Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Greek Stock Market Reopens (sort of); Math Perspective on the "Bailout"
- Rabbit-Hole Math: Chicago Proposes Bonds that Make No Periodic Payments; When Does Stupidity Stop?
- IMF Reiterates Greece Disqualified for Bailout, Participation Depends on Debt Relief and Reforms
Greek Stock Market Reopens (sort of); Math Perspective on the "Bailout" Posted: 31 Jul 2015 01:53 PM PDT The Greek news of the day is Greek Stock Market to Reopen, With Restrictions. Restrictions
I supposed people could transfer cash from elsewhere into stocks but no one in their right mind would do such a thing. And what about taking cash out of brokerage accounts, wiring it elsewhere? The article did not say, but I suspect that has capital restrictions as well. Will the market really reopen Monday? I suggest not. Reader "Bailout" Perspective Reader "AC" occasionally pings me with some interesting comments and perspectives. Here's another one. Ciao Mish,Additional Math To further add to AC's perspective, the existing bailouts equal €240 billion. The total bailout will be €326 billion (not counting additional money needed to stabilize the banks, and not counting Target2 imbalances of about €120 billion and growing). €326 billion exceeds 150% of GDP. Germany wants Greece to have a current account surplus of 3% of GDP. 3% of €216 billion (2014 GDP) is €6.48 billion. At zero percent interest, assuming a 3% surplus every year, and also assuming every penny of the surplus goes to creditors, it will take Greece 50 years to pay back €326 billion. Of course, Greek GDP is expected to rise. Then again, I assumed 0% interest, and I also assumed a 3% current account surplus from now until seemingly ever. The math gets much more cumbersome at interest rates that exceed a mere 1%. Pardon me for asking, but ...
Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Rabbit-Hole Math: Chicago Proposes Bonds that Make No Periodic Payments; When Does Stupidity Stop? Posted: 31 Jul 2015 11:43 AM PDT Chicago Eyes Bonds that Delay Repayments Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel has his eyes on raising money via Capital Appreciation Bonds. CABs saddle taxpayers with higher costs because they delay interest and principle payments until a final lump-sum payment at the end. CABs have fallen out of favor because of risk. Some cities and states have outlawed them. Nonetheless, Chicago Mulls Borrowing That Puerto Rico Rejected as Too Risky. Mayor Rahm Emanuel proposed issuing $500 million of bonds this week in an ordinance that would permit the use of capital appreciation bonds, where borrowers postpone interest and principal payments into one big sum at the end of the term.Rabbit-Hole Math Given Chicago's junk bond rating, no investor in their right mind would purchase Chicago CABs. Default risk is enormous. Also note that Emanuel needs to sell bonds to "fund swap termination payments". Those termination fees came into play because Chicago issued taxpayer-risky bonds that required repayment if the bonds dropped into junk territory. Those bond are now junk, so Chicago has to borrow money to get out of swaps it never should have gotten into in the first place. And $1.7 billion in bonds for "refunding savings". Say what? Borrowing to refund savings? That statement caught my eye, but a vice president of US bank pinged me with this explanation: "In muni land, refunding is another word for refinancing. So when the City of Chicago is talking about 'refunding for savings' they are referring to refinancing for interest savings. Not sure where the term originated, but that's what we call it." Desperation Tactics These are the tactics of a city that is clearly in serious trouble. Is there no end to stupidity? Here's the deal.
Until there is an honest discussion about the above three points, Emanuel has proven he is willing to go further down the rabbit hole in search of solutions that cannot possibly work in the real world. Emanuel Needs Another Choice The Illinois legislature contributes to the problem. Chicago needs choices. One of those choices is to declare bankruptcy. Because bankruptcy is different for municipalities than corporations, Chicago itself cannot declare bankruptcy now. But the school system can and should. Unfortunately, Illinois municipalities cannot declare bankruptcy until the state allows it. The legislature needs to give Chicago that choice. Perhaps that choice would wake up the mayor. Perhaps not. Question of Mushrooms Did Emanuel eat too may funny mushrooms in his travels in Wonderland to understand a good option when he sees it? Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
IMF Reiterates Greece Disqualified for Bailout, Participation Depends on Debt Relief and Reforms Posted: 31 Jul 2015 02:21 AM PDT Once again the IMF is back in the news in regards to Greece. The IMF staff told the board of directors Greece Disqualified from New IMF Program. Yet, Germany insists IMF be a part of the program. The reason for the latter is Germany will have to pony up lots more money if the IMF is not involved. The staff presented this message to the board this week, along with the message eurozone bailout lenders first need to agree on "debt relief". From the above link (Financial Times) ... The International Monetary Fund's board has been told Athens' high debt levels and poor record of implementing reforms disqualify Greece from a third IMF bailout of the country, raising new questions over whether the fund will join the EU's latest financial rescue.Same Old Same Old? This is essentially the same story we heard two weeks ago in another "confidential" leak. Nathan Tankus writing on Naked Capitalism presented this view on July 16: Lagarde Distances the IMF From Implications of Leaked Debt Sustainability Report. In general, when discussing large complicated institutions distinctions must be made between parts of this institution. The mainstream press is particularly bad at that kind of nuance because these organizations are already complicated: making further distinctions between IMF managing directors, IMF staff and the IMF executive board gets needlessly obscurant in their view. However, these distinctions are important. The report that was leaked two weeks ago and the latest update to that report was written by IMF staff and specifically "neither discussed with nor approved by the IMF's Executive Board". Additionally, Christine Lagarde or her title "managing director" appear nowhere in this document. Thus to say that the "IMF" is saying anything in this report is deeply misleading.Options Four, Five, Six The above analysis seemed plausible at the time. It doesn't anymore. For starters, the report has now been presented to the executive board. And a four-page "strictly confidential" summary appears to be in the Financial Time's hands. We need to now consider options four, Five, and Six.
Option six is not incompatible with either 4 or 5. The staff revolt and the leak may not have been authorized by Lagarde herself, but by others on the executive board. This brings us back to "Senior EU officials have insisted that Christine Lagarde, the IMF managing director, signalled her willingness to participate in a new bailout at the high-stakes summit that agreed the new rescue earlier in July." It's possible EU "senior officials" are mincing words, not Lagarde. Willingness to participate does not imply "on German terms". Certainly, senior EU officials have lied before. It still may very well be that Nathan Tankus is correct, but more options are clearly in play. I suspect option six coupled with either four or five, perhaps over the wishes of Lagarde herself. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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