelos Venizelos wants EU and IMF to give Greece another year to meet fiscal targets;
  • Peter Spiegel says that Portugal has two months to prove it needs no second bailout;
  • the Dutch finance minister wants hedge funds to be more closely monitored;
  • economists expect the Ifo index to decline;
  • German economics institutes disagree on debt redemption fund;
  • meanwhile, we have an illustration by the IMF, showing how contagion in the eurozone might work.

Eurointeligence Comment and Analysis

An ECB debt redemption bond, a programme to address investment and internal imbalances, and the creation of a genuine single banking market is all that it takes to solve the eurozone crisis. And it is doable without Treaty changes.

This is a sobering forecasting from the IMF, according to which it will take until 2017 for Spain to reach the 2008 level of GDP – six years later than France and Germany. The 2.5m jobs lost since the onset of the crisis will not be recovered until 2022 or 2023 at best, El Pais quotes a Spanish economist. (And we assume that more jobs will get loss as the country goes through the next cycle of deleveraging and austerity.) The IMF projections assume that Spain will growth barely in 2013, and maintain a growth of under 2% until 2017. (We think this is hugely optimistic, as the deleveraging process is unlikely to be completed quickly. The article also quotes an IMF official as saying one should treat the long-term forecasts with caution.)

 

Bank of Spain is considering a quasi bad bank


El Pais has a short article on a presentation given by José María Roldán, director of regulation at the Bank of Spain, who proposed a scheme whereby banks would separate the property-related out of the balance sheet and hand it over to a property company, which would manage the assets. This is a kind of a bad bank, though Roldán disagreed with the term. This company would manage most of direct property assets and a majority of construction development assets that are currently weighing down the balance sheets of Spanish banks. The idea, as with a bad bank, is to provide transparency. The problem, as the paper states, is who pays for the losses if they become large?

 

(We like the idea because it creates a resolution mechanism, and force the sale of properties, which in turn will lead to a further significant fall in Spanish house price. It is only after this backlog is cleared that we will a proper idea of the scale of the problem.)

 

De Guindos tells Germans he needs no EFSF money


On a roadshow in Germany, the Spanish economics minister Luis de Guindos denied that Spain needed to tap the EFSF to recapitalize its banks, Handelsblatt reports. „We will not need money from the EFSF in order to refinance our banks“, he told the paper. There are strong doubts in Europe and at the IMF that government’s estimate, according to which only €50bn are neccessary, is accurate. The ECB and several euro member states suggest that the EFSF should be allowed to give its money directly to the banks instead of channelling it through governments first. This is vehemently opposed by Germany.


(Judging by the frequency of official denials, one would have thought that such a programme must now be imminent. We don’t think that is the case, but we believe that a programme is very likely to be necessary.)

 

Spanish and French bond auctions went well, but at a cost


The Spanish and French bond auctions went well yesterday, according to Reuters. The Spanish treasury sold €2.5bn, taking the issuance to over half the annual target. The bid to cover ratio was 3.3 on the shorter end of the bonds, and 2.4 at the longer end. The yield on the two year bond was 3.46%, and 5.74% for a ten-year bond. Most of the buyers seem to be Spanish banks. The article noted that Spanish yields had risen in the secondary market after the auction. France sold near €8bn of medium-to-long term bonds, with a bid-to-cover ratio of close to 3.

 

Sarkozy loses his nerves


Ahead of the presidential election’s first round on Sunday Nicolas Sarkozy showed his frustration over the fact that he did not manage to close the distance to Francois Hollande in the polls, Le Monde’s Arnaud Leparmentier reports on his blog L’Elysée Coté Jardin. According to the blog post, Sarkozy attacked the rules for TV and radio according to which each of the ten presidential candidates gets exactly the same air time regardless of his or her chances of making it to the second round, including four candidates whose polls are in the region of 0.5%.

 

The polls have recently moved back in favour of Hollande, with one poll giving him a lead in the first round. For the second, decisive round, all polls give Hollande a comfortable margin of victory.

 

Hollande wants to tap the citizens’ savings to finance France’s debt


If elected Francois Hollande wants to tap the savings of the French to finance the country’s debt, according to Les Echos. He said French household savings at 17% of income was very high. „The more we borrow from the French the less we have to borrow on the markets,“ he said. Hollande also explained that it would be cheaper to borrow from the French than from international investors on the markets. By the end 2011 roughly 65% of all French debt was held by international investors, the rest by French. In 2009 Nicolas Sarkozy had the same idea. He later renounced the idea because it turned out the French debt agency warned that it would be a lot more expansive to raise significant amount of debt with small private French savers than with professional international investors.

 

Greek banks get funding pledge but recapitalization terms delayed


Due to difficulties in reaching an agreement on the recapitalisation terms for Greek banks, the announcement of the details is likely to be postponed today. On Thursday Lucas Papademos met with Central Bank Governor Giorgos Provopoulos, but their meeting proved inconclusive regarding the details of the process. The main issue is how the private character of the lenders can be retained. But commercial lenders will receive a formal assurance from the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund (HFSF) that they are to receive €23bn if they stick to the capital enhancement plans they have submitted to the Bank of Greece, Kathimerini reports. To strengthen their Core Tier I index up to the 10 percent threshold, National Bank will need €6.6bn, Eurobank must get €4.6bn, Alpha needs €2.6bn and Piraeus should draw €4.6bn.

 

Venizelos wants EU and IMF to give Greece an extra year to meet fiscal targets


On the campaign trail Evangelos Venizelos said that he would push for the EU and IMF to grant the country an extra year to meet its fiscal targets moments after Christine Lagarde stressed the importance of Greece implementing the fiscal adjustment program it had agreed , reportsKathimerini. Venizelos told PASOK supporters: “In June, Greece has to decide which measures it will implement to reduce spending by €11bn by the end of the adjustment period….It falls upon us to decide this and we propose that the country push for something it can achieve easily: adjustment not over two years until 2014 but over three years, until 2015. The adjustment should be softer, more friendly for citizens and more friendly on growth.”

 

Portugal has two months to prove it needs no second bailout


On the Brussels blog of the FT Peter Spiegel argues that Portugal has de facto two months to convince that it does not need a second bailout. The argument is as follows:

 

“In September 2013, Portugal must find €9.7bn to pay off a bond that comes due. The current three-year programme calls for that money to raised by Portugal itself in medium- and long-term bond auctions, as this chart from the European Commission’s recently-released report on the Portugal bailout shows. So if Portugal needs to go back to the financial markets in September 2013, that means it must be able to show the IMF such a plan is realistic 12 months in advance – or September 2012. And if a second bailout is to be organised, negotiations over what that package will look like will probably have to begin two or three months before that. Which means Portugal has until about June – just two months from now – to convince the financial markets it is worthy.”

 

Dutch finance minister wants hedge funds to be closer monitored


The Dutch finance minister Jan Kees de Jager wants hedge funds and stock market speculators under the supervision of De Nederlandsche Bank (DNB) and the Financial Markets Authority (AFM), the Volkskrant reports. The proposal means that the DNB will monitor the funds, whether they are financially sound and what risks could arise. The AFM will monitor the behaviour of the funds and speculators and the products they offer.

 

Economists expect Ifo index to decline


Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect the Ifo German business confidence index to decline for the first time in six months as the resurgent sovereign debt crisis threatens to curb growth. The Ifo institute’s business climate index, based on a survey of 7,000 executives, is expected to drop to 109.5 from 109.8 in March, according to the median forecast of 40 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Ifo releases the report at 10am in Munich today.

 

German economic institutes disagree over debt of the crisis countries


While presenting their report on the German economy, the economic research institutes demonstrated that they profoundly disagree on how to deal with the debt of the crisis countries, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. Two institutes plead in favour of a European debt redemption fund. They fear the old debt creates a vicious circle of rising risk premiums, increasing servicing costs and the necessity to sustain a high primary surplus over an extended time. In order to escape from that circle the countries should be able to refinance the part above 60% with money from the redemption fund. But the Ifo Institute and the Kieler Institute für Weltwirtschaft (IfW) are strictly opposed. They argue that guaranteeing the fund would lower Germany’s rating. Also they say the pressure of the markets is necessary for those countries to reform.

 

How eurozone contagion might work.

 

This is from the IMF’s GFSR, hat tip FT Alphaville. It shows the mechanisms of how the eurozone financial crisis affects the rest of the world.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.383

1.490

1.490

Italy

3.863

4.078

4.073

Spain

4.215

4.311

4.363

Portugal

10.960

10.682

11.073

Greece

19.831

20.001

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.309

5.254

5.478

Belgium

1.891

1.962

1.994

Bund Yield

1.63

1.611

1.616

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.312

1.3143

 

Yen

106.860

107.11

 

Pound

0.817

0.8184

 

Swiss Franc

1.202

1.2018

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

1.94

1.94

 

2 yr

1.99

1.89

 

5 yr

1.86

1.86

 

10 yr

2.08

2.08

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-8.243

-8.343

 

1 Month

 

 

 

3 Months

 

 

 

1 Year

97.143

98.943

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 23:55
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Quinta-feira, 19 de Abril de 2012
Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 19 de Abril de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

IMF warns of financial crisis in eurozone

  • Global Financial Stability Reports warns of a massive credit crunch in the next 18 months;
  • banks are expected to divest 7% of their assets;
  • impact on eurozone credit supply is a negative 1.7%;
  • threat of serious damage to asset prices, credit supply, and GDP;
  • Olivier Blanchard says the EU must urgently focus on the recapitalisation of banks;
  • a report by Fitch says that the prices of repossessed Spanish property are down 50% of their original value;
  • reports suggest that official Spanish house prices statistics are meaningless;
  • also estimates that there are over 1m unsold homes;
  • the EBA is to set up a data hub to allow outsiders to run their own stress tests;
  • in its latest charity fund raise, the IMF said it secured $320bn in donations for the eurozone;
  • Jens Weidmann says Spain should solve its own problems, and not rely on the ECB;
  • an analysis by JP Morgan shows that Italy’s latest budget revision is way off track, as this year’s deficit is headed for a figure of more than twice the estimate;
  • Germany’s economic institutes fear for the ECB’s independence;
  • say that a prolonged recession could lead to debt default in Spain and Italy;
  • German engineering employers are offering a 3% wage increase;
  • Francois Hollande said he was considering raising the French minimum wage;
  • the election campaign kicks off in Greece today;
  • the outcome of the Irish referendum on the fiscal pact is highly uncertain, according to the latest polls;
  • Portuguese banks are getting money from the state to invest in government bonds;
  • George Soros, meanwhile, says eurozone policy is heading for a disaster, and if he were to invest (which he is not), he would bet against the euro.

This is probably the most important story in the eurozone crisis right now – and mostly off the policymakers’ radar screen. The IMF warned in its Global Financial Stability Report that the eurozone is about to witness a massive credit crunch – of a scale that warrants a complete reboot in economic crisis resolution policies. We have going on about this problem in Spain, where the full scale of private sector deleveraging has become apparent.

 

The best summary, as ever, is from the report itself, emphasis ours:

 

“…  large EU-based banks could shrink their combined balance sheet by as much as €2.0 trillion through end-2013, or almost 7% of total assets. Although subject to considerable uncertainty, our estimate is that about one-fourth of this deleveraging could occur through a reduction in lending, with the remainder coming largely from sales of securities and noncore assets. Under the baseline, the impact on euro area credit supply is estimated at about 1.7% of present credit outstanding. Some balance sheet reduction by individual banks is necessary because high leverage is no longer supported by either markets or regulators and some activities are no longer viable. But the potential consequences of a synchronized and large-scale deleveraging warrant supervisory efforts to avoid serious damage to asset prices, credit supply, and economic activity in Europe and beyond.”

 

Olivier Blanchard said at the news conference that there was an urgent need for recapitalisation and resolution, and that the EFSF/ESM should be used for the recapitalisation of banks, to break what he called the “pernicious link between sovereigns and banks”.

 

Spanish house prices are now starting to decline

 

 

There was an unrelated story yesterday that goes a long to explain the extent of the credit crunch in Europe, at least in respect of Spain. The FT cites a report by Fitch according to which repossessed properties in Spain are selling for about half their original value, and are likely to continue to fall. (That squares or own estimate of a Spanish house price decline of over 50%, of which less than half is so far officially recorded.) Fitch said that valuations on properties that were bundled up in securitisation deals and later repossessed are also significantly lower than data from the official housing price index suggest. The FT also reported that the latest Bank of Spain data for non-performing loans have registered a jump to over 8%, the worst level since 1994. Official data show that Spanish house prices fell 3% in the first three months of the year. Fitch noted that reposed homes were valued at 25% below their original prices, but their average selling price is 48% lower. An expert is cited as saying as saying that the official house price statistics are therefore highly misleading. Fitch estimates that the overhang of unsold homes in Spain is still over 1m.

 

EBA to set up proper stress test infrastructure

 

 

The European Banking Authority plans to set up a data hub within two years to give outsider full transparent information on the riskiness of European banks, according to Reuters. The article quotes Andrea Enria of the EBA as saying the authority was to prove up-to-date information on banks' capital positions, sovereign debt holdings, and other stress test-style data. He said the lack of such information had been a source of market uncertainty. He said once there a common reporting framework is established, “we can go much further in terms of disclosure."

 

Europe’s little wall

 

 

This looks like a charity fund raiser. The IMF said yesterday that it had already secured $320bn, $200bn of which from within the EU, to increase the firewall, in other words only $120bn from outside. So much for the idea of a large foreign participation. The latest commitments were $8bn from Poland, and some money from Switzerland. The target is to get to $400bn. (The target has been adjusted so that it can be met). The biggest external commitment came from Japan with $60bn. Reuters quotes Mark Carney, of the Bank of Canada, as saying that the success of the crisis response will not depend on the firewall, but on the policies. Neither the US nor Canada have put any money.

 

Weidmann says it’s not the ECB’s job to solve Spain’s problems

 

 

Spain should take a rise in its bond yields as a spur to tackle the root causes of its debt woes, not look to the European Central Bank to help by buying its bonds, Jens Weidmann told Reuters. The head of the Bundesbank, who has led a push by some policymakers from core eurozone countries for the bank to begin planning an exit from its crisis mode, said no ECB policymakers favoured using the bank's bond-buying plan to target specific interest rates on sovereign bonds, and ECB board member Benoit Coeure was simply stating a fact by saying last week that the programme still existed. Weidmann also said he saw no reason to discuss a third LTRO. „We shouldn't always proclaim the end of the world if a country's long-term interest rates temporarily goes above 6 percent,“ he said referring to rates at which Spain currently has to borrow. „That is also a spur for policymakers in the countries concerned to do their homework and to win back (market) confidence through the pursuit of the reform path.“

 

Italy’s budget way off track, according to JP Morgan

 

 

This is a very interesting analysis from JP Morgan, as reported by FT Alphaville, showing the delusion of European governments in their deficit planning. Italy’s cabinet yesterday considered the new forecasts, which project an increases in the projected deficits for 2012 from 1.6% to 1.7%, and in 2013 from 0.1% to 0.5%. But JP Morgan looked at the raw Jan-Mar budget data, and concludes that the budget is current on a trajectory for a deficit more than twice as large for this year - €60bn, instead of the projected €26bn.  (To us, this shows that the deficit planning in the eurozone periphery is completely delusional, as is the 3% deficit target for 2013.)

 

German economic institutes fear for ECB’s independence

 

 

The eight leading German economic institutes fear that the ECB will lose its independence as a result of all the non-standard rescue operation for the eurozone, according to Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. „Independence and credibility are at stake“, the paper quotes from their yet unpublished report on the economic situation in Germany that the institutes will today present to the government. „There is the danger that the monetary policy will no longer be able to liberate itself from this situation of constraints that has arisen“, the report warns. The institutes also criticize the government that despite the good economic situation in Germany the government will not be able to have a surplus. Additionally the institutes take a sceptical view on the euro crisis countries’ ability to fulfil their consolidation and reform obligations. According to the institutes, especially Italy and Spain are vulnerable. Should there be a prolonged recession, both countries may no longer be able to service their debt, the report warns.

 

Metall industry employers offer 3.0% pay rise

 

 

The German metal industry employers start negotiations on salaries in the industry by offering 3.0% pay rise over 14 months starting retroactively as of April 1 for the 3.6m workers in this sector in Germany, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reports. The powerful union IG Metall is asking for 6.5% over 12 months. Additionally the union demands that all trainees shall get definitive work contracts and that the unions will get co-decision powers over the question whether a company hires temporary workers. The public workers union Verdi had recently raised hopes for significant wage increases by obtaining a 5.6% pay rise over two years. In the past years Germany had been among the euro members with lowest real and nominal wage rises.

 

If elected Francois Hollande wants to raise the minimum wage

 

 

According to Les Echos, Francois Hollande wants to raise the French minimum wage SMIC if he gets elected. The Socialist candidate said that he would examine if that was a possibility „given that the SMIC had not been raised for at least three years“. Unions reacted cautiously to the announcement. The Communist CGT and the extreme Left candidate Jean-Luc Mélenchon union want to raise the SMIC to 1700€ which would be 20% more than it currently is.

 

Election campaign kicks off in Greece

 

 

Antonis Samaras will unveil his party’s economic programme today ahead of the May 6 elections. Samaras has called  yesterday for a «clear mandate» that will allow his party to govern without having its «hands tied,» adding that if elected ND would seek changes to Greece's austerity programme. Evangelos Venizelos also tries to draw a line behind the past distancing himself from his predecessor Papademos saying that he had been against the decision to appeal for IMF emergency loan and that he had preferred Greece to drawn up its own measures. He pledged in his TV appearance for measures to improve liquidity for small businesses, Kathimerini reports.

 

 

According to the latest polls, the two major parties would win a narrow parliamentary majority if elections were held today, Reuters reports. Support for the conservative New Democracy party was at 22.3%, down 2.5pp from a previous poll last month. The Socialist PASOK party was down 0.6pp to 17.8%. Based on those poll numbers, the election would allow the two parties to renew their coalition government.

  

Undecided will be decisive in Irish Referendum

 

 

The outcome of the Irish referendum on the European stability treaty on May 31st is wide open, according to the latest Irish Times/Ipsos MRBI poll which shows the result is in the hands of undecided voters. Asked whether they were likely to vote Yes or No to the treaty, 30% of voters said Yes, 23% said No, 39% were undecided and 8% said they would not vote. When undecided voters, and those who won’t vote, are excluded the Yes side is ahead by 58% to 42% but the outcome hinges on the attitude of the currently undecided voters. The Lisbon Treaty has a lead of the Yes vote at a similar stage but the referendum turned it down. Good news is that the number of ‘No’ voters has halved since October. 

 

Portuguese banks given money to invest in government bonds

 

 

Jornal de Negocios reports that the money that the Portuguese state will inject into the two banks, the BCP and BPI, to help these two institutions to comply with capital requirements of the European Banking Authority (EBA) will be mainly invested in government debt. The two banks cannot use those resources to increase the credit to the economy.

 

George Soros says he would bet against the eurozone

 

 

In an interview with Le Monde, George Soros makes a number of gloomy predictions. He said the policies of the eurozone were leading to disaster, and that the euro was now threatening the survival of the European Union. And even if the euro survived, the eurozone would face the prospect of a lost decade similar to what happened in Argentina in 1982 or in Japan ten years later. In the interview he also said that his Quantum fund had no positions in the euro, but if he were to invest, given the present political leadership, he would bet against the euro.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

 

 

Italy worsening, France worsening, Spain a little better.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.352

1.383

1.394

Italy

3.816

3.966

3.953

Spain

4.241

4.215

4.275

Portugal

10.980

10.960

11.124

Greece

19.647

19.831

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.259

5.309

5.510

Belgium

1.873

1.891

1.922

Bund Yield

1.668

1.63

1.643

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.311

1.3116

 

Yen

106.620

106.8

 

Pound

0.823

0.8183

 

Swiss Franc

1.202

1.2021

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

2.05

1.94

 

2 yr

2

1.99

 

5 yr

1.86

1.86

 

10 yr

2.09

2.08

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-7.500

-8.6

 

1 Month

 

 

 

3 Months

28.729

29.329

 

1 Year

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 23:55
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Eurointelligence Daily Briefing, 18 de Abril de 2012. Enviado por Domenico Mario Nuti.

Is contagion about to spread to France?

  • Ten year spreads have been rising in France as nervousness grows about the outcome of the French election;
  • analysts warn that bond vigilantes might cross over from Spain to France;
  • a poll, however, suggests that a majority of fund managers expect Nicolas Sarkozy to win the elections;
  • in an interview with Handelsblatt, Francois Hollande positions himself as the anti-Merkel; says he will not sign fiscal pact, unless it is complemented by a growth initiative;
  • says there will be no constitutional debt brake in France;
  • the latest Ifop poll shows him beating Sarkozy 56% to 44% in second round;
  • the IMF’s Fiscal Monitor shows the French deficit at 3.9% in 2013, thus overshooting the target;
  • the IMF also registers overshoots in Italy and Spain;
  • a Monti administration official also acknowledges that Italy will overshoot  the deficit target this year and next, though by a smaller margin than forecast by the IMF;
  • he says that Monti has yet to decide whether or not to compensate for the shortfall;
  • the IMF is relatively optimistic about the world economy, and predicts increases in GDP even in Italy and Spain;
  • but Spain is not expected to reach the 3% deficit target until 2018;
  • a bunch of German business activists have taken the Bundesbank to court over Target 2;
  • Bild is worried that the deterioration of Spain may cost Germany a lot of money; 
  • Wolfgang Munchau says Andres Velasco of Chile is right when he says that the eurozone has failed to learn from the experience of others;
  • Manfred Neumann says that it is too early to tell if austerity has gone too far; also says economists have the right to assess a country’s exit from the eurozone;  
  • Martin Wolf argues that the eurozone will most likely stay together;
  • The populist True Finns, meanwhile, lost 7pp in the latest polls.

The FT has picked up on the steady rise in French 10-year spreads (see also our table below),  which this morning stood at 1.363%, as investors are becoming nervous about the French elections, and the prospects that Francois Hollande might win and implement his programme. The article makes the point that investors have been so fixated on Spain that they have taken their eyes off the ball in France, where the deficit has come in at 5.2% last year. The article quotes one well-known economist who says that if Hollande does not immediately focus on the deficit, the bond vigilantes are likely to cross the border from Spain to France. Interestingly, the article refers to a survey of fund managers, a narrow majority of whom expect Nicolas Sarkozy to win (we suspect some of them must be confused by the dual-round voting system, and do not understand that a first-round lead does not automatically translate into a victory).

 

 

Hollande positions himself as Europe’s Anti-Merkel

 

 

In an interview with Handelsblatt, Hollande positions himself as the politician who will break Angela Merkel’s dominance of the European political scene. He reiterated his announcement not to sign the fiscal pact, if it is not amended with measures in favour of growth and employment. Also Hollande insisted that economic policies needed to be better coordinated in Europe. „All EU countries, even Germany, are suffering from a lack of economic dynamism. There is no common initiative for economic revitalization because we don’t coordinate ourselves“, he explained. The Socialist candidate also announced that he wanted to discuss with Merkel „how the European Central Bank can more strongly intervene in order to restrain the speculation against state finances“. Hollande reiterated that he had no plans to introduce the debt brake into the French constitution on the grounds that the constitution already requires balanced public finances. The candidate also underlined that he was going to implement his plans to raise taxes for millionaires to 75% and to reduce tax breaks for wealthy French by €40bn. However, Hollande said that the EU needed „the Franco-German couple in this deep crisis“, and his first foreign trip would therefore be to Berlin.

 

IMF sees French deficit at 3.9% in 2013 instead of 3.0%

 

 

In its Fiscal Monitor the IMF forecasted the French deficit in 2013 at 3.9%, the Le Monde blog Contes public reports. That is significantly above the 3.0% both Nicolas Sarkozy and Francois Hollande promised their EU partners to reach in that year. If the IMF projections are correct, the next president will have find additional cuts in the magnitude of €18bn.

 

The latest polls: according to Ifop Hollande will beat Sarkozy by a big margin

 

 

According to an Ifop poll for Le Monde Hollande and Sarkozy would both get 27% at next Sunday’s first round but Hollande would beat Sarkozy by a clear margin of 56% to 44%.

 

The Monti administration expects to miss deficit target

 

 

The FT reports that Italy’s government expects to miss the 3% deficit target, citing unnamed officials. This comes from the government’s annual budget forecasting document, to be considered by the cabinet on Wednesday, which (as we reported yesterday) is likely to include a higher than previously forecast recession. The new budget deficit will be 0.5%, rather 0.1%, a target the Italian government now expects to hit in 2014. Monti has said repeatedly that he would not impose additional austerity to meet the targets, but the official said Mr Monti had not yet made a final decision on the matter.

 

Il sole 24 ore focuses on the IMF’s forecast for Italy, showing a fall in GDP of 1.3% this year, and a rise of 0.5% in 2013, with a deficit of 1.7% this year, and 0.5% next year – which is significantly above the Italian’s government own (revised) forecasts. Public debt to GDP will peak at 123% this year, before falling back to 114% in 2014.

  

IMF believes that Spain will not hit 3% deficit target until 2018

 

 

This would normally have made top billing in El Pais, but the Spanish press is understandably preoccupied by the fallout of Argentina’s threatened nationalisation of its domestic Repsol activities. El Pais writes that the latest IMF forecasts say that it will take Spain until 2018 to reach the 3% deficit target, with a forecast of a 2012 deficit of 6% (as against a target of 5.3%), and 5.7% in 2013 (against a target of 3%). But the IMF is also forecasting a return to economic growth in 2013 (of 0.1%). Total public debt is set to increase to 92% by 2017, which would a containable scenario.  The article quotes Olivier Blanchard as saying that the IMF would not advise Spain to enact further austerity if the economy continued to contract. But the economic outlook for the global economy is now better than it was three months ago. The Spanish government responded to the IMF forecasts with the comment that the IMF has not always been accurate in their economic forecasts. (That is true, but the Spanish governments’ successive track record is much worse.)

 

Bundesbank taken to court over Target balances

 

 

According to Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the Munich based economic lawyer Bernd Schüneman and a foundation of family-run companies have taken the Bundesbank to court over embezzlement because of the target balances. „Because of the dimension of the risks those who are responsible must no longer look the other way“, the foundation’s chairman Brun-Hagen Hernekes told the paper. „The Bundesbank board and the federal government should not have let the European Central Bank act as it did. It was their duty to keep away damage from the Federal Republic and the taxpayers.“

 

Bild worries about Spain, the German’s favourite holiday destination

 

 

Bild is worried about Spain and its effects on the eurozone.  The headline runs: „Euro crisis: How dangerous is a Spanish bankruptcy for my money?“. The paper quotes the economist Lars Feld who warns that the repercussions could this time be worse than they were 2011. The article basically tells Bild’s 10m daily readers not to worry too much. The biggest risk according to the paper is that the euro will depreciate as a result of an escalation in Spain which would make gasoline even more expansive in Germany than it already is. But crucially there is no reason to worry about holidays already booked in Spain. „If you have booked with a German travel agent there is nothing to fear“, Bild quotes the federation of German travel agents.

 

Wolfgang Munchau on Andres Velasco

 

 

Writing in FT Deutschland, Wolfgang Munchau says Andres Velasco, the former Chilean economics minister, gave the best speech at this year’s INET conference (the last of the lot, held at midnight).  Velasco makes the point that eurozone policy makers have failed to consult anybody from other parts of the world with first-hand crisis experience, thus repeating all the mistakes others have made before them. Munchau lists voluntary private sector participation, and pro-cyclical austerity as among those mistakes. He concludes that the failure to consult is a consequence of European navel-gazing, a lack of interest in, and understanding of, events that occur outside its own borders, and a long tradition of economic exceptionalism.

 

Manfred Neumann on austerity – and the Wolfson prize

 

 

Writing in Vox, Manfred Neumann defends austerity, saying it is too early to sound the alarm, but says economists are right to consider all options, including exit. He says countries subject to a large adjustment now face three options. The first is simply to reverse the fiscal programme, which would trigger an immediate market crisis. The second is to continue austerity, but to fine-tune its composition. He favours this option, especially in view of the moderately strong global economic recovery. The third is to exit the euro, an option he prefers for Greece. He says it was legitimate for economists to consider and analyse this option acknowledging that a break-up of the eurozone as such is unrealistic, and should be discarded as an option.(Just to put this into context, Neumann is one of the judges of this year’s Wolfson prize, which asks the question of how to dismantle the eurozone. )

 

Also, Vox has a wider debate on whether austerity has gone too far, with contributions fromGiancarlo Corsetti, who argues that it has, from Alberto Alesina and Francesco Giavazzi, who argue that Corsetti has gone too far, and from Brad DeLong who says the costs of austerity will exceed its benefits.

 

Martin Wolf on why the eurozone may yet survive

 

 

In his FT column, Martin Wolf argues that the eurozone may yet survive due to the will of its political elites. But it is no optimistic column, and his prediction is that it will survive in misery.

“The principal political force is the commitment to the ideal of an integrated Europe, along with the huge investment of the elite in that project. This enormously important motivation is often underestimated by outsiders. While the eurozone is not a country, it is much more than a currency union. For Germany, much the most important member, the eurozone is the capstone of a process of integration with its neighbours that has helped bring stability and prosperity after the disasters of the first half of the 20th century. The stakes for important member countries are huge.” 

He concludes that the most likely outcome would be a compromise under which German support will grow, with lower surpluses, and higher domestic inflation, while the periphery adjusts internally.

 

Support for True Finns on the decline

 

 

A year after their big parliamentary win, support for the Finns Party continues to slide, according to  YLE. A new Helsingin Sanomat poll finds that the party currently enjoys popular backing around 16%, which is some 7 percentage points down from last summer. With a backing of 23%, Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen’s National Coalition has maintained its position as the country’s largest party.

 

10-Y Spreads, Forex, ZC Swaps and Euribor-Ois

Some relaxation for Spain, but note the rise in French bond spreads.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10-year spreads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous day

Yesterday

This Morning

France

1.391

1.352

1.363

Italy

3.961

3.909

3.900

Spain

4.436

4.241

4.290

Portugal

11.299

10.980

11.107

Greece

19.800

19.647

#VALUE!

Ireland

5.290

5.259

5.502

Belgium

1.944

1.873

1.903

Bund Yield

1.633

1.668

1.677

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euro Bilateral Exchange Rate

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous

This morning

 

Dollar

1.311

1.3129

 

Yen

105.490

106.6

 

Pound

0.825

0.8242

 

Swiss Franc

1.202

1.2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ZC Inflation Swaps

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 yr

2.02

2.05

 

2 yr

1.99

2

 

5 yr

1.97

1.86

 

10 yr

2.2

2.09

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Euribor-OIS Spread

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

previous

last close

 

1 Week

-7.743

-7.643

 

1 Month

-1.493

-1.393

 

3 Months

29.414

29.714

 

1 Year

99.829

99.929

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Reuters

 

 

 



publicado por João Machado às 13:30
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