(Reuters) -
The coming week will go a long way to dictating whether Greece remains in the
euro zone. A meeting of euro zone finance ministers on Monday is tasked with
producing a deal that will keep Greece solvent and which is acceptable to both
sides.
Some of
this is down to semantics - the Greeks will not accept an extension of the
hated bailout program while bridging financing sounds fine - but there are
serious issues of substance too and there is a gulf to overcome.
The new
government's plan to renegotiate Greece’s debt pile and end debt-cutting will
not fly given the amount of money Athens owes to European institutions and
governments.
There is
economic logic in easing up on austerity to galvanize growth and increase the
tax take. The euro zone could move a little in that direction but Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras is likely to have to move considerably further from
where he is now.
Tsipras
says he has a strong democratic mandate to pursue a new deal. The euro zone
says Greece owes them a fortune. Both are right. Something must give.
The
European Central Bank has kept the pressure on and could possibly pull the plug
on emergency support for Greek banks, without which they will collapse, if
there is no progress toward a deal.
Last week,
the ECB made available a further 5 billion euros of Emergency Lending
Assistance (ELA). Banking sources told Reuters it did so because deposit
outflows have picked up and also to ensure sufficient liquidity while the
standoff persists.
That money
will only last until Wednesday when the ECB Governing Council meets to review
the situation. It could stop the lifeline for Greek banks if Greece was clearly
not in a bailout program and/or if it judged its banks to be insolvent. That
would push Athens a big step closer to the edge.
"A
continuation of the deadlock on Monday will immediately shift focus to
Wednesday’s bi-weekly ECB review of the ELA limits of Greek banks," said
Deutsche Bank strategist George Saravelos.
"In
the event of failure, we would expect the ECB to become more explicit on the
timing of when ELA funding would be withdrawn or capped."
The odds
are still on some sort of extension to the bailout, even if it is called
something else, to allow time for more substantive negotiations. But it is far
from guaranteed.
The Dutch
finance minister who will chair Monday's meeting of the Eurogroup played down
the chances of a breakthrough. "I’m really still very pessimistic about
that now," Jeroen Dijsselbloem said on Friday. Economists polled by
Reuters estimated a one-in-four chance of Greece leaving the 19-nation single
currency area this year - the highest reading since the start of the Greek debt
crisis in late 2009.
"Ultimately,
the alternative of ELA withdrawal and eventual capital controls for Greece is
worse for all sides involved. But whether progress can be achieved under very
pressing deadlines and large differences of opinion on the underlying policy
path between the two sides remains to be seen," Saravelos said.
ANY OTHER BUSINESS
Greece will
cast a long shadow this week but there are other key events besides. Top of the
list is the minutes of the Federal Reserve's last policy meeting.
The central
bank world has been upended by cheap oil and the prospect of the European
Central Bank creating more than 1 trillion euros over the next 18 months.
Interest
rates have been cut from Australia to India to Canada. Denmark and Sweden now
boast negative official rates and the latter has started printing money.
In stark
contrast, the Fed is expected to raise rates at some point this year. At its
last meeting, it said it would remain patient about a first policy tightening
but said the U.S. economy was expanding "at a solid pace" with strong
job gains.
The Bank of
Japan delivers its latest policy decision on Wednesday. In April 2013, the BOJ
pledged to push inflation up to 2 percent in "about two years" by
printing money at an unprecedented rate to end two decades of deflation.
With
inflation running at just 0.5 percent, more stimulus is expected but not yet.
Of 16 analysts polled by Reuters, five each said more BOJ easing would come at
either its July or Oct. 30 meeting.
Flash
purchasing manager’s surveys for February from the euro zone, the United States
and China will give the latest snapshot of the health of the world economy and
whether cheap energy is starting to give activity a fillip.
(Πηγή: www.reuters.com)
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