Investment Chart Kondratiev Wave

Investment Chart Kondratiev Wave

Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Greek tragedy continues: March 27 voluntary default



At long last a new agreement has been reached where Greece will be able not pay its debt and gets a fresh € 130B when they behave prodigiously (so lots of new debts where IMF.ECB and ESM will be senior to other bond investors, trashing their hopes to get anything when Greece defaults). The private sector writes down 53% immediately, the interest rates go down and the maturities up resulting in losses of 75%. Even the ECB pays a bit, but unbelievable little thanks to Super Mario.
The agreed haircuts will apply on the redemptions of March 20 and with a delay of seven days you will get the voluntary default on March 27.
The official default will be later. First 95% of the private sector must agree and the hedge funds have too much fun on battling this kind of agreement to agree soon, so 95% should be elusive. When you don’t get that 95% everything can happen again. Delay, more or less haircuts, still CDS triggered, an official default.

Meanwhile the elections in Greece will complicate things. The extreme parties will win and they will not agree with the current agreements and renegotiate things, while support for the euro in Greece is going down fast (still a majority wants the euro).

The scrooges from the north will continue to do difficult about new tranches for Greece when new scenarios point to a base scenario of government debt/ GDP of 140%+ instead of 120.5% in 2020.

The market can be relieved again for some time: we kicked the can down the road. But Greece will remain the naughty boy.

It is not necessary to exaggerate the importance of Greece: O"Neil of Goldman Sachs tells China creates every quarter a total extra economy as big of Greece. The world is not so dependent of Greece for economic growth [but rebranding of Greece into Hellas will do no harm]

(pictures before photoshop: Agence France- Press / Getty images;Lagarde and Papademos; and picture from Economist with Venizoulos, Papademos (together a resistance pose like the Dutch parody war hero’s the brothers Temmes that pointed the Germans in the wrong direction), Schäuble and the finance minister of France)

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