Wednesday, June 24, 2015

More Cowbell?


Surprisingly, the biggest story of the week wasn’t Greece but the USD and the Fed. Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen emerged from a two day policy meeting to declare that the FED NEEDS “MORE DECISIVE EVIDENCE”. More cowbell? Are you kidding?! It seems that every time the market’s perception gets closer to thinking the Fed is about ready to finally raise interest rates the Fed pulls the rug out from underneath that train of thought. After more than 6 years of emergency monetary policy, which included QE1, QE2, QElite, QE3 – all under a zero interest rate policy – what is it that the Fed is fearing?

The USD took it on the chin (more on this later) as it appears the market has lost complete faith in the Fed. For example, let’s take a look at the Fed’s revised growth rate for 2015. It downgraded 2015 GDP to 1.8-2.0% from 2.3-2.7%, which had already been downgraded in March. Doing the math, Q1 came in at 0.7% and the Atlanta Fed GDP Now model has Q2 at 1.9%. Thus, to get to 2.7% for the year means that both Q3 and Q4 must come in at 4%. This may be a tall order, but if it happens then we should expect the Fed to raise interest rates.

Now for the USD, the reaction after the Fed announcement was swift and fast. The US dollar index is not on firm ground on the charts. The 50-day moving average has crossed the 100-day moving average, which is known as a death cross in technical analysis. As you can guess from the name this is not a positive development, as it indicates a bear market is on the horizon. The momentum indicators are also flagging.

On the fundamental side, the America’s trading partners are heading in the opposite direction. Japan has signaled that it no longer wants a weaker yen. The UK looks to have regained its legs after the Scottish referendum, the federal election, and a central bank that appears comfortable in raising interest rates in mid-2016. Europe looks like it has escaped deflation and is slowly on track for positive growth despite its problems with Greece. As for China, it is starting to exhibit some green shoots – just last week China’s business indicator reached its highest reading in a year at 53.5 from the 49.7 it registered in May.

Salvation to Catastrophe: What might happen to Greece



We found this excellent article on Bloomberg, which we thought is worth a read. You can find the Original article here

The Greek saga has haunted policy makers for more than five years. Now talks are deadlocked, banks are on life support and time is running out. With financial doomsday drawing ever closer in Athens, everyone from creditors and investors to depositors is increasingly focusing on what's next.
Some things are clear:

 Greece owes the International Monetary Fund about $1.7 billion this month.

 In July and August, the European Central Bank is due almost 6.8 billion euros ($7.6 billion).

 The euro-area backed bailout program expires on June 30, with creditors refusing to release up to 7.2 billion euros in remaining funds before Athens complies with belt-tightening conditions.

With time running out to close a deal, the German government has begun planning for a Greek default, according to Bild newspaper. If you're waiting for a clear resolution to the country's status in the 19-nation monetary union, you may wait a long time. Adopting the euro was always supposed to be a one-way ticket, so there is no legal precedent or political roadmap for an exit.
Next steps for Greece range from retaining the euro to catastrophic divorce. Half-measures are also on the cards, such as having multiple currencies circulate, with aid recycled to repay foreign-currency debts. Equally unclear is who would tell the world - and how - that Greece has entered an economic afterlife. Possible messengers include Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, European Union President Donald Tusk and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker. There could be others.
We asked economists, investors and former policy makers what could happen next – and how it might unfold.

Scenario A – Grexit Avoided

Tsipras, whose Syriza party won January elections promising to undo the tough terms of the bailout loans, capitulates to creditor demands. Faced with a choice between effective expulsion from the euro area or implementing austerity in exchange for loans, Tsipras takes the cash. The ECB maintains its support of the financial system.
While aid flows, the government's days are numbered as its most hardline supporters mutiny. A new coalition is formed with backing from the pro-European opposition and Syriza's moderate flank – or elections are called. Greece's continued euro membership is ultimately secured as new loans are used to repay the ECB and the IMF and the country's coffers are replenished. Greece gets easier repayment terms on bailout loans. This helps tame the popular backlash against the new wave of fiscal measures. However, the cuts attached to the agreement suppress economic output, delaying Greece's recovery from the longest recession on record.

Scenario B – Hotel California

Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis has described euro membership by using a lyric from the famous 1976 Eagles song: “You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.” Tsipras might fail to strike a compromise acceptable to the German government, Communist factions of his Syriza party, and stakeholders in between. Somehow, though, he manages to keep Greece officially in the euro.
Bailout loans – Greece's only source of funding – remain stalled. With Europe's political leaders unwilling to proceed, the ECB rations Emergency Liquidity Assistance, the lifeline keeping Greek banks afloat.
That requires the imposition of capital controls – as there isn't enough cash to meet demand – following a bank holiday. We're calling the two possible outcomes from here “somersault” and “check out.”
Scenario B1 – Somersault
Capital controls mean that limits are placed on withdrawals and transfers. The dramatic consequences force Tsipras to compromise. Opinion polls show that most Greeks – between two-thirds and three-quarters of the population – want to stay in the euro area “at any cost”. “You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.”
Tsipras forges a new coalition with opposition lawmakers of pro-European parties. A referendum carried out amid capital controls and with banks shut, gives him a mandate to reverse course. A unity government is formed and Greece remains in the euro, but not before the disruption triggers a new recession.

Scenario B2 – Checking Out

With banks shut, the political situation deteriorates and a popular uprising intensifies, with Germany targeted as the country's main antagonist. Polls show a swing in favor of breaking from the euro area.
Capital controls give the government the space and time to print either a new currency or IOUs for domestic payments. The new scrip quickly plunges, reflecting the weak fundamentals of an economy that has shrunk by about a quarter since 2008.

Euro-area governments give Greece a “sweetener,” a parting-loan in hard currency. The rationale is to avert total economic collapse, which would create a failed state in a strategically critical region.
Greece’s debt to public entities is restructured, providing for the repayment of loans to the IMF, either through the euro area’s crisis fund or from the departure credit. Greece remains shut out of debt markets. Most Greek companies and banks default. Some bank deposits are seized to recapitalize a shattered financial system, or redenominated to the new legal tender equivalent. The sovereign debt
restructuring of 2012 has already ensured that the state won’t have to pay principal on most of itsexisting loans to private investors and the euro area for the next few years and until the economy stabilizes. Both the new paper and euros circulate. Greece may not officially leave the euro zone – the door is open to a return in good standing – though the country sputters in a financial purgatory.

Scenario C – ‘C’ for Catastrophe

Greece separates from the euro area in a messy default, amid demonstrations and deepening misery for most, with the government blaming everything on the Germans. No help is provided to support a new currency and to keep servicing bonds and IMF debt. That triggers cross-default clauses to all creditors. The government and banks collapse, meaning that years will be needed before a new structure emerges. Greece's economy plunges into a second depression. The blow from the biggest default in the history of capitalism drives Europe back into a recession and heaps pressure on vulnerable euro countries such as Italy.

Bad blood leads to Greece’s departure from the European Union. The idea that the euro is irreversible is thrown into question, rattling global markets. The economic implosion paves the way for extremists, from either the left or the far right, to take power. Those who can, flee the country. The tumult casts doubt on Greek membership in NATO. A new – and unstable – government turns to Russia for support, providing a Mediterranean outpost for Vladimir Putin.


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