Published: Apr 28, 2015 5:09 a.m. ET
By SARA SJOLIN
MARKETS
REPORTER
With the
risk of Greece
running out of cash looming larger by the day, investors are grappling with a
key question — what are the consequences of a Greek default?
The fallout
really depends on which bond, loan or interest the government fails to repay
and to whom, leaving open an array of default scenarios, as UBS sketches out in
a note published on Monday. The worst-case outcome has widely been described as
a “Grexit”, shorthand for Greece
leaving the eurozone, and according to the UBS economists there is a fast and
slow path to exit.
The
investment bank doesn’t predict a Grexit as its base-case scenario, but if it
were to happen, it’s likely to be via one of these two tracks, the strategists
said.
The fast
route: If the government fails to meet its debt obligations to one of its
lenders, such as the European Central Bank or the International Monetary Fund,
there’s a risk deposits will start to flow out of the country — and probably
fast. This could drain the Greek banks and threaten the solvency levels. That
will raise a red flag at the ECB, which is currently keeping Greek banks afloat
through the emergency liquidity assistance program, under conditions that the
banks are still solvent.
If the ECB
cuts off ELA funding that’s basically the death blow to Greece as a
member of the currency union.
“The
government would then need to refinance (and probably recapitalize) the banking
system by creating a new currency to do so,” the UBS strategists said.
However,
the fast route could be slowed down if the government imposed capital controls
to limit the deposit flight.
The slow
route: Aside from scrambling to repay loans and pay bond interest, Athens is struggling to
find money to pay public-sector salaries and pensions, which are usually due
end-month. As it’s running out of funds, the government could start to pay with
IOUs instead of euros, beginning with payments to suppliers and over time expand
it to salaries and pensions.
The new IOU
notes are unlikely to be valued at their face value, so the purchasing power
would probably be weaker than that of the euro. This essentially means that a
new, devalued parallel IOU currency has been created.
The more
notes that are issued, the more they get integrated in the financial system.
Banks could start to clear payments in them. Businesses and citizens would
increasingly use the IOUs to pay taxes. All the while “euros would leak out of
the Greek banking system and the economy would rely on the new currency to a
greater extent,” UBS said.
“Nominally,
Greece
could (in theory, and just conceivably) remain in the euro under these
circumstances, but there would come a point in this process at which it had in
a practical sense already left,” they strategist said.
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