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When it comes to trading the possibility of a Grexit, Bloomberg strategist Vassilis Karamanis writes,that there are three possible outcomes.
Scenario 1: Greece exits the euro
Scenario 2: Capital controls are imposed on Greek banks
Scenario 3: Agreement is reached within the next days
Of course, since it is now Draghi’s determination to keep injecting as much paper money into the system as is necessary to keep pushing asset prices to all time highs, any rebound in the EUR will be short-lived.
Furthermore, Commerzbank AG on Monday raised the probability it assigns to a Greek euro exit to 50 percent from 25 percent after euro-area finance ministers’ talks in Brussels broke down. Bank of America Merrill Lynch strategists, including Athanasios Vamvakidis, wrote in a client note Feb. 10 that the Greek government “can potentially get through the IMF payments in March, but would have difficulties after May.”
And in case that wasn’t enough, here is again Bloomberg laying out how a worst-case scenario could unfold.
The Greek government, companies and lenders have all effectively lost access to international markets, due to the uncertainty over the country’s future. The current sources of liquidity are bailout funds from the euro-area nations, the currency bloc’s crisis fund, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank’s Emergency Liquidity Assistance.
Failure to strike a compromise means that these payments would cease. This means that the state would be unable to service its debt obligations, which stand at 22 billion euros ($25 billion) this year, excluding treasury bills, according to the 2015 budget. Greek aid talks in Brussels ended abruptly Monday.
“If the ECB considers the talks to have stalled, there is a risk that it will suspend ELA, perhaps leaving Greece with no choice but to exit the euro zone,” Jennifer McKeown, senior economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London said by e-mail.
Lack of access to bailout funds would also mean that the Greek state wouldn’t be able to repay its 15 billion euros outstanding of short-term debt held by the country’s lenders. At present, Greek banks continuously roll over bills, helping the government stay afloat. The ECB decision not to accept Greek bills as collateral for financing operations and accelerating deposit outflows are limiting the ability of banks to buy new bills.
All of which would finally lead to what everyone’s known for years is inevitable: the return of the Drachma
With no access to any source of financing, the insolvent state and its banks would have to start using a new currency, or a currency equivalent, as no economy can survive without cash. This would be the start of a de-facto exit from the euro area, caused by Greece’s inability to deal with a stripping of liquidity worth as much as 96 billion euros, according to Bloomberg calculations below.
Finally, here is a list of the loans Greece would loses access to in case of a Grexit:
Naturally, the implication of all this is that Greece has “no choice” but to grovel in shame, and retract its hard-line negotiating stance if it wishes to enjoy the fruits of the ECB’s money printing labor.
There is one problem: Greece continues to not play ball with the group of unelected Eurocrats, for whom the Greek behavior is simply confounding – after all how can anyone reject “free money” (even if that it means nothing but ongoing debt slavery).
So with Europe having made it very clear that the only possible next step is for Greece to approach Europe next and request a bailout extension as the Austrian FinMin explained earlier:
“There won’t be a meeting where we have to listen to how the world is working,” Austrian Finance Minister Hans Joerg Schelling said in an interview Tuesday. “There will be a meeting only where it’s clear, the letter is there, the request is there, the conditions are confirmed.”
… Greece has refused to take the hint.
It’s over RT @EmilyPurserSky: Hearing that Varoufakis has left the #ecofin meeting and is back at his hotel. Due to leave for Athens tonight
— Ed Conway (@EdConwaySky) February 17, 2015
So why are futures rallying, and why is the EURUSD acting as if yesterday’s fiasco never happened? This is why.