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  • How shock waves will hit US if Greece drops euro

    How shock waves will hit US if Greece drops euro

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    euro

    Source: Bloomberg

    euro

    Source: Bloomberg

    THE unthinkable suddenly looks possible.

    Bankers, governments and investors are preparing for Greece to stop using the euro as its currency, a move that could spread turmoil throughout the global financial system.

    The worst case envisions governments defaulting on their debts, a run on European banks and a worldwide credit crunch reminiscent of the financial crisis in the fall of 2008.

    A Greek election on Sunday will determine whether it happens. Syriza, a party opposed to the restrictions placed on Greece in exchange for a bailout from European neighbors, could do well.

    If Syriza gains power and rejects the terms of the bailout, Greece could lose its lifeline, default on its debt and decide that it must print its own currency, the drachma, to stay afloat.

    No one is sure how that would work because there is no mechanism in the European Union charter for a country’s leaving the euro. In the meantime, banks and investors have sketched out the ripple effects.

    They think the path of a full-blown crisis would start in Greece, quickly move to the rest of Europe and then hit the U.S. Stocks and oil would plunge, the euro would sink against the U.S. dollar, and big banks would suffer losses on complex trades.

    ACT I

    What would Greece’s exit look like? In the worst case, it starts off messy.

    The government resurrects the drachma, the currency Greece used before the euro, and says each drachma equals one euro. But currency markets would treat it differently. Banks’ foreign-exchange experts expect the drachma would plunge to half the value of the euro soon after its debut.

    For Greeks, that would likely mean surging inflation – 35 percent in the first year, according to some estimates. The country is a net importer and would have to pay more for oil, medical equipment and anything else it imports.

    Greece’s government and banks currently survive on international loans, and if it dropped the euro, the country would probably be locked out of lending markets, says Athanasios Vamvakidis, foreign-exchange strategist at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch in London. So the Greek central bank would need to print more drachmas to make up for what it could no longer borrow from abroad.

    That’s one reason analysts say the switch to a drachma would lead the country to default on its government debt, possibly triggering losses for the European Central Bank and other international lenders.

    Most assume foreign banks would have to write off loans to Greek businesses, too. Why would Greeks pay off foreign debts that effectively double when the drachma drops by half?

    Say a small shop owner in Athens has a ?50,000 business loan from a French bank. She also has ?50,000 in savings in a Greek bank. The Greek government turns her savings into 50,000 drachma.

    If the new currency fell by 50 percent to the euro as expected, her savings would suddenly be worth ?25,000. But she would still owe ?50,000 to the French bank.

    European banks would take a direct blow. They’ve managed to shed much of their Greek debt but still held $65 billion, mainly in loans to Greek corporations, at the end of last year, according to an analysis by Nomura, a financial services company. French banks have the most to lose.

    ACT II

    Here’s where things get scary.

    The European Central Bank and European Union would have to persuade investors in government bonds that they will keep Portugal, Spain and Italy from following Greece out the door. Otherwise, borrowing costs for those countries would shoot higher.

    The main way European leaders have tried to calm bond markets is by lending to weaker governments from two bailout funds. Experts say these two funds, designed as a financial firewall to stop the crisis from spreading, need more firepower.

    Much of the ?248 billion ($310 billion) left in one of them, the European Financial Stability Facility, was pledged by the same countries that may wind up needing it, Vamvakidis says.

    There’s also a ?500 billion European Stability Mechanism that’s supposed to be up and running next month, but Germany has yet to sign off on it.

    “If they fail to reassure bond investors, all of the nightmare scenarios come into play,” says Robert Shapiro, a former U.S. undersecretary of commerce in the Clinton administration.

    The biggest danger is a fast-spreading crisis known in financial circles as contagion – a term borrowed from medicine and familiar to anyone who has watched a disaster movie about killer viruses on the loose.

    “It’s like a disease that spreads on contact,” says Mark Blythe, professor of international political economy at Brown University.

    The bond market, where banks, traders and governments cross paths, provides the setting. If Greece dropped the euro, traders would become more suspicious of Spain, Portugal and Italy and sell those countries’ government bonds, pushing their prices down and driving their interest rates up.

    Higher borrowing costs squeeze those countries’ budgets and push them deeper into debt. Plunging bond prices also would imperil Europe’s troubled banks. The banks are big holders of government bonds, which they bought when the bonds were considered safe.

    At this point, the risk would be high for a run on banks throughout Europe. People would worry that the banks might fail and would rush to withdraw what they could. Analysts and investors say that’s the biggest fear.

    People in Spain, for example, have already seen what’s happened in Greece and have started pulling euros out of their accounts in fear the country will switch back to cheaper pesetas.

    “People see their banks in trouble,” Shapiro says.

    In less frantic times, the government would come to the rescue with cash or take over the banks. Individual European countries insure bank deposits, so if one bank fails people can still get their money out. But all this is happening in the middle of a government debt crisis, and if the crisis gets worse, the Spanish or Italian government couldn’t raise enough money in the bond markets to save the day.

    “They can’t afford to guarantee deposits or money market balances,” Shapiro says. “They don’t have the ability to borrow internationally from bond markets. Where are they going to get the funds?”

    From here, the crisis could get much worse: Banks could fail, the surviving banks could stop lending to each other, and a credit freeze could shut down commerce in Europe as assuredly as a blizzard did last winter.

    One way to stem the contagion would be to create so-called eurobonds – bonds backed by all 17 countries that use the euro. They could be sold to raise money to buy the bonds of troubled European governments. With the backing of 17 countries, including mighty Germany, eurobonds would have a yield far lower than the bonds of countries like Spain and Italy.

    Germany, which has the strongest economy of the euro countries, has slowly warmed to the idea but wants weak governments to fix their finances first. “Germany’s strength is not infinite,” Chancellor Angela Merkel said Thursday.

    Cash-strapped European governments should be able to turn to the International Monetary Fund for help, but the IMF’s money comes from 188 member countries. Peter Tchir, who runs the TF Market Advisors hedge fund, says the U.S. and other countries may balk if the IMF asks for help supporting Europe.

    He worries that the IMF may take a loss on the roughly $28 billion it has already loaned to Greece.

    “People are happy to put money in if they think they won’t lose it,” Tchir says. “In this case, the IMF loses money, then everybody gets scared.”

    ACT III

    A full-blown crisis would cross the Atlantic through the dense web of contracts, loans and other financial transactions that tie European banks to those in the U.S., experts say.

    Blythe, the professor at Brown, believes credit default swaps, the complex financial instruments made infamous by the 2008 financial crisis, would provide the path.

    Banks created the swaps to sell as insurance for loans. After lending money to a business or government, investors can turn to a bank and take out protection on the amount they lent. If the borrower runs into trouble and can’t pay – say, the government of Spain defaults – the banks that sold the insurance cover the loss.

    A $2 billion trading loss that JPMorgan Chase revealed in May, traced to a hedge against the Europe crisis, shows just how easy it is for even the safest and savviest of banks to slip up.

    And it doesn’t even take a default for a credit default swap to go bad.

    If traders think other countries will follow Greece, they’ll drive up borrowing rates by selling government bonds, which also pushes up the cost of insuring their debt. That’s similar to how your neighborhood insurance agent handles a teenage driver.

    In the derivatives market, where credit default swaps are traded, there’s a twist. When markets treat Spain like a bad credit risk, those who took out insurance on Spanish debt to protect against a default can force the banks that sold the insurance to prove they can make good on the claim.

    To do that, banks cash out something else – U.S. government debt, gold, or anything easy to sell. In normal times, it’s no big deal. In a crisis, it can lead to a cascade of selling, spreading trouble from one market to another.

    Another problem: It’s not clear how much U.S. banks have at risk to Europe through credit default swaps because regulations let banks keep that information a secret.

    “You could have American banks up to their necks in CDS liabilities,” Blythe says. “We don’t even know.”

    There are other paths the turmoil could take into the U.S.

    Money market mutual funds, which hold more than $2.5 trillion, have an estimated 15 percent of their investments in Europe. European banks are also large buyers of U.S. mortgage bonds. If they’re forced to sell them, mortgage rates could jump, imperiling the U.S. housing market. Frightened banks in Europe and the U.S. might also pull the credit lines companies depend on for global trade.

    So what’s the good news? It’s hard to find anybody who believes the crisis will get that far.

    The bankers planning for a Greek exit from the euro say they think European leaders will get scared into action. The Federal Reserve and other central banks learned from the financial crisis in 2008, they believe, and will jump in to stop the nightmare scenario from unfolding.

    Just in case the worst comes to pass, analysts at Barclay’s have attempted to estimate the fallout. They say it would be like the days after the investment bank Lehman Brothers collapsed in September 2008. This time, they project that oil would fall to $50 a barrel, stock markets outside of Europe would plunge 30 percent, and the dollar would soar to trade nearly even with the euro.

    Blythe is skeptical that it will get that bad because he hopes the previous financial crisis has left governments and central banks prepared.

    However the Greek story ends, Blythe believes it’s bound to be ugly. Putting 17 countries together to share a common currency worked well when Europe prospered. Now that they’re struggling, “all the design flaws are becoming apparent,” he says. And every solution that’s supposed to fix a problem creates another problem.

    The proposed $125 billion loan to save Spanish banks, for instance, will add to the debt burden of Spain, which sent its borrowing costs higher this week and will put a tighter squeeze on its budget.

    “The euro itself,” Blythe says, “is a bloody doomsday machine.”

  • ’50-year storm’ bears down on Britain

    ’50-year storm’ bears down on Britain

    50-year storm

    An image of the 70mph storm taken by NASA’s Terra satellite. Picture: NASA Source: Supplied

    ANYONE looking to head overseas to avoid Australia’s wild weather would be wise to give Great Britain a miss.

    England and Wales are on flood alert as Britain braces for a “once in 50 years” storm which could bring a month’s worth of rain and 70mph winds.

    The storm is expected to hit tomorrow – right in the middle of the peak summer season.

    More than 110mm rain is expected to fall in Wales in about 48 hours, the Weather Channel predicted. It also said there was a 50 per cent chance of a once-in-50 years 80mm deluge in just 12 hours.

    Britain’s environment agency has dispatched hundreds of flood specialists to ensure the country is properly able to defend against the storm, clearing debris blocking rivers and drains.

    “There is a high risk of flooding, with the situation made even worse by ground being saturated from previous rain this week,” Weather Channel forecaster Leon Brown said.

    Australia has been hit hard with wild weather this month with Western Australia the hardest hit. The third major front to cross WA’s southwest uprooted trees, crushed cars and tore roofs earlier this week.

  • Australian wind farms ‘would create $17bn’

    Australian wind farms ‘would create $17bn’

    AAPJune 15, 2012, 8:29 pm

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    Wind farms could pump more than $17 billion into Australia s economy, a new report says.

    EPA © Enlarge photo

    Wind farms could pump more than $17 billion into Australia’s economy if proposed projects were to go ahead, a new report says.

    The study, which was commissioned by the Clean Energy Council, found that a total of $4.25 billion had so far been injected directly into Australia as a result of existing wind power projects.

    If however, proposed projects for about 90 farms were to go ahead, this number could balloon to another $17.8 billion by around 2020, the study said.

    Speaking at the launch of the report in Sydney on Friday, the council’s policy director Russell Marsh said it proved that wind farms had direct economic benefits for local communities, as well as boosting the national economy.

    “Wind farming can help farmers generate significant extra funds for local suppliers, contactors, shopkeepers, community facilities and more,” Mr Marsh said in a statement.

    “(They) can help farmers earn vital extra income, make better use of farming land and insure against downturns in key commodities.”

    According Sinclair Knight Merz report, the construction of the “typical wind farm” of around 25 to 30 turbines can produce 48 direct building jobs and provide indirect employment of around 160 people locally, 504 state-wide and 795 nationwide.

    NSW Parliamentary Secretary for Renewable Energy Rob Tokes said the report painted an “encouraging snapshot” of the wind industry’s potential.

    “NSW is keen to develop a sustainable wind industry that supports rural and regional communities and promotes opportunities for further growth within the industry.

    “This involves the development of clear planning processes that provide guidance and assurances to all stakeholders – whilst driving innovation and investment,” Mr Tokes said.

  • Russia’s Nuclear Industry is a Disaster Waiting to Happen

    Russia’s Nuclear Industry is a Disaster Waiting to Happen

    Posted: 14 Jun 2012 03:49 PM PDT

    The state of Russia’s civilian nuclear power should be cause the entire planet to shudder: Radioactive waste deposal sites are full to the bursting point, and many reactors are outdated and fail to meet even the most basic of safety standards. In short, as one reads between the lines, a new disaster is pending.The now-famous disaster in Japan has taken on tragic proportions and caused massive public health problems. Explosions in Japanese atomic power plants are forcing world experts to question once more the future of nuclear energy, as…

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  • Government cuts down list of carbon polluters

    Government cuts down list of carbon polluters

    Posted June 15, 2012 19:46:06

    With a little over two weeks to go until the start date for the carbon price, the Federal Government has released an updated list of the entities likely to pay the tax.

    The Clean Energy Regulator says 294 entities have now been identified as liable to pay the carbon price when it comes into effect on July 1.

    But it is well short of the figure of the 500 first nominated by the Federal Government.

    Its list includes a total of 34 local councils which have landfill sites or produce natural gas.

    Climate Change Minister Greg Combet says it is a figure which will continue to change.

    “As some businesses may even be able to apply technology to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions so that they come off the list, they get underneath the threshold. Others might expand production and so end up above the threshold and come onto the list,” he said.

    There has been particular attention recently on the effect the carbon price will have on local councils.

    But Parliamentary Secretary for Climate Change, Mark Dreyfus, says councils will not have to pay liabilities for another 12 months.

    “What we’re expecting for those 32 councils who are covered under the carbon price mechanism is that there will be some rate rises in the range of around 13 cents per household per week up to around 40 cents per household per week,” he said.

    “That’s amply covered by the $10.10 per household per week assistance that’s coming from the Federal Government.”

    And he says the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) will be on watch for people misrepresenting the impact of the tax and pushing up prices unnecessarily.

    But Opposition climate spokesman Greg Hunt says if councils pay more they will pass on the cost.

    “Whether you are in Bendigo, Rockingham, Darwin, Gold Coast, Geelong, Lake Macquarie, Launceston, across the country there are residents who will be hit with either higher rates of fewer services and inevitably they will also pay more money to go to the tip,” he said.

    Topics:emissions-trading, business-economics-and-finance, federal-government, government-and-politics, australia

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