Thursday 6 May 2010

Debt markets in the next two weeks

This article is extremely insightful. However I must disagree with the analogy between Greece and Bear Stearns. This is inappropriate because Greece is getting bailed out, Bear Stearns wasn’t. If anything Greece should be compared to Morgan Stanley who was bailed out.

Moreover, the contagion to Portugal, Spain, Ireland and Italy is similar but on a much smaller scale. When Bear Stern filed for bankruptcy, the devastation was enormous because suddenly reputation was worthless. Therefore markets were unable to know who was in a good financial position and who wasn’t. Bad money crowded out good money which almost brought trading to a halt. In the present situation however markets know that Northern Europe’s credit is good. The doubt is as to whether all of Southern Europe is worse off than its northern neighbours and if so by how much.

Thus reactions are probably extremely exaggerated. Greece cooked its books for some years until it was impossible to hide the mess any longer. Portugal, Spain, Ireland and Italy for all we know have been honest in their reporting. Now of course no one is in a great place right now. Portugal has a private debt to GDP ration above 200% and requires some very fundamental changes in the way its economy works. Spain is going through 20% unemployment rates. Ireland has the EU’s largest deficit this year. So the fundamentals are not quite there, and in the long run it is both predictable and good that the financial markets are putting some pressure on these countries to fix their economies.

I would venture the guess that asymmetries of information between the governments and their lenders are causing the latter to exaggerate the extent of risk that they are exposed to. They are also increasing the effect of rumours and gossip in trading, such as Morgan Stanley's Joachim Fels' argument that the Euro-area is at risk. If this is the case, then things should either get much better or much worse for Portugal, Spain and Italy in the next 2 weeks. On May 12 data pertaining to the first quarter of 2010 about the national accounts of Portugal and the preliminary Italian and Spanish GDP values will be published. On May 19, the Spanish national accounts data will be published and the next day Italy will publish its latest industrial turnover figures.

The dissemination of this information should decrease the asymmetries of information and give a better idea of how solvent these countries are. Of course whether the new data will be favourable to the reporting nations is completely unknown. If it is, sovereign debt yields should shrink. If isn’t, then there might be yet another run on their debts and on the Euro. If the latter occurs, I would expect the ECB to start purchasing national debt on the secondary market in order to limit contagion. This should lower the prices of national debt, while maintaining some institutional pressure on EU member states to reform. All that the ECB has to do is to warn that in the absence of reform it will dump suspicious sovereign debt on the markets, causing a fairly predictable increase in their price.

Until then the markets should continue to behave a bit nervously, at least for another week, unless something new happens, like some oil shock, a or some freak revolution in Greece. Moreover, they will probably go a bit bonkers with the fact that there wont be a clear cut majority in Westminster. The Greek parliament could fail to approve EU/IMF assistance, or the upcoming summit of the council leaders could be either very successful or very unsuccessful in drafting plans for dealing with fiscal problems and reforming the Stability and Growth Pact (Hopefully they'll come up with decent plans for the EMF rather than for an actual European rating agency). Finally some rating agency might downgrade one of these countries yet again. What do you think?

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