Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts

July 12, 2011

Lehman On My Mind

The US government still has not reached an agreement on raising the debt ceiling, the markets turn their backs on Spain and Italy, stocks worldwide erase all their recent month's earnings in two days, gold is near its historic high again... Everybody seems to be expecting another big hit to the economy sooner rather than later. We have already been there, we should know what to do. Quoting the great Ray Charles "No peace I find, just this old sweet song keeps Georgia on my mind". In this case the name may not be Georgia but Lehman Brothers, and the 'song' may not be sweet at all, but we should have it on our minds...

Because while preparing for this kind of impact, what people are not figuring out is that they are inadvertently paving the way for said impact to be much stronger. Nobody seems to trust anybody else these days, and this is bad, very bad for market stability. No matter how long you have traded or invested with a counter-party, no matter how strong and risk-averse you have been for years; in the eyes of others nobody seems safe against what is coming. 

Lehman Brothers' situation was really bad, but it was the mistrust from its clients, partners and rivals that put it into a corner and accelerated its demise. This mistrust seems to be the general rule in financial markets these days. Today everybody is hedging against everybody else, buying insurance and taking CDSs (Credit Default Swaps) through the roof. This mistrust has enough power to stall the global financial markets; and as we recently became aware of, a financial crisis can transform in a fully fledged economic crisis in the blink of an eye. If that was to happen we would find ourselves in the much feared double-dip recession. I do not want to even think about what another economic crisis would mean globally when we are still struggling to make our ways out of the first one. However there is something I can be totally sure of: if such a double-dip recession happened, a lot of players would be out of the game very soon. A lot of companies, and most importantly some countries, would be unable to dodge a second punch when they are still dizzy from the first one.

March 24, 2011

And now Portugal... But hunters already looking for their next prey

Here comes the latest member (it is almost there) to join the euro-bailout club: Portugal. This is not breaking news, as everybody was expecting this to happen sooner or later. It is not frightening either, as Portuguese contribution to the whole European GDP is relatively low; it is lower than that of the Irish and clearly the eurozone did not break because of Ireland's (or Greece's) bailout. Belgium is mentioned too, but that would not pose a much bigger problem than Portugalm, but what IS frightening economists worldwide is the possibility of Spain or Italy being next.
Portugal 10-year Bond. Credit: Bloomberg
The pattern on European bailouts is becoming worryingly clear. One country's economy begins showing signs of slowing down and continues with its excessive debt issuing. Rating agencies notice (thus making the yields go up), international investors notice (and ask for bigger yields on said sovereign bond) and last but not least speculators notice and try to take advantage of the situation. The death spiral has begun and everybody knows the results... The same moment this happens, the whole financial world locks in to their next target; the most suitable candidates being now Spain and Italy. The first expression that comes to mind when mixing the word 'bailout' and the name of Spain is 'too big too fail'. The expression is already familiar for American people but European people have not suffered it yet. The falls of Greece and Ireland were manageable for the European rescue fund, but a crash in Spain, or Italy, would pose an enormous problem to the whole eurozone. But disregarding what the hunters (speculators) want, is really Spain in need of a bailout?