Alexis
Tsipras’ Greek election win could spell further gains for the country’s
high-yielding government bonds
The Wall
Street Journal
By RICHARD
BARLEY
Sept. 21,
2015 9:29 a.m. ET
Alexis
Tsipras’ political gamble in calling new elections in Greece has paid
off, returning his Syriza party to government. Buying Greek bonds also
represents a gamble, but a potentially attractive one.
Mr.
Tsipras’ support for the eurozone’s Greek bailout program remains questionable.
But one message from Sunday’s elections is that anti-euro parties polled only
15% of the vote, Royal Bank of Scotland
notes. The Popular Unity party, formed by former Syriza hard-liners opposed to
the bailout, failed to make it into parliament. Low turnout of 55% may signal
voter disillusionment with politics in general, potentially damping this
message. Even so, Syriza’s essential contradiction of rejecting European
bailouts while remaining within the euro appears to have been settled in the
single currency’s favor, for now.
There are
plenty of risks around implementation of Greece ’s third bailout. But that is
reflected in a Greek bond yield curve that is still inverted, with two-year
bonds yielding 9.9% and 10-year bonds around 8%. The short-dated debt could
well offer opportunity, as the biggest risk to these bonds has long been the
question of Greece ’s
euro membership.
In the
best-case scenario, if Greece keeps its bailout program on track, the bonds
could become eligible for purchase by the European Central Bank—and
expectations are building that ECB buying may be ramped up from current levels.
Quantitative easing may not do much for the Greek economy, but would
undoubtedly be a fillip for Greek bondholders.
Investors
will need strong nerves, however. Liquidity is low and volatility high; bad
news on the economy is likely to emerge.
But Greece actually offers diversification away from
global risks linked to U.S.
interest rates and China .
It will be politics in Greece
and the eurozone that determine whether a gamble on Greek bonds pays off or
not.
Write to
Richard Barley at richard.barley@wsj.com
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