Bloomberg
by Nikos
ChrysolorasVassilis Karamanis
12:00 AM
EEST
May 18, 2015
Greek banks
are running short on the collateral they need to stay alive, a crisis that
could help force Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s hand after weeks of
brinkmanship with creditors.
As deposits
flee the financial system, lenders use collateral parked at the Greek central
bank to tap more and more emergency liquidity every week. In a worst-case
scenario, that lifeline will be maxed out within three weeks, pushing banks
toward insolvency, some economists say.
“The point
where collateral is exhausted is likely to be near,” JPMorgan Chase Bank
analysts Malcolm Barr and David Mackie wrote in a note to clients May 15.
“Pressures on central government cash flow, pressures on the banking system,
and the political timetable are all converging on late May-early June.”
European
policy makers are losing patience with Tsipras who said as recently as May 14
that he won’t compromise on any of his key demands. While talks are centering
on whether to give Greece
more money, the European Central Bank could raise the stakes if it increases
the discount on the collateral Greek banks pledge in exchange for cash under
its Emergency Liquidity Assistance program.
Such a move
might inadvertently prompt a further outflow of bank deposits and pressure
Tsipras to choose between doing a deal and putting his country on the road to
capital controls. A Greek government spokesman declined to comment, as did officials
at the Greek central bank and the ECB.
“We are in
an endgame,” ECB Executive Board member Yves Mersch said in an interview with
Luxembourg radio 100.7 broadcast Saturday. “This situation is not tenable.”
Liquidity
Lifeline
The
arithmetic goes as follows: Greek lenders have so far needed about 80 billion
euros ($92 billion) under the ELA program.
Banks have
enough collateral to stretch that lifeline to about 95 billion euros under the
terms currently allowed by the ECB, a person familiar with the matter said.
With the central bank raising the ELA by about 2 billion euros every week, that
could take banks to the end of June.
A crunch
will come if the ECB increases the haircut on Greek collateral to levels not
seen since last year. That could be prompted by anything from a complete
breakdown in talks to a missed debt payment, the official said. A continuation
of the current impasse could even be all that’s needed, the official said.
An
increased haircut would reduce the ELA limit to about 88 billion euros, the
person said. While that gives banks about four weeks before hitting the
buffers, the leeway is so limited that Greece might need to impose capital
controls, limiting transactions such as ATM withdrawals, to conserve the
cushion.
ECB Tools
“Since the
great crisis of 2008, Europe has created many tools to control the flow of
money and banks,” said Andreas Koutras, an analyst at In Touch Capital Markets,
in London .
“Thus the crisis in Greece
is more likely to be resolved through the tools of the ECB rather than” through
political tools.
Market News
International first reported on the reduced ceiling on May 12. The ECB’s next
decision on ELA is expected on May 20, when the governing council meets in Frankfurt .
Investors
in Greek debt are showing few signs of panic for now. The yield on the Greek
10-year bond was at 10.76 percent on May 15, down from 13.64 percent on April
21. While Greece
benchmark ASE Index fell 3.2 percent last week, it has still risen 15 percent
since April 21.
Nor are ECB
policy makers willing to raise the pressure on Greek banks on their own.
Central bank governors won’t take any action which would be seen as pushing Greece out of
the currency bloc if negotiations show progress and convergence, the person
said.
Collateral
Fix?
Greek lenders
are also working with the country’s central bank on plans to collateralize
additional assets, a separate local official with knowledge of the matter said.
Still, it’s
unclear if these assets, including government guarantees, would be accepted by
the ECB if the standoff in bailout negotiations persists. According to a senior
Greek commercial banker, the ECB’s decision on what to accept as collateral is
essentially a judgment call, and not necessarily related to the quantity of the
assets available.
Tsipras
will push Greece ’s case at a
European Union leaders summit in Riga
that starts on May 21 after a weekend that showed few signs of progress. An
International Monetary Fund memo dated May 14 said Greece won’t be able to make an IMF
payment on June 5 unless an accord is reached with partners, the U.K’s Channel
4 news reported on Saturday.
The ECB’s
next full monetary policy meeting is on June 3, two days before the IMF
payment.
“There were
too many people crying wolf before,” Koutras said. “But as Hemingway wrote: How
did you go bankrupt? Two ways: Gradually, then suddenly.”
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