Posts Tagged ‘euro’

Portugal Becomes Third of PIGS To Seek EU Bailout

Monday, June 6th, 2011

Portugal has become the third European nation to accept a financial bailout to the tune of € 78 billion, with € 12 billion going directly to the Iberian nation’s banks.  It is the third of four PIGS nations (Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Spain) to require a bailout.  Caretaker Prime Minister Jose Socrates announced that he had reached preliminary agreement with the European Union (EU), International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the European Central Bank (ECB) for a three-year package of support, including help for Lisbon’s banks.  Portugal’s bailout means three of the eurozone’s 17 countries can be described as being in financial intensive care.  Greece accepted €110 billion of bilateral loans last year; Ireland signed an € 85 billion bailout last November — with the long-term fiscal and economic prognosis for all three nations still uncertain.  Socrates believes that he has secured a good deal, saying, “There are no financial assistance programs that are not demanding.”

The eurozone’s three patients are on three different medicine regimes: Greece’s loans must be repaid over seven years at an average 4.2 percent interest rate; Ireland’s over seven years at an average 5.8 percent rate (although it is trying to change the rate); and Portugal’s is still under discussion.  “I think the terms inevitably are going to be different in each country because the circumstances are…different,” said Eamon Gilmore, Ireland’s minister for foreign affairs.  “The government would be very fed up too if another country was getting a bailout deal better than the terms that we are getting,” he said.

The capital of these banks isn’t really the main problem at the moment.  The focus is their dependency on the ECB for liquidity and how they can get out of that and somehow fund themselves in the wholesale market again,” said Carlo Mareels, banks analyst for RBC Capital Markets.  Portugal’s banks have been unable to raise funds in wholesale markets for the last year, demonstrating exactly how intertwined the fortunes of the state and lenders has become in eurozone countries.  Margins have been squeezed as banks compete for retail deposits, which strains their capital positions.  The declining value of their government bonds makes a bad situation even worse.

Simonetta Nardin, a spokeswoman for the IMF, l confirmed that officials had reached an agreement with the Portuguese government ”on a comprehensive economic program.  We have said from the beginning that it is important that any program should have broad cross-party support and we will continue our engagement with the opposition parties to establish that this is the case.”  The bailout requires EU approval.  Portugal’s prime minister said that he would present the deal to opposition parties and called on them to show ”a sense of responsibility and a superior sense of national interest” to ensure Portugal receives emergency financing quickly.  Under the plan, the deficit would need to be reduced to 5.9 percent of GDP this year; 4.5 percent in 2012; and three percent in 2013.

Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics, predicted that Portugal’s GDP will decline by two percent in 2011. “Against this background, while the confirmation of the bailout should provide some reassurance that Portugal will be able meet its upcoming bond redemptions, it won’t put an end to speculation that – along with Greece and perhaps others – it will sooner or later need to undertake some form of debt restructuring,” he said.

The bailout needs wide-ranging cross-party support because Socrates’ government collapsed last month, which set off a round of increased borrowing rates.  Additionally, it forced Lisbon to seek financial assistance from the EU.  The winner of the June 5 general election will implement it.  Agreement on the loan terms is required by June 15, when Lisbon needs to redeem € 4.9 billion worth of bonds.

Ireland Accepts EU/IMF Bailout

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

Ireland Accepts EU/IMF BailoutAgainst its will, Ireland is now in a state of receivership mandated by the European Union (EU) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in an effort to resolve the Emerald Isle’s debt crisis.   European central bankers have paid £111 billion into Ireland’s banks to prevent damage to the euro in what is being jokingly referred to as the “Oliver Cromwell package.”  EU president Herman Van Rompuy described the action as a “survival crisis.”

Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen will delay any decision on whether to proceed with national elections until the 2011 budget is passed and details of the international bailout package are negotiated “I’m saying that it is imperative for this country that the budget is passed,” Cowen said.  “I’m also saying that it is highly important in the interests of political stability that that happens.  It’s very important for people to understand that any further delay in this matter in fact weakens this country’s position.”

Cowen asked for significant “financial assistance” from the EU and the IMF and promised. spending cuts and tax increases.  This request came shortly after the prime minister said Ireland had “made no application for external support” for its debt-laden banks.  Dublin has spent billions trying to prop up its embattled banking sector.

Ireland is the second EU country, after Greece, to seek outside help to stabilize its finances.   That nation has been under strong pressure from its European neighbors – primarily Germany and France — to apply for a bailout, which they hope will calm investors and prevent a crisis of confidence in the euro.

“It is important that this state continues to fund itself in a stable way,” said Brian Lenihan, Ireland’s Finance Minister, “that economic continuity is preserved, that there is no danger to the borrowing which the state requires.”  Ireland’s low corporate tax rate – just 12.5 percent- — will not enter into the discussion because the country wants to attract large companies.

Central Banks Tighten the Purse Strings A Little

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

The world’s central banks are easing up slightly on the generosity they have shown over the past year when the financial crisis threatened to destroy the global economy. After European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet said his bank would withdraw some liquidity operations, the euro rose.  Similarly the pound went up after the Bank of England started purchasing bonds at a slower rate.  The Federal Reserve detailed the conditions in which it would raise interest rates – though it hasn’t acted on that yet.Central banks take initial steps to see if global economies can thrive without being propped up.

Juergen Michels, chief European economist at Citigroup, Inc., in London, says that “As soon as the first exit measures are put in place, there’s the risk that the market overreacts.  We’ll probably see a tightening of financing conditions, and hard-fought-for improvements will be in jeopardy.”

These actions mean that investors will have to operate without the liquidity that has been propping up the world’s economies, even as new concerns about additional asset bubbles grow.  Mistiming the withdrawal of support could spoil the fragile recovery.  Central banks are changing course at a time when factories are restocking inventories, and the price of commodities like gold and sugar are climbing.  The MSCI All-Countries World Index has soared 66 percent since March and sugar has increased 90 percent this year.

“There are all kinds of risks,” said Jim O’Neill, chief global economist at Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., in London.  “We don’t know how much of the improvement in markets is due to the central banks’ largesse, and neither do they.  They’re pretty nervous, but they’ve got to get out of it at some stage.”