Thursday 14 April 2011

Greek debt returns to the spotlight

German minister Wolfgang Schauble today expressed concerns that Greece may be unable to meet its debt repayments by June. This triggered a wave of uncertainty within the debt and currency markets, as fears remerge that Greece may be forced into restructuring its debt.

ECB policymaker Bini Smaghi has also joined the discussion. Smaghi stated that a restructuring of Greek debt would be disastrous for its economy - he, pointed to the risks to its banking sector, social cohesion and even democracy within the troubled state. Greek government bonds have come under real pressure today as a result. Smaghi warned that public speculation over eurozone debt issues can turn out to be self-fulfilling prophecies (almost certainly true of both the Irish and Portuguese bailouts), and so might be the case here. Smaghi went on to assert that if Greek banks were to lose access to ECB financing, then “The Greek economy would be on its knees”, which seems somewhat hypocritical to me...

Last week saw Portugal request a bailout - the market remained broadly unconcerned, perhaps relieved that the issue had finally been addressed. The real concerns were that Spanish and Italian debt would come under pressure as investors focused elsewhere, but these struggling states have impressively been able to maintain investor confidence thus far.

Greek officials have denied the need to restructure their debt; but then again Portugal strongly rebuffed accusations that they would require a bailout (and we all know how that ended). The current picture of Greece’s economy is one of GDP contraction, low tax revenues, soaring unemployment and vicious public sector cuts. Prevailing arguments suggest that this is creating a downward spiral from which the state cannot pull out - unless its debts are written off.

The euro has come under real pressure as a result of the various comments that have surfaced today, dropping by over a cent against the dollar. Could this finally be the turnaround in the euro we’ve been waiting for? It seems unlikely. We’ll have to wait and see how the Greek situation develops, but today’s euro-weakening should only be a temporary. We have seen time and again the resolve of Asian sovereigns to buy the euro, particularly when it has dipped in the European session.

In addition, we’re already seeing the euro recover as we speak, suggesting that market concerns may have been overdone. Nonetheless, this has been a welcome break for a struggling UK currency, which is now trading at a more palatable level above €1.13.

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.