What happens if they "bin" the "investors" instead?

 

M

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Keith Hudson
Sent: Saturday, November 26, 2011 9:29 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, ,EDUCATION; Robert Stennett
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Banks Build Contingencies for Euro Zone Breakup -
NYTimes.com

 

At 14:42 26/11/2011, Robert wrote:




https://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/26/business/global/banks-fear-breakup-of-the
-euro-zone.html?nl=todaysheadlines
<https://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/26/business/global/banks-fear-breakup-of-th
e-euro-zone.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha25&pagewanted=all>
&emc=tha25&pagewanted=all 

Very interesting things happening in the eurozone.... This one's for Keith.


Thanks. Yes, the Eurozone seems to be very close to collapsing now. When
even Germany -- by far the strongest nation in the Eurozone -- couldn't
clear all its latest auction of bonds last Wednesday, then what chance have
any others when they come to sell theirs? With reference to the first
paragraph of  Liz Alderman's article below, you have to realize that Angela
Merkel and any of the top German politicians and bureaucrats will swear
right up to the last minute that they will save the Eurozone. Germany still
has a legacy of guilt from starting WWII and what went on within it. 

It's been a tale of the cat with nine lives so far, except it's been
something like nineteen announcements of 'final' rescue plans in the last
eighteen months. Even if another solution is announced next week it's likely
that potential investors will bin it within hours.

Keith  






Banks Build Contingency for Breakup of the Euro




 []
<http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2011/11/26/business/Euro/Euro-articleLa
rge.jpg>  
Robert Schlesinger/European Pressphoto Agency

Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany and the nation's finance minister,
Wolfgang Schäuble. 


By LIZ
<http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/people/a/liz_alderma
n/index.html?inline=nyt-per>  ALDERMAN







Published: November 25, 2011




PARIS — For the growing chorus of observers who fear that a breakup of the
euro zone might be at hand, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany has a
pointed rebuke: It’s never going to happen.

But some banks are no longer so sure, especially as the sovereign
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/e/european_sov
ereign_debt_crisis/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>  debt crisis threatened
to ensnare Germany itself this week, when investors began to question the
nation’s stature as Europe’s main pillar of stability. 

On Friday, Standard & Poor’s downgraded Belgium’s credit standing to AA from
AA+, saying it might not be able to cut its towering debt load any time
soon. Ratings agencies this week cautioned that France could lose its AAA
rating if the crisis grew. On Thursday, agencies lowered the ratings of
Portugal and Hungary to junk. 

While European leaders still say there is no need to draw up a Plan B, some
of the world’s biggest banks, and their supervisors, are doing just that. 

“We cannot be, and are not, complacent on this front,” Andrew Bailey, a
regulator at Britain’s Financial Services Authority, said this week. “We
must not ignore the prospect of a disorderly departure of some countries
from the euro zone,” he said. 

Banks including Merrill Lynch, Barclays Capital and Nomura issued a cascade
of reports this week examining the likelihood of a breakup of the euro zone.
“The euro zone financial crisis has entered a far more dangerous phase,”
analysts at Nomura wrote on Friday. Unless the European Central Bank steps
in to help where politicians have failed, “a euro breakup now appears
probable rather than possible,” the bank said. 

Major British financial institutions, like the Royal Bank of Scotland, are
drawing up contingency plans in case the unthinkable veers toward reality,
bank supervisors said Thursday. United States regulators have been pushing
American banks like Citigroup and others to reduce their exposure to the
euro zone. In Asia, authorities in Hong Kong have stepped up their
monitoring of the international exposure of foreign and local banks in light
of the European crisis. 

But banks in big euro zone countries that have only recently been infected
by the crisis do not seem to be nearly as flustered. 

Banks in France and Italy in particular are not creating backup plans,
bankers say, for the simple reason that they have concluded it is impossible
for the
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/c/currency/eur
o/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>  euro to break up. Although banks like
BNP Paribas, Société Générale, UniCredit and others recently dumped tens of
billions of euros worth of European sovereign debt, the thinking is that
there is little reason to do more. 

“While in the United States there is clearly a view that Europe can break
up, here, we believe Europe must remain as it is,” said one French banker,
summing up the thinking at French banks. “So no one is saying, ‘We need a
fallback,’ ” said the banker, who was not authorized to speak publicly. 

When Intesa Sanpaolo, Italy’s second-largest bank, evaluated different
situations in preparation for its 2011-13 strategic plan last March, none
were based on the possible breakup of the euro, and “even though the
situation has evolved, we haven’t revised our scenario to take that into
consideration,” said Andrea Beltratti, chairman of the bank’s management
board. 

Mr. Beltratti said that banks would be the first bellwether of trouble in
the case of growing jitters about the euro, and that Intesa Sanpaolo had
been “very careful” from the point of view of liquidity and capital. In late
spring, the bank raised its capital by five billion euros, one of the
largest increases in Europe. 

Mr. Beltratti said that Italy, like the European Union, could adopt a series
of policy measures that could keep the breakup of the euro at bay. “I
certainly felt more confident a few months ago, but still feel optimistic,”
he said. 

European leaders this week said they were more determined than ever to keep
the single currency alive — especially with major elections looming in
France next year and in Germany in 2013. If anything, Mrs. Merkel said she
would redouble her efforts to push the union toward greater fiscal and
political unity. 

That task is seen as slightly easier now that the crisis has evicted weak
leaders from troubled euro zone countries like Italy and Spain. But it
remained an uphill battle as Mrs. Merkel continued this week to oppose the
creation of bonds that would be backed by the euro zone. 

Politically, even the idea of a breakaway Greece is increasingly considered
anathema. Despite expectations that Greece — and the banks that lent to it —
may receive European taxpayer bailouts for up to nine years, officials fear
its exit could open a Pandora’s box of horrors, such as a second Lehman-like
event, or even the exit of other countries from the euro union. 

Europe’s common currency union was formed more than a decade ago and now
includes 17 European Union members, creating a powerful economic bloc aimed
at cementing stability on the Continent. It ushered in years of prosperity
for its members, especially Germany, as interest rates declined and money
flooded into the union — until the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy sent global
credit markets into chaos three years ago and the financial crisis took on
new life with the near-default of Greece last year. The creation of the euro
zone meant countless interlocking contracts and assets among the countries,
but no mechanism for a country to leave the union. 

But as the crisis leaps to Europe’s wealthier north, banks have been
increasing their preparedness for any outcome. For instance, while it would
certainly be legally, financially and politically complicated for Greece to
quit the euro zone, some banks are nonetheless tallying how euros would be
converted to drachmas, how contracts would be executed and whether the event
would cause credit markets to seize up worldwide. 

The Royal Bank of Scotland is one of many banks testing its capacity to deal
with a euro breakup. “We do lots of stress-test analyses of what happens if
the euro breaks apart or if certain things happen, countries expelled from
the euro,” said Bruce van Saun, RBS’s group finance director. But, he added:
“I don’t want to make it more dramatic than it is.” 

Certain businesses are taking similar precautions. The giant German tourism
operator TUI recently caused a stir in Greece when it sent letters to Greek
hoteliers demanding that contracts be renegotiated in drachmas to protect
against losses if Greece were to exit the euro. 

TUI took the action just days after Mrs. Merkel and President Nicolas
Sarkozy of France acknowledged at a meeting earlier this month of G-20
leaders in Cannes, France, that Greece could well leave the monetary union.
On Thursday, Greece’s central bank warned that if the country failed to
improve its finances quickly, the question would become “whether the country
is to remain within the euro area.” 

In a survey published Wednesday of nearly 1,000 of its clients, Barclays
Capital said nearly half expected at least one country to leave the euro
zone; 35 percent expect the breakup to be limited to Greece, and one in 20
expect all countries on Europe’s periphery to exit next year. 

Some banks are now looking well beyond just one country. On Friday, Merrill
Lynch became the latest to issue a report exploring what would happen if
countries were to exit the euro and revert to their old currencies. If
Spain, Italy, Portugal and France were to start printing their old money
again today, their currencies would most likely weaken against the
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/c/currency/dol
lar/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>  dollar, reflecting the relative
weakness of their economies, Merrill Lynch calculated. 

Currencies in the stronger economies of Germany, the Netherlands and Ireland
would probably rise against the dollar, according to the analysis. 

In Asia, banks and regulators view the situation with growing alarm. Norman
Chan, the chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, said on
Wednesday that regulators had stepped up their surveillance of banks’
exposure to Europe. 

Regulators have been working with bank managers on stress tests to determine
how the banks’ financial stability might be affected by an increasingly
severe financial dislocation in Europe, said a Hong Kong banker who insisted
on anonymity. 

The main danger of a euro breakup, said Stephen Jen, managing partner at SLJ
Macro Partners in London, is “redenomination risk,” the unpredictable effect
that a euro breakup would have on financial assets as newly created
currencies sought their own levels in the market and the value of contracts
drawn up in euros came into question. 

Most people hope that will not happen. “Remember when Lehman went bankrupt —
nobody could anticipate what happened next,” said the French banker who was
not authorized to speak publicly. “That was a company, not a country. If a
country leaves the euro — multiply the Lehman effect by 10,” he said. 

Keith Bradsher contributed reporting from Hong Kong, Julia Werdigier from
London, David Jolly from Paris and Elisabetta Povoledo from Rome. 

Keith Hudson, Saltford, England http://allisstatus.wordpress.com/2011/11/
  

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