MIKE BIRD
APR. 14,
2015, 2:52 AM
http://www.businessinsider.com/
The country
has entered a pretty dire fiscal situation. It desperately needs to unlock
bailout funds from its creditors, but progress negotiating that cash is shaky
at best.
If Athens
doesn't get its next €7.2 billion ($7.58 billion) bailout tranche by the April
24 Eurogroup meeting of European finance ministers, default becomes a lot more
likely, and it seems as if the government is already preparing for the worst.
Here's the FT:
The
government, which is rapidly running out of funds to pay public sector salaries
and state pensions, has decided to withhold €2.5bn of payments due to the
International Monetary Fund in May and June if no agreement is struck, they
said.
"We
have come to the end of the road ... If the Europeans won't release bailout
cash, there is no alternative [to a default]," one government official
said.
Quickly
after the FT's story emerged, the Greek government denied that it was planning
for a default. But given the country's financial situation, it would probably
be careless if it was not at least looking at the scenario.
The
International Monetary Fund makes a point of never restructuring debts it's
owed. If Greece
doesn't make a payment, it has a grace period of about a month to transfer the
money, at which point it would have undoubtedly defaulted.
A chart
from Morgan Stanley (not shown here) shows why eurozone officials may be less
bothered about a Greek default this time around. The risk of contagion into the
rest of Europe is reduced, so Greece
may be able to sink without dragging other countries on Europe 's
periphery down with it.
The
situation is now so grim that Morgan Stanley analysts think "full
membership" of the eurozone is no longer the most likely outcome for Greece , with a
45% chance of a Greek exit from the eurozone, or Grexit:
Unfortunately,
continued full membership of the euro now has become an outside scenario for us
with a subjective probability of only 40% (see What Are the Implications of
Grexit for Europe , March 17, 2015). Either an
exit from the euro or a suspension of the membership via the introduction of
capital controls instead seem more likely to us, with a subjective probability
of 25% and 35%, respectively. Given that we see the risk of Grexit rising to
60% once the country is forced to impose capital controls, we compute a total
probability of 45% for a Grexit.
And it's
worth remembering the bailout deal on the table is only a stopgap. The bailout
was meant to last four months (though it will probably not last that long, even
if it's dispensed soon), and then the country will be back in this position
again.
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/report-greece-is-getting-ready-to-default-2015-4#ixzz3XJOm16E3,
in this link you can find the chart referenced in this article.`
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