Daily News Briefing

More evidence that there is no bailout deal

18.03.2010

Germany wants Greece to go the IMF; as bailout plans get more concrete, and more imminent, Germany is now trying to wiggle out of its promises of support; CDU’s Meister says only IMF has the know-how how to handle such a situation; Merkel says Greeks have to solve their own problems; European Commission warns eight member states that their GDP growth assumptions are too optimistic; Strauss-Kahn says a Tobin tax is unrealistic as it can be circumvented by the use of derivates; Jean Quatremer says Zapatero helped Brown on hedge funds because of the forthcoming UK elections; Ralph Atkins says Axel Weber may be too outspoken to be acceptable as an ECB president; Wolfgang Schauble, meanwhile, has had another great idea: he now wants to use Germany’s intelligence service to track down hedge funds.


Eurointelligence Syndicated Column

Ban Naked CDS

18.03.2010

By: Richard Portes

A good side effect of Greece’s troubles is that politicians, regulators and central bankers are finally paying serious attention to this market. For two years, I have been pointing out the destabilising effects of naked CDS in the financial crisis and the dangers in the use of these instruments as a speculative device. Only now is this taken seriously.


The Greek crisis and the future of the Eurozone

11.03.2010

By: Paul De Grauwe

The crisis that started in Greece culminated into a crisis of the Eurozone as a whole. There is no doubt that the major responsibility rests with the Greek authorities who mismanaged their economy and deceived everybody about the true nature of their budgetary problems. The solution of the problem will therefore necessitate drastic changes in Greek economic and budgetary policies. This being said, there is more than one villain in the play. The financial markets and the eurozone authorities also bear part of the responsibility for letting this crisis degenerate into a systemic crisis of the eurozone.


'Swap Tango' – A Derivative Regulation Dance: Part 2

04.03.2010

By: Satyajit Das

Banks and their lobbyists do not believe that there is a case for regulation. Banks argue that the complex nature of derivative trading dictates that self-regulation is the only feasible approach. If that fails, then banks seek to minimise scrutiny of major issues, such as the size of the market, speculative activity, pricing issues, complexity and mis-selling of derivatives to unsuitable clients. They argue that existing regulations already adequately cover some issues. Proposed regulations will be masterfully narrowed to minimise impediments to profitable activities.


Greek Competitiveness Is Not the Issue, Fiscal Discipline Is

04.03.2010

By: Erik Jones

With all due respect to my colleagues in the economics profession, they have jumped the gun on Greek competitiveness within the eurozone. The simple fact of the matter is that Greece is having a fiscal crisis. It would have had that crisis whether or not it was in the eurozone. Greece is not having a crisis of competitiveness. Hence joining the eurozone was not the problem; leaving it is not the solution.


Europe in Dire Straits – don’t be Brothers in Arms.

02.03.2010

By: Henrik Enderlein

On 30th October 1975, the New York Daily News titled: “FORD TO CITY: DROP DEAD” - referring to the refusal of the US-President to provide financial assistance to the New York City government (at that time in serious debt difficulties). Today, this headline is a perfect guide to handling the situation with Greece. Instead of muddling through and changing the basic rules of the euro-area, European leaders should now send a clear message and tell markets that there won’t be a bailout for Greece.


'Swap Tango' – A Derivative Regulation Dance: Part 1

02.03.2010

By: Satyajit Das

Politicians and regulators globally are currently busy drafting laws to regulate derivatives. A common theme underlying the activity is an absence of knowledge of the true operation of the industry and the matters that need to be addressed. As Goethe observed: "There is nothing more frightening than ignorance in action."


Germany’s Chinese New Year and What to Do About It

25.02.2010

By: Adam S. Posen

In 2009, China displaced Germany as the world’s largest exporter. But Germany starts 2010 sharing a common dilemma with China: how to sustain growth, when those markets locked into a fixed exchange rate with it need real adjustment


Why I worry more about Spain than about Greece

18.02.2010

By: Wolfgang Münchau

After a decade of not always constructive ambiguity, the European Union now has a bailout rule. It goes as follows: A bailout shall be granted to any country that subsequently complies with a brutal adjustment programme, dictated by the EU. I suspect that Greece, being the first country in trouble, being small and sufficiently scared, will comply with all the conditions. Maybe Greece will not need a bailout. I still suspect that it might. But in any case, we have established a new principle. Whereas previously nobody was really sure what would happen in such a case, we now know that there are specific cases in which a bailout is likely.



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