Mon, May 28, 2012, 8:07 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Contagion fears back on Greek bailout uncertainty

Debt crisis contagion fears back due to continued uncertainty over Greek bailout

LONDON (AP) -- Mounting confusion over whether Greece will get vital bailout cash to avoid defaulting next month is rekindling fears that Europe's debt crisis will spread to bigger countries like Italy.

As stocks and the euro fell sharply on Thursday, borrowing rates rose for Italy and Spain, an indication of renewed investor concerns that they will eventually be dragged back into the crisis that had shown some signs of easing over the past couple of months.

The pressure on the two countries had eased substantially in recent weeks, primarily because the European Central Bank offered super-cheap long-term loans to banks.

But new jitters were creeping into markets as worries grew about a default in Greece next month. The country has yet to clinch deals for a bailout worth euro130 billion ($170 billion) and an accompanying euro100 billion ($131 billion) debt writedown by private bondholders.

Jean-Claude Juncker, who heads eurozone finance meetings, promised more clarity on Monday, when he said decisions will be made.

Over the past few days, doubts grew that the bailout deal may be unravelling and on Wednesday relations between Greece and its partners in the eurozone hit a new low.

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizolos said there were some in the eurozone who wanted Greece out of the euro while his counterpart in Germany Wolfgang Schaeuble even urged the postponement of elections in Greece, which are due in April.

"Yesterday's back and forth between Greek politicians and EU policymakers had all the hallmarks of an unedifying playground spat, with accusations and insults flying thick and fast," said Michael Hewson, markets analyst at CMC Markets.

"Unfortunately there will be no winners or losers in this particular little saga as Europe gives the impression of gearing up to cut Greece loose, unless they subjugate to demands for new measures to sate various new concerns."

As uncertainty lingers, investors are gradually reassessing their assumption that Greece will get the money, prompting big market movements Thursday. The Stoxx 50 index of leading European shares was down 0.5 percent while the euro slipped by the same rate to below $1.30.

Meanwhile, the yield on Italy's ten-year bond has risen by 0.20 percentage points to 5.84 percent while Spain's rate has risen another 0.16 percentage points to 5.55 percent. Though both are still down from the 7 percent mark that is considered unsustainable in the long-run, the increases are the biggest daily movements in weeks.

Greece was asked last week to meet three demands so it could get the bailout cash which it needs to avoid defaulting on its debts on March 20, when a big bond redemption is due. As well as insisting that Parliament agrees another batch of austerity measures, the eurozone wanted clarity on a further euro325 million ($425 million) in savings by Greece and the written agreement by the leaders of the Greek coalition government to the measures after the elections.

Even though all three conditions appear to have cleared, the eurozone is balking at finalizing the bailout, with some suggestions that money should not be handed over until after the elections.

On Wednesday evening, after a three-and-a-half-hour conference call between the 17 eurozone finance ministers, it looked like more hurdles have been put in front of Greece.

Though Jean-Claude Juncker, the head of the eurozone group of finance ministers, said Greece had made "substantial further progress," he added that "further considerations are necessary regarding the specific mechanisms to strengthen the surveillance of programme implementation and to ensure that priority is given to debt servicing."

His statement suggests that Greece's eurozone creditors may be insisting on a recent proposal by France and Germany to set up an account, separate from Greece's general budget, that would be dedicated to paying off Greece's massive debt. It was unclear whether this account would only manage the bailout money or whether government revenue could also be funneled into it.

Such an account would give the eurozone more control over what Greece does with its money, after the country has repeatedly missed budget, reform and privatization targets over the past two years. However, it could also be seen as an unprecedented interference into the fiscal affairs of a sovereign state.

The European Commission, which is in charge of economic surveillance in the European Union, is now working on a specific proposal for such an escrow account, which will be present to the ministers at a meeting on Monday.

In Athens, Venizelos said a combination of the country's written pledges, Parliament's passage of the austerity measures with a two-thirds majority and labor reform legislation were "a credible response to all those in Europe who doubt our ability to implement the program and to continue its implementation after the coming elections."

 

10 comments

  • Daemonicus  •  3 months ago
    Greece will default and the rest will fall like dominoes.
  • exqindex  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  3 months ago
    The house of cards is about to be dealt a harsh hand & fold. The fact that this crisis has been dragging on for over two years clearly indicates that there is no resolve to extricate the EuroZone from the inevitable abyss which is about to hit the fan.
  • Noway  •  Bemidji, Minnesota  •  3 months ago
    But the headlines over the past few weeks have been saying that Greece had been ring fenced and that contagion was no longer a threat. The 'news' would be to go back and talk to all those ministers and stock analysts and ask them how they feel today. Of course there will be contagion. The bondholders already know they are either getting nothing or a 70% haircut -- but its the bankers and investment firms holding the Greek CDS's that are shaking right now, because a default means they will have to pay out 100% of the Greek debt. Think that is not going to ripple? They will need to liquidate 200 billion in other assets to pay those CDS's. And where is that 200 billion now? In stocks, commodities, bonds, etc. It will be like MF Global all over again.
  • clarence  •  Capitol Heights, Maryland  •  3 months ago
    France and Germany to set up an account, to pay for Greece's massive debt. LOL..they think Greece are like little children that won't get thier allowance if they don't clean there room
  • Captain What you say  •  3 months ago
    Read about the Weimar Republic under the Dawes Plan and then the Young Plan and how a bunch of German Conservative/Nationalist parties drafted drafted the "freedom law" to default on the reparations debt. It seems that a minor (fringe) Bavarian party made a lot of political hay out of that situation.
  • Patrick  •  3 months ago
    ha ha ha. someone has to pay for those that didn't. greeks don't need the loan but the loan sharks do in order to keep the stock ponzi going. why do you think the politicians are so eager to print and give the 170B - all they needed is lip service from banker PMs that everything is agreed even though the terms of the treaty cannot be kept... go figure. when they print, it is devaluation of people's savings but the money will go into boosting the stock markets therefore politicians are not hurt. when you try doing the same, the timings are always wrong with stocks, why? insider information. follow the money and catch the crooks. see which greek lawmakers are now sweating in his pants because the EU is holding back on the money - must have bought CDS for the killings... hee...hee...hee...
  • Asian Dragon  •  3 months ago
    GREECE must sell some islands to Turkey. Otherwise, the EU should STOP aid to them. The Greeks are parasites and worms.
    The other option is that China can provide financial aid package in exchange for territory control. It is that simple, but the Greeks are not able to understand. They know how to sail their boats, but they don’t know how to do the simple math.

    ==================================================================
  • J.  •  Minneapolis, Minnesota  •  3 months ago
    contagion? really? you guys who write financial articles take a global econ class or get reassigned to write for the entertainment sections.
    Greece is a none event.
    • Mark 3 months ago
      How so? Greece going down would be the start of the fall. Spain, Italy. Who do you think is buying these countries bonds right now? Banks....
    • J. 3 months ago
      Spain and Italy are much larger diversified economies and have little if any exposure to Greece. The Banks have little if any exposure to Greece and their bonds have been marked to market long ago (30 cents on the dollar). A Greek default to Europe and their exit from the zone would be a positive for everyone but Greece and Greece knows it. 70% of Greeks polled agree with the austerity measures and desire to stay in the Eurozone.......again the writers want to make everything seem catastophic, a crisis, a contageon.....stop with the scary headlines and report the news as it is not laced with apocalyptic language.
  • Mark  •  3 months ago
    Would someone just shoot Greece and put it out of our misery
  • Choipus  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    One doesn't "subjugate" to plans. One submits or surrenders to plans.
 
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