Cost of Greek exit from euro put at $1tn

 

 

UK government making urgent preparations to cope with the fallout of a possible Greek exit from the single currency

 

Mervyn King

The cost of a possible Greek exit from the euro has emerged as Mervyn King warned that Europe is ‘tearing itself apart’. Photograph: Chris Ratcliffe/Getty

The British government is making urgent preparations to cope with the fallout of a possible Greek exit from the single currency, after the governor of the Bank of England, Sir Mervyn King, warned that Europe was “tearing itself apart”.

Reports from Athens that massive sums of money were being spirited out of the country intensified concern in London about the impact of a splintering of the eurozone on a UK economy that is stuck in double-dip recession. One estimate put the cost to the eurozone of Greece making a disorderly exit from the currency at $1tn, 5% of output.

Officials in the United States are also nervously watching the growing crisis: Barack Obama on Wednesday described it as a “headwind” that could threaten the fragile American recovery.

In a speech in Manchester before flying to the United States for a summit of G8 leaders, the British prime minister, David Cameron, will say the eurozone “either has to make up or it is looking at a potential breakup”, adding that the choice for Europe’s leaders cannot be long delayed.

“Either Europe has a committed, stable, successful eurozone with an effective firewall, well capitalised and regulated banks, a system of fiscal burden sharing, and supportive monetary policy across the eurozone, or we are in uncharted territory which carries huge risks for everybody.

“Whichever path is chosen, I am prepared to do whatever is necessary to protect this country and secure our economy and financial system.”

Officials from the Bank, the Treasury and the Financial Services Authority are drawing up plans in the expectation that a Greek departure from monetary union – increasingly seen as inevitable by financial markets – could be as damaging to the global economy as the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008.

With a second election in Greece called for 17 June, King dropped a strong hint that the Bank would take fresh steps to stimulate growth if policymakers in Europe failed to deal with the sovereign debt crisis.

“We have been through a big global financial crisis, the biggest downturn in world output since the 1930s, the biggest banking crisis in this country’s history, the biggest fiscal deficit in our peacetime history and our biggest trading partner, the euro area, is tearing itself apart without any obvious solution,” he said.

Doug McWilliams, of the Centre for Economic and Business Research, said a planned breakup of the single currency would cost 2% of eurozone GDP ($300bn) but a disorderly collapse would result in a 5% drop in output, a $1tn loss. “The end of the euro in its current form is a certainty,” he added.

Alistair Darling, who was Chancellor of the Exchequer under the former Labour administration, said: “This has the seeds of something disastrous. It is madness. If it spreads to bigger countries, this could be really disastrous for Europe. It could consign us to years of stagnation.”

Capital flight from Greece has increased since it became clear that a coalition government could not be formed after the election earlier this month. The Greek president, Karolos Papoulias, said citizens were withdrawing their money amid “great fear that could develop into panic” at the risk of a debt default and exit from the euro area, according to minutes of their meetings posted on the presidency’s website. In little more than a week following the election on 6 May, €3bn was withdrawn from bank accounts. The central bank reported that €800m was taken out in a single day earlier this week.

The head of the International Institute of Finance banking lobby, Charles Dallara, said money was leaving Greece at a growing pace due to political uncertainty. “There has been a pickup of deposit flight from Greece, but I think that is stabilisable once you get a new government in place, if that government reaffirms its intention to remain in the eurozone.” The damage to the rest of Europe if Greece were to leave the euro would be “somewhere between catastrophic and armageddon”, he said.

The Spanish prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, told parliament that his country faced trouble financing itself as borrowing costs shoot up to “astronomic” levels. The Irish finance minister, Michael Noonan, said Dublin’s plan to return to capital markets in late 2013 might not be achievable because of the uncertainty.

The first meeting between French president François Hollande and German chancellor Angela Merkel helped to calm nerves in the markets at one stage, with suggestions that Berlin might be amenable to initiatives to boost growth in Greece and the other austerity-stricken nations of the eurozone.

But the jittery mood was underlined by a fall in European shares and the single currency late in the day amid reports that the European Central Bank was cutting off its funding lifeline to Greek banks that had failed to amass enough capital to protect them from future losses.

The ECB later said it expected the Greek central bank to use part of the €130bn bailout from the EU and IMF to ensure that the country’s banks were safeguarded from collapse, and that they would receive additional help from Frankfurt only once this had happened. Already delayed by the political uncertainty in Greece, €18bn is now expected to be released to recapitalise the banks.

Sony Kapoor, of the Brussels-based Re-Define thinktank, said: “The high-stakes game of chicken between Greek and other EU politicians must end now. Those saying that a Greek exit from the eurozone will not be a big deal either don’t know what they are talking about, or have some ulterior motives. The social, political and economic damage to the EU from a Greek exit is potentially incalculable.”

At the G8 summit, which starts on Friday, Obama will press Merkel to lean more towards a growth package for Europe, instead of pressing so hard for the austerity measures that were rejected by Greek voters.

But foreign affairs analysts said that Obama’s leverage with the European leaders is minimal. Although the US has the economic muscle to help Europe out of its mess, the Obama administration has taken the strategic decision not to become involved directly.

Instead, Obama is to use the Camp David summit for some quiet diplomacy, hoping to sway Merkel to endorse some immediate actions to help growth.

King, speaking at the publication of the Bank of England’s quarterly inflation report, said growth in Britain was weaker and inflation higher than Threadneedle Street had expected three months ago. It would take until 2014 for output to return to where it was in 2008, when Britain’s deepest post-war recession began.

“What is so depressing about it is that this is a rerun of the debates in 2007/08 – these are not liquidity problems, they are solvency problems,” King said. “Imbalances between countries in the euro area have created creditors and debtors and at some point the credit losses will need to be recognised and absorbed and shared around,” he said.

“Until that is done, there will not be a resolution. That is why just kicking the can down the road is not an answer. The European Central Bank has performed heroically in trying to buy time but that time hasn’t been used to put in place fundamental underlying solutions.”

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Cameron warns messy endgame for the euro could tip UK into decade-long depression

 

PUBLISHED: 08:36, 17 May 2012 | UPDATED: 08:36, 17 May 2012

David Cameron will today express grave doubts about the survival of the euro amid fears that a collapse could drag Britain into a decade-long depression.

He will warn of ‘perilous economic times’ and launch a startling attack on the failure of Germany and other major European countries to take the necessary steps if they want to prevent the euro breaking apart.

‘The eurozone is at a crossroads – it either has to make up, or it is looking at a potential break-up,’ the Prime Minister will say, insisting that sticking to the Government’s austerity measures is the only way to ‘keep Britain safe’.

David Cameron, pictured yesterday, will today express grave doubts about the survival of the euro
Warning: Christine Lagarde, IMF managing director, said the financial body had to be 'technically prepared for anything', while Bank of England governor Mervyn King said 'contingency plans' were being made between the bank and UK government

David Cameron will today express grave doubts about the survival of the euro while Bank of England governor Sir Mervyn King said yesterday the single-currency bloc was ‘tearing itself apart without any obvious solution’

With signs of a full-blown bank run beginning in debt-stricken Greece, experts warned that if the crisis is not quickly contained, as much as 10 per cent of national income could be wiped out in countries across the EU.

Bank of England governor Sir Mervyn King said yesterday the single-currency bloc was ‘tearing itself apart without any obvious solution’, while former Labour Chancellor Alistair Darling said the crisis could condemn Britain to ‘years of stagnation’. In other developments:

■ Households face another painful squeeze this year after the Bank of England raised its inflation forecast and warned of rising mortgage costs;

■ Growth forecasts for this year were slashed from 1.3 per cent to 0.8 per cent, with no return to pre-financial crisis levels of growth before 2014;

■ Financial markets slumped further as Greek leaders braced themselves for  fresh elections after talks to form a coalition government failed;

■ In a glimmer of good news, unemployment dropped 45,000 to 2.63million, while the number in work jumped by 105,000 to 29.2million.

Economists believe the euro breaking up in disarray would herald a ten-year slump similar to that experienced by Japan in the 1990s. Japanese policymakers hesitated before tackling a banking crisis, and then struggled to revive economic growth, leading to a so-called ‘lost decade’.

Sir Mervyn yesterday issued a dire warning about the potential consequences for Britain of the eurozone breaking up. The crisis in Europe meant a real danger of a ‘storm heading our way from the Continent’, he said, warning it posed ‘the biggest risk to the recovery’.

The single currency region was ‘tearing itself apart’, having wasted two-and-a-half years since the crisis began rather than putting in place ‘fundamental solutions’, he said. 

Greeks race to take cash out of banks

 

Mr Cameron, who will attend an emergency eurozone summit next week, will argue that unless its countries agree a much more coordinated economic policy – with Germany and other rich countries prepared to stand behind struggling nations such as Greece – the single currency is doomed to fail.

The Prime Minister will use a speech today to make an explicit warning about the potential death of the single currency, until recently a taboo subject for senior politicians. Just days ago the Chancellor, George Osborne, warned that ‘open speculation’ about the future of some eurozone members was damaging the EU economy.

Douglas McWilliams, chief executive of the Centre for Economics and Business Research, said the cost of the break-up of the euro would be at least £200billion but might be nearer to £600billion if unplanned. ‘The most obvious fault line in the current situation is the conflict between the level of prosperity to which European electorates feel entitled and the levels economically available to them, particularly given past overspending,’ he said.

‘The end of the euro in its current form is a certainty. A currency with the name euro may survive but even if it does it will be radically transformed. The economic consequences depend on the timing and the way in which the euro splits. There is no doubt that when the euro breaks up it will be costly. Some countries will lose around 10 per cent of annual GDP.

‘But whatever the cost, growth will be faster afterwards than it would be if an attempt is made to keep the weaker currencies in the euro through continued austerity.’

■ Public support for continued UK membership of the European Union has slumped as a result of the crisis in the single currency, according to a poll released yesterday.

Only 34 per cent of 1,000 voters questioned for the British Election Study in April approved of Britain’s EU membership, while 54 per cent said they did not.

ITALY ANGRY WITH ‘IRRESPONSIBLE’ MASS DOWNGRADE OF 26 BANKS

Italy’s banking and business community today responded angrily to credit rating agency Moody’s mass downgrade of 26 of their banks.

They called the move ‘irresponsible’ and ‘an assault on the austerity-hit country’ as it struggles with an economic crisis.    

Moody’s pinned the downgrade on a weakening operating environment made worse by Prime Minister Mario Monti’s tough austerity cure.

‘Moody’s decision is an assault against Italy, its companies, its families,’ said Italian banking lobby ABI.

‘Once more rating agencies turn out to be a destabilising factor for financial markets with their partial and contradictory statements.’

Big business lobby chief Emma Marcegalia said she was concerned by such an ‘attack against Italy.’

Moody’s downgrade came on the back of its February cut of Italy’s sovereign rating to A3 from A2 and makes the ratings of Italian banks among the weakest in western Europe.    

While large groups such as Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit have enough international reach and capital to absorb the hit, this is more problematic for smaller lenders such as Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, which now stands just above ‘junk’ or non-investment grade status.  

 

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Markets and euro dive again as IMF prepares for a ‘messy’ Greek eurozone exit

16 May 2012

By Daily Mail Reporter

PUBLISHED: 01:20, 16 May 2012 | UPDATED: 09:22, 16 May 2012

Warning: Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said the financial body said it had to be ¿technically prepared for anything¿ Warning: Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said the financial body said it had to be ‘technically prepared for anything’

Financial markets and the euro have slumped again today after the International Monetary Fund revealed it was gearing up for Greece to leave the euro.

IMF head Christine Lagarde last night said it had to be ‘technically prepared for anything’ after Athens confirmed that fresh elections would be held next month.

The euro has fallen more than a cent in the last 24 hours to $1.270 and against the pound it has slipped to 79.6p. And the FTSE 100 index was 61.1 points lower at 5,376.52 – a fall of 1 per cent – as markets digested the implications of a Greek exit.

Mrs Lagarde, whose organisation is underwriting the Greek bailout, warned such a move would have untold consequences for world finances.

She said: ‘The spillover effects, the chain of consequences are very difficult to assess. We can certainly assume that it would be quite messy.’

The Treasury confirmed that it was keeping British contingency plans for a Greek exit of the euro – dubbed ‘the Grexit’ – under active review.

Some Greek ministers have warned leaving the euro could spark ‘civil war’.

Experts believe a Greek withdrawal could put nations such as Spain and Portugal under pressure to do the same and trigger the collapse of the euro.

The warning came after talks to form a government following this month’s inconclusive elections collapsed.

Greek president Karolos Papoulias will confirm today that new elections will be held next month to break the deadlock.

There was brighter news from Berlin, where the signs are that new French president Francois Hollande and German chancellor Angela Merkel will agree a limited deal to promote economic growth.

This reportedly includes the European Investment Bank lending €10billion to small and medium-sized businesses, using up unspent EU structural funds, dusting off plans for a controversial financial transaction tax, and introducing EU ‘project bonds’ for green initiatives.

As falls on the London stock market extended heavy losses racked up earlier this week, it was a similar picture on the continent, where Germany’s DAX was down 89.2 points to 6,311.88 and France’s CAC 40 was off 31.3 points at 3,008.

The Dow Jones in the U.S. gave up early gains on upbeat manufacturing and retail figures and closed down 63.5 points at 12,632 overnight.

It also emerged that companies and the rich have withdrawn £560million from Greek banks since the elections on May 6.

Way out: Greek President Karolos Papoulias (right) with Radical Left Coalition leader Alexis Tsipras who rejects the terms of Greece's international bailout - which critics say will lead the country out of the euroWay out: Greek President Karolos Papoulias (right) with Radical Left Coalition leader Alexis Tsipras who rejects the terms of Greece’s international bailout – which critics say will lead the country out of the euro

The eurozone bailout fund last week approved most of the latest tranche of cash for Greece, totalling £3.4billion.

But most of this will be eaten up by a £2.6billion loan payment to the European Central Bank, which is due this week.

There is mounting uncertainty over whether a £25billion payment to Greece due at the end of next month will go ahead unless it agrees to stick to the austerity deal imposed by the IMF and the eurozone.

Greek transport minister Makis Voridis last night warned that failure to make the payment would effectively lead to his country dropping out of the euro.

He said: ‘If government instability continues then some fiscal aid will stop. Then it will be almost a necessity to return to the drachma in order to be able to pay the deficit.’

As French President Francois Hollande flew to Berlin for crisis talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel last night, opinion polls suggested the Far-Left Syriza party, which wants to scrap the austerity measures, is likely to become the biggest party in Greece.

Syriza has pledged to ‘tear up the barbaric accord’ that underpins the bailout deal.

New tack: French President Francois Hollande flew to Berlin for crisis talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel to discuss the European debt crisis and measures that mark a departure from previous austerity packagesNew tack: French President Francois Hollande flew to Berlin for crisis talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel to discuss the European debt crisis and measures that mark a departure from previous austerity packages

Mr Hollande and Mrs Merkel last night promised to continue helping Greece.

The new French president said: ‘We will be supporting Greece, so we can pull Greece through the recession.

‘It’s our duty to ensure Greece remains in the eurozone.’ Mrs Merkel added: ‘We wish to have Greece within the euro and we know the majority of the Greek population agree with us.’

But German finance minister Wolfgang Schauble suggested there was no mood for compromise among EU leaders.

Speaking at a gathering of finance ministers in Brussels, he said: ‘If Greece wants to stay in the euro, then they have to accept the conditions. Otherwise it isn’t possible.’

Meanwhile, there was surprise news that the eurozone economy did not fall into recession in the first quarter of the year.

The 17-nation bloc dodged slipping back into recession by a whisker because of surprising German growth.

But despite Germany’s surge, stagnation in France and contraction in southern Europe underlined sharply differing fortunes in a bloc labouring under the effects of austerity.    

Overall gross domestic product across the eurozone was unchanged for the first quarter of 2012 following a dip at the end of last year.

It means that the eurozone missed slipping officially into recession by the narrowest possible margin.  

But a surprisingly strong showing from Germany, whose exporters are helping it to cope with the eurozone crisis, flattered dismal performances in most of the other major economies.

Holiday firms headache

Today’s data showed a two-speed eurozone, with Italy’s recession deeper than feared and Greece suffering something akin to a depression.

‘There’s a growing divergence in the euro zone, with particularly sharp contractions in the peripheral countries that need to do the most structural reforms, while Germany is the outperformer,’ said Joost Beaumont at ABN Amro in Amsterdam.    

GDP in Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, rose 0.5 per cent on the quarter, confounding expectations of a more modest rise and lifting the rest of the single currency bloc.    

While the eurozone’s stagnation offered little cheer, it was still better than the 0.2 per cent contraction most economists had expected.

Two successive quarters of falling GDP would have marked the second recession since 2009.

Germany’s strong showing initially bolstered markets which were battered yesterday by growing fears that Greece will deepen the crisis by leaving the eurozone.

The FTSEurofirst of top European shares climbed in response, safe haven German government bond futures dipped and the euro recovered some poise.     

But even in Germany, the crisis is holding back a true revival, and analyst and investor sentiment fell sharply in May, separate figures showed.

That ended a run of strong data for the economy as political uncertainty took its toll on confidence.

Germany’s biggest steelmaker, ThyssenKrupp, also said today there was no sign of a quick recovery in Europe after the steel industry operated at reduced capacity in recent months due to weak demand and sliding prices. 

The figures will prove another salient talking point for Mr Hollande, who marked his first day in charge with his trip to Berlin to meet Mrs Merkel.

ITALY ANGRY WITH ‘IRRESPONSIBLE’ MASS DOWNGRADE OF 26 BANKS

Italy’s banking and business community today responded angrily to credit rating agency Moody’s mass downgrade of 26 of their banks.

They called the move ‘irresponsible’ and ‘an assault on the austerity-hit country’ as it struggles with an economic crisis.    

Moody’s pinned the downgrade on a weakening operating environment made worse by Prime Minister Mario Monti’s tough austerity cure.

‘Moody’s decision is an assault against Italy, its companies, its families,’ said Italian banking lobby ABI.

‘Once more rating agencies turn out to be a destabilising factor for financial markets with their partial and contradictory statements.’

Big business lobby chief Emma Marcegalia said she was concerned by such an ‘attack against Italy.’

Moody’s downgrade came on the back of its February cut of Italy’s sovereign rating to A3 from A2 and makes the ratings of Italian banks among the weakest in western Europe.    

While large groups such as Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit have enough international reach and capital to absorb the hit, this is more problematic for smaller lenders such as Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, which now stands just above ‘junk’ or non-investment grade status.   

‘The eurozone crisis has returned to investors’ attention with the banking troubles in Spain and political instability in Greece,’ said Christian Schulz at Berenberg Bank.     

France, the eurozone’s second largest economy, reported no expansion in the first quarter, unwelcome news for Hollande.

Hollande, who is due to attend his first EU summit in Brussels next week, said he would urge his peers to back a pact that coupled the goals of deficit reduction with economic stimulus.

But Italy’s weaker-than-expected output epitomised southern Europe’s anaemic economies.

Italy’s heavily indebted economy shrank more than expected in the first quarter, with GDP falling 0.8 per cent and marking the third consecutive quarter contraction.    

After a decade of falling productivity in Italy, the debt crisis has highlighted how barriers to competition, heavy regulation and bureaucracy are dragging on the economy, discouraging investment and prosperity.    

Data two weeks ago showed Spain, which is struggling to reduce a huge deficit and rebuild its banking sector following a burst property bubble, is already in recession, after GDP shrank 0.3 per cent in the first quarter.    

Even in the wealthy Netherlands, economic output contracted for a third consecutive quarter, shrinking 0.2 per cent in the first quarter of 2012 compared with the previous three months, underscoring just how damaging the crisis has become.    

Greece, still without a government nine days after elections as its political parties argue about whether to rip up its bailout programme, is in its fifth consecutive year of recession, which is tantamount to a depression.    

Greek GDP contracted 6.2 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2012.     

EU leaders have been unable to find a way back to growth, while many southern Europeans are turning against the austerity measures.

They are holding huge street protests in the Spanish capital of Madrid and backing radical political parties in the Greek elections.     

Mr Hollande wants new growth measures and while Mrs Merkel has not disagreed in principle, she is unlikely to accept anything that pushes government debt up further.    

Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti is also pressing for a growth strategy. He won support from an unlikely source when credit ratings agency Moody’s sharply downgraded 26 Italian banks.

He said budget-cutting measures and an Italian recession had hit demand and increased the level of bad loans.    

A hefty defeat for Merkel’s conservatives in a German state election on Sunday, meted out by the Social Democrats who have argued against austerity for austerity’s stake, will add to the pressure on the chancellor.

Meanwhile, the Bank of England will paint a gloomier view of the UK’s recovery today in its first assessment of the economy’s prospects since the return to recession.

Governor Sir Mervyn King is expected to indicate growth of 0.75 per cent in 2012, compared with the 1.2 per cent expected three months ago and 2.2 per cent predicted a year ago.

But he will stick by his expectation that inflation will fall to 2 per cent this year.

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Bank of England set to stand by inflation forecast of 2% by end of 2012 but slash growth estimate to 0.75%

15 May 2012

By Adrian Lowery

PUBLISHED: 17:13, 15 May 2012 | UPDATED: 09:03, 16 May 2012

The Bank of England is set to stand by its forecast that UK inflation will come down to 2 per cent by the end of 2012 despite signs that price pressures are not retreating as expected.

In its quarterly inflation report tomorrow, the Bank is also expected to cut its forecast again for this year’s economic growth to 0.75 per cent.

Three months ago, before output data confirmed that the economy had slipped back into a double-dip recession, the Bank indicated growth of 1.2 per cent – itself a dramatic downgrade from the 2.2 per cent forecast a year ago.

Dilemma: Governor Sir Mervyn King and the rest of the Bank's policymaker are caught between sticky inflation and the recessionDilemma: Governor Sir Mervyn King and the rest of the Bank’s policymaker are caught between sticky inflation and the recession

Inflation, meanwhile, has not fallen as expected, with the headline consumer price index rate rising in March to 3.5 per cent – posing Governor Sir Mervyn King and the rest of the monetary policy committee a tricky dilemma in terms of further assistance for the real economy.

The MPC stopped short of increasing its quantitative easing programme last week despite a 0.2 per cent decline in GDP in the first three months of the year.

Sir Mervyn is already braced for a choppy year, with events such as Olympics and an additional bank holiday granted for the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee expected to see growth ‘zig-zag’ throughout 2012.

But while economists expect the Bank to cut growth estimates for 2012, they predict the downward revision to figures for 2013 will not be much lower than 2.8 per cent in its last report.

Alan Clarke, UK and eurozone economist at Scotiabank, believes the Bank will forecast growth of around 0.75 per cent in 2012.

He said: ‘The economy hasn’t grown for six months, and the headline second quarter GDP data are unlikely to stray much above zero, even if the underlying picture is more robust.’

In its last report, the Bank forecast GDP growth of around 1.2 per cent this year and around 2.8 per cent in 2013, while inflation will hit its 2 per cent target in the final quarter of 2012 and fall to as low as 1.5 per cent the following year.

The Bank has previously questioned the ONS figures, calling a drop in construction output ‘perplexing’ and adding that underlying growth in the UK appeared to be strong.

But the picture is mixed as exporters are now facing fresh headwinds from a strengthening pound and weak demand in the euro zone, where the economy stagnated in the first quarter.

Homeowners are in for a boost as the report is expected to show that interest rates will be maintained at their historic low of 0.5 per cent, or close to that, for at least several more months.

The Bank pumped £50billion into the QE programme in February but members of the MPC vetoed increasing the stock of asset purchases from £325 billion in their last meeting.

Vicky Redwood, chief UK economist at Capital Economics, said while inflation forecasts will be roughly the same tomorrow as in February’s report, this does not mean further QE will be ruled out.

She said: ‘After any downgrade this week, the MPC’s new growth forecasts are likely to remain far too optimistic. Accordingly, we continue to expect a third round of QE to start later this year.’

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Billions wiped off value of shares as Merkel admits Greece could quit the euro

15 May 2012

By Daily Mail Reporter

PUBLISHED: 07:44, 15 May 2012 | UPDATED: 07:45, 15 May 2012

Tens of billions of pounds were wiped off shares yesterday as Angela Merkel conceded for the first time that Greece could be forced to quit the euro.

The German chancellor suggested that European support for Greece would ‘end’ unless Athens held to the punishing bail-out terms agreed with Brussels and Berlin.

Her warning came amid mounting speculation that Greece could be forced out of the single currency within weeks – plunging both Athens and the single currency into crisis.

Francois Hollande (pictured) is set to meet Angela Merkel in Berlin tomorrow, soon after he is sworn in as President
Angela Merkel, pictured, suffered a 'crushing' defeat when her Christian Democrats party suffered in yesterday's North-Rhine Westphalia elections

Decision time: France’s new President Francois Hollande (left) will meet with German chancellor Angela Merkel (right) tomorrow in what could be a decisive time for the single currency

Observers have dubbed the possible departure as the ‘Grexit’ and one Greek minister last night warned the crisis could result in ‘civil war’, with Kalashnikov-toting gangs roaming Athens.

Greek newspaper Imerisia reported that the government has just £1.2billion left in its coffers – enough to continue for only a few days.

Last night there were also rumours of an unofficial ‘grey market’ in the drachma – the old Greek currency – springing up in anticipation of the exit.

Mrs Merkel, who will hold talks on the crisis with new French president Francois Hollande today, said Greece would ‘always’ be a member of the EU.

But she left open the question of Greece’s membership of the single currency, saying only that it would be ‘better’ if it remained within the ailing single currency.

Her comments came as the mounting political turmoil in Greece sent shockwaves through world stock markets. Mr Hollande will fly to Berlin today for talks just hours after being sworn in.

In London, the FTSE-100 index was down by 110 points to its lowest level this year, wiping almost £30billion off the value of Britain’s top companies. 

Bank shares took a hammering, with Barclays, Lloyds and Royal Bank of Scotland all down by around 5 per cent.

Markets in the U.S. also fell on the news – the Dow Jones was down 125 points, while the Nasdaq fell 31 points.

Boys in town: Head of Greece's Left Coalition party Alexis Tsipras (centre) leaves the presidential palace yesterday Boys in town: Head of Greece’s Left Coalition party Alexis Tsipras (centre) leaves the presidential palace yesterday

The euro fell to its lowest level against the pound for three-and-a-half years.

John Cridland, director general of the CBI, warned that a Greek exit from the eurozone ‘would be like an earthquake happening’ for the British economy.

George Osborne flew to Brussels last night for crisis talks today with EU finance ministers on the future of the euro.The Chancellor is expected to warn that Europe’s economy is at risk unless Greece is saved.

There were also fresh concerns about Spain after financial markets demanded a punishing 6.2 per cent interest rate on government loans – the highest level this year.

The crisis unfolded as political leaders in Greece gathered in Athens for another round of talks on forming a coalition following this month’s elections.

The talks broke up inconclusively and there will be a further round of negotiations today.

But last night there was widespread speculation that Greece would be forced to hold fresh elections next month after left-wing parties indicated they would boycott any deal that supported the austerity drive agreed with the EU.

Polls suggest that the far-left Syriza party, which has said it will not impose cuts demanded by the eurozone and IMF, could emerge victorious in a fresh poll. Greece’s stock market closed at its lowest level since 1992.

Greek politician Michalis Chrysohoidis predicted the country would be plunged into ‘civil war’ if it quit the euro and readopted the drachma.

The minister for citizen protection in the outgoing government said: ‘If Greece cannot meet its obligations and serve its debt the pain will be great.

‘What do we have to lose more than we have lost already? Our freedom.

‘What will prevail are armed gangs with Kalashnikovs and which one has the greatest number of Kalashnikovs will count … we will end up in civil war.’

But Manolis Glezos, a Syriza MP and a veteran of the Second World War resistance, warned Greeks had had enough of cuts imposed on them from outside.

He said: ‘Achtung Frau Merkel. The Greek people want to live free and they don’t want to be under a new occupation from Germany.’

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Gold Bull Market ‘Is Not Over’ – Morgan Stanley

14 May 2012

By Debbie Carlson

Gold is trading at its lowest levels since December, but Morgan Stanley analysts say gold’s bull market “is not over” and that they are buyers of the metal at current prices. The recent sell-off in prices is “consistent with distressed selling and long liquidation,” but they think prices will recover in the coming weeks. They say the factors that have supported gold remain in place: the European sovereign debt crisis and low interest rates. They also note that the low level of speculative net-length in the CFTC reports is a positive sign.

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Greece turmoil brings euro exit closer as Cable warns of ‘massive impact’ on UK of currency break-up

14 May 2012

By James Chapman

PUBLISHED: 07:51, 14 May 2012 | UPDATED: 07:52, 14 May 2012

Vince Cable: The Business Secretary admits 'we are exposed' as a result of ongoing difficulties in Greece Vince Cable: The Business Secretary admits ‘we are exposed’ as a result of ongoing difficulties in Greece

Vince Cable warned yesterday of a ‘massive impact’ on Britain if Greece crashed out of the euro and debt contagion spread.

The Business Secretary admitted there was little the UK could do to influence an unfolding disaster in the eurozone.

It came after former chancellor Alistair Darling warned that foreign aid would have to be sent to starving Greeks if the country left the single currency and lost its bailout money.

Senior EU officials, who are losing patience after an inconclusive election cast doubt on debt-stricken Greece’s commitment to austerity, yesterday began to discuss publicly the prospect of the country’s exit from the single currency.

Last ditch talks were held in Athens last night to try to cobble together a coalition government and avoid a new election.

But the leader of radical left-wing, anti-bailout party Syriza, which finished second in the election earlier this month, refused to sign up to a grand coalition. 

Alexis Tsipras said it would be ‘criminal’ for Greece to stick to the terms of the bailout, adding: ‘Syriza won’t betray the Greek people.’

Support for parties who want to tear up the terms of an EU bailout is growing by the day.

No to bailout: Head of Greece's Left Coalition party Alexis Tsipras (middle) leaves the presidential palace after a meeting in Athens yesterday No to bailout: Head of Greece’s Left Coalition party Alexis Tsipras (middle) leaves the presidential palace after a meeting in Athens yesterday

City analyst David Buik said: ‘If Greece leaves the euro, a drachma devalued by say 30 per cent in 18 months gives the economy half a chance. Holidays and exports will be cheap.’

But Labour’s former Chancellor Alistair Darling warned that a Greek exit from the euro could be catastrophic.

The country would run out of money in about six weeks if bailout cash was withdrawn, leaving it unable to pay pensions or public sector salaries.

‘Anyone who thinks that Greece leaving the euro is the easy fix is kidding themselves,’ Mr Darling said.

Warning: Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling has said that Greek exit from the eurozone could be catastrophic Warning: Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling has said that Greek exit from the eurozone could be catastrophic

‘Europe would almost certainly have to give it financial aid, simply to stop people going hungry. 

‘As for a planned exit, does anyone seriously think that over a weekend, say, you could print drachmas ready for issue on Monday morning – in the meantime preventing money draining out of the country and preventing panic as people realise that their savings had vanished?

‘What would be the effect on other countries, the ones people feared would be next in line?’

Mr Cable said Britain ‘must hope’ the eurozone’s firewalls were strong enough to prevent contagion, and warned there could be ‘a massive impact’ on trade if they were not.

‘Britain isn’t in the eurozone, so… my Government isn’t in the business of having to manage this crisis,’ the Business Secretary said.

But he added: ‘The problem would affect us if it spread, if you had these contagion effects in Italy and Spain.’

Mr Cable warned that if the the EU’s firewalls failed ‘then of course it has a massive impact on our trade – half of our exports go to the eurozone countries, our banks are quite substantially exposed to those countries’.

Asked what Britain could do, he admitted: ‘There isn’t a great deal.’

‘Our own position of course is much stronger. There was a real danger when we came into office that we could be sucked into this sovereign debt crisis,’ he added.

‘There was a worry that the crisis of confidence would spread to the UK, and that certainly hasn’t happened – we’re now perceived in much the same way that Germany is perceived.’

Luc Coene, a member of the governing council of the European Central Bank, which has spent around 40billion euros buying up Greek government bonds to try to support the country, said a Greek exit from the single currency ‘would be possible’.

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Dollar Turns Down After Sentiment Data

11 May 2012

Shift cuts off greenback’s longest rally since 2008

By Deborah Levine and William L. Watts

May 11, 2012

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) – The dollar turned lower on Friday, cutting off its longest rally since 2008, after data showed U.S. consumer sentiment unexpectedly improved this month, buoying stocks and overshadowing worries stirred by J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.’s surprise trading loss.

The ICE dollar index , which measures the greenback against a basket of six currencies, turned down to 80.100 from 80.159 late Thursday – which looks to have capped its longest winning streak since an 11-day run in August 2008.

The euro turned up to $1.2955, from $1.2943 in late North American trading Thursday.

The dollar reversed lower after the University of Michigan-Thomson Reuters consumer sentiment index climbed to 77.8 in May, up from 76.4 in April, above the 76.0 expected in a MarketWatch-compiled economist poll.

That turned U.S. stocks higher, with the S&P 500 Index lately rising 0.2%

Investors’ appetite for risk took a hit starting late Thursday after J.P. Morgan announced that it faced a loss of roughly $2 billion on trading in credit derivatives.

The euro had little immediate reaction to the Spanish government’s announcement of reforms for its banking sector that include raising loss provisions on loan portfolios, according to reports.

Meanwhile, investors continue to watch developments in Greece, where party leaders remain engaged in talks in an effort to cobble together a coalition government in the wake of last Sunday’s splintered election results.

“Investors should not mistaken the lack of further weakness for renewed optimism,” said Kathy Lien, director of currency research at GFT. “The Greeks are still having a tough time forming a coalition government.”

Reports about Spain are also limiting the shared currency’s decline, she said.

The greenback gained a little after a U.S. report showed producer prices unexpectedly fell 0.2% in April.

For the week, the euro has lost 1%, finally breaking below $1.30 for the first time since January.

The dollar index has advanced for a second week, by 0.8%.

U.K. pound, Canadian dollar

Also Friday, the British pound retreated to $1.6099, down from $1.6156 Thursday.

The greenback turned sharply lower against the Canadian dollar after a government report showed Canada’s economy added way more jobs in April than analysts expected.

The dollar traded at 79.97 Japanese yen , little changed from ¥79.99 late Thursday.

The Australian dollar slipped to $1.0077, from $1.0099 in the previous session when it was boosted by some surprisingly strong jobs data. Credit Suisse and Goldman Sachs sharply lowered their outlooks for the Australian currency on Friday, citing a slowing economy and less demand for Australian bonds.

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Gold falls to 1-month low, triggers bargain hunting

11 May 2012

A salesman arranges a gold necklace inside a gold jewellery showroom in Kochi April 16, 2012. REUTERS/Sivaram V/Files

MUMBAI | Fri May 11, 2012 4:24pm IST

(Reuters) – Indian gold futures extended their fall for the straight third session on Friday to hit a one-month low, triggering some bargain buying from physical traders at the end of the wedding season.

* The most-active gold for June delivery on the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX) was 0.49 percent lower at 28,308 rupees per 10 grams, after hitting 28,281 rupees — its lowest since April 9.

* “Slowly deals are taking place as market is in the falling mode,” said a dealer with a private bank in Mumbai, which imports bullion, adding “traders will try to catch the bottom.”

* The wedding season will end by the end of the month, while festival season will restart in August.

* “People will not be willing to maintain huge inventory in a falling market and only resort to need-based buying,” said the dealer.

* Overseas gold fell 1.3 percent to a four-month low as waning appetite for risk hurt the euro and other assets like stocks and crude oil.

* The rupee, which traded weaker on Friday, kept the downside in prices limited. The rupee plays an important role in determining the landed cost of the dollar-quoted yellow metal.

* Silver also extended losses tracking gold. Silver for July delivery was 1.50 percent lower at 53,747 rupees per kg.

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Gold Gains As European Concerns Ease

10 May 2012

By Claudia Assis and Laura Mandaro

May 10, 2012

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) – Gold futures edged higher Thursday following a round of U.S. economic data, with a reprieve in concerns over Europe’s banking and sovereign-debt outlook providing a floor for the metal.

Gold for June delivery advanced $3.20, or 0.2%, to $1,597 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Traders keyed off U.S. government data that showed initial jobless claims stayed relatively flat last week as import prices dipped in April and the U.S. trade deficit surged in March.

The dollar slipped Thursday, helping gold to stabilize after closing below $1,600 an ounce for the first time this year in the previous session.

Dollar-denominated commodities – particularly gold, which is seen as an alternate to paper currencies – often take a knock as the dollar rises.

On Thursday, European stocks and the euro rose after Spain moved to nationalize struggling real-estate lender Bankia and European leaders agreed to grant the next aid payment to Greece.

The Stoxx Europe 600 was up 0.6% at 251.23, pivoting away from early losses.

The dollar fell against the euro, with one euro buying $1.2971 compared with $1.2954 late Wednesday.

Despite its recent downturn, gold is not losing its luster “as the currency of last resort,” analysts at Goldman Sachs said in a report released Thursday.

“Improved confidence” in the dollar in recent months has made the U.S. currency the flight-to-safety asset at the moment, they said.

“However, we believe it is too early for the U.S. dollar to reclaim this status, as the original U.S. dollar concerns have not disappeared,” the analysts added. They left their 6-month forecast for gold prices unchanged at $1,840 an ounce.

Meanwhile, most metals futures traded higher. Silver for July delivery rose 11 cents, or 0.4%, to $29.34 an ounce. The Shanghai Futures Exchange on Thursday launched a new silver futures contract, according to analyst and news reports.

“This can be seen as complementing the existing contract on the Shanghai Gold Exchange and is aimed more at institutional investors and producers… [The] new contract could lead to generally higher demand for silver and lend support to the price,” analysts at Commerzbank said in a note to clients.

July copper gained 3 cents, or 0.9%, to $3.69 a pound.

A Chinese auto maker trade group reported higher-than-expected passenger car sales in April, climbing up 12.5% on year to 1.28 million units.

The report confirmed the trade group’s forecast that vehicle sales will grow 8% this year, the Commerzbank analysts said, “which could lend support to the precious metals platinum and palladium, both of which have come under severe pressure recently.”

Platinum for July delivery declined $3.30, or 0.2%, to $1,495.80 an ounce. Palladium for June rose $4.85, or 0.8%, to $618.50 an ounce.

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