The Greek stock market is down 36% year to date; the risk of
global contagion in the event of a Greek exit is very real. Ordinarily such a
crisis would require a massive coordinated effort from global stakeholders,
perhaps directed by the IMF or some other pan-national financial body. But
not in this case; the rhetoric is nationally-based and biased with unity of
purpose across finance ministries. Recent official soundings from the UK and
German governments saying that exposure to Greece is limited only underscores
the depth of denial, ignorance and lack of consensus that exists within the
euro area. A Greek exit from the euro would profoundly weaken the euro
experiment and create a dangerous precedent for all future crises in the
region.
The European economy is the largest middle class economy in the world.
With over 400 million relatively affluent consumers it represents a massive
portion of the net global economy and as such a breakup of part of it would
be felt across the world in credit spreads and capital decisions for years to
come. This would not have been because of Greek exit, but rather because of
the inability of the authorities to manage the crisis as risks initially
built up, then as bail outs were designed and implemented and then as these
efforts surely failed.
We are witnesses to an epic failure of planning, statecraft and social
justice. Regardless of where your politics lie, these elements are critical
for a modern globally connected economy to function.
Sadly, the geopolitical backdrop is one of suspicion and hostility in the
form of a festering proxy war between western and Russian interests in
Ukraine and regional crisis and humanitarian catastrophe in the middle east
as Syria and Iraq descend into stateless anarchy. These factors reduce the
odds of a successful solution in Greece being found in time.
The share value of Greek banks cratered up to 30% Wednesday alone, before
pulling back on Thursday as fears grew that the new government may not intend
to soften their stance now that they are in office.
In what is probably the worst performance for the sector on record, the
four major banks – Bank of Piraeus, Alpha Bank, National Bank of Greece and
Eurobank – all closed more than 25% lower. Athens stock exchange closed 6.4%
lower.
It marks an acceleration of the losses incurred over Monday and Tuesday in
the immediate aftermath of the Syriza victory. From London’s Telegraph.
Greece’s banks have lost almost 40pc of their value in the three days
since Syriza ascended to power in Sunday’s election as the dual threats of a
bank run and the loss of support from the European Central Bank threaten a
liquidity squeeze.
Forbes list five main causes for the collapse:
- Deposit flight has accelerated.
- ECB liquidity could be cut off.
- Potential public and private debt restructuring.
- Low profitability.
- Reliance on deferred tax assets – Forbes explains it as
an over-reliance by Greek banks on liquidity from the state.
Greek banks are hemorrhaging deposits. The telegraph reports, “Banks also
risk a repeat of the deposit flight seen in 2012. Up to €8bn of private
sector deposits has been pulled out of Greek banks since November, according
to Moody’s”, adding that bank deposits have fallen 5% in the last two months.
The Financial Times paints an even more dramatic picture of bank runs and
capital flight.
The real danger is that the Greeks themselves lose confidence. There are
tentative signs that money is again being sent abroad, as it was in mid-2012.
Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou at JPMorgan points out that €350m was sent from
Greece to Luxembourg money funds since the start of last week. Extrapolating
to all cash flight, he estimates as much as a 10th of Greek deposits may have
left already this year. If a Greek bank panic develops it will strengthen the
German hand, and make negotiations that much harder.
In the event of any or all of these possibilities, gold and silver bullion will perform well
as a currency of last resort.
Greek coin and bullion dealers with whom GoldCore spoke, confirmed
an increase in demand for gold coins and bars in recent weeks and since the
election.
GoldCore have Greek clients both in Greece and living in the UK
and throughout the world. We have seen a definite upsurge in interest,
inquiries and demand since the election last Sunday.
Concerns about bank holidays and also a return to the drachma have
returned and Greeks are looking for ways to prevent further destruction of
their wealth.
For Greeks, Storage in Switzerland remains a favoured way of
owning gold.
The comprehensive guide to bail-ins: Protecting
Your Savings in the Coming Bail-in Era
PRICE UPDATE
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,263.50, EUR 1,114.98 and GBP 837.42 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1.275.50, EUR 1,129.36 and GBP 842.25 per ounce.
Gold and silver both fell yesterday. Gold dropped 2.13% or $27.30, closing
at $1,257.60/oz. Silver fell 5.78% or $1.04 and closed at $16.95/oz.