Saturday, 2 July 2011

Greece Isn't Lehman Brothers. It is Worse Than That...

In my Money Week column this week, I've been writing about why Greece is even worse for the markets than Lehman Brothers. Here's a taster....


If the Greeks had a euro for every City analyst and financial reporter who has solemnly warned that the country’s debt crisis risks being ‘another Lehman moment’ for the financial markets, their economy would probably be in far better shape than it is. It has become the most over-used cliché of the last few weeks – and like every tired cliché, simply shows that the people using it have stopped thinking clearly for themselves.
In truth, the Greek crisis is nothing like the Lehman collapse. It is far worse than that. Lehman was a short, sharp shock for the global markets, and although it caused massive damage to the global economy, it was over relatively quickly.
The sovereign debt crisis, by contrast, is going to be a long, drawn-out and messy affair, with no clean resolution. It will depress investment, economic output and equity market for years to come.
Over the course of the last week, the Greek crisis has prompted a global sell- off in every kind of asset – and rightly so. The government of the beleaguered Greek premier George Papandreou looks on its last legs. The Germans have been wrangling with the European Central Bank over the terms of a fresh bail-out. Protestors have been marching across Greece, fighting yet more austerity. There were certainly reasons to fear that Greece might be forced into a sudden default – and that would pose huge risks for the European banking system. Greek debt is hidden on balance sheets right across the financial system. No one really knows where the losses will come out.
Even so, it is nothing like Lehman Brothers. When the Wall Street investment bank collapsed in 2008, the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve had no real idea it would pose a systemic risk to the financial system. If they had, they wouldn’t have let it go down. They would have stepped in to rescue it instead. The crisis it provoked was largely unexpected.
That isn’t true of Greece. Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel and France’s President Nicolas Sarkozy are well aware of the threat a Greek collapse poses to the financial system. They aren’t going to let it happen until their experts have reassured them their banks can survive. After all, they aren’t stupid. They are not going to let their financial system blow up. If they have to find a few more tens of billions of euros to prop up their wayward southern neighbour for another year they will. It’s better than the alternative.
There isn’t going to be a sudden collapse. The risks are all flagged up, and everyone will work hard to avoid them.
The trouble is, Greece is just the tip of a much larger iceberg. The sovereign debt crisis is going to depress economies, deter investment, and keep a lid on assets prices for a long time yet.
Greece has been running massive budget deficits for years. So have most of the other peripheral countries, such as Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Ireland. France shows very little sign of getting its deficit under control. Neither does the US. The UK is making some progress, but lower than expected growth means we are unlikely to meet our targets. The sovereign debt crisis is not just a Greek issue. It is hitting most of the developed world.
That is going to impact the markets in three ways.
First, it is going to depress economic growth. There is only one real way to bring deficits under control, and that is to make deep and painful cuts in government spending. Nothing else works. But as governments everywhere scale back on their expenditure, growth is going to be hit. Over the medium-term, a smaller state allows the private sector to grow faster. It is a mistake to fall for the simplistic Keynesian mistake of thinking state borrowing and spending promotes growth. It doesn’t. Cuts allow the economy to grow faster – eventually. But it takes time for that to happen. And in the medium-term, the economy will be more sluggish than it otherwise would be.
Next, the debt crisis is going to deter investment. Who would want to build a new factory or sales office in any of the peripheral euro-zone countries right now? You have no idea what the economies will look like, or even what currencies they might be using in three or four years time. You are likely to face years of grinding austerity programmes as governments struggle to stay in the euro. And yet investment is the lifeblood of economic growth. If companies don’t invest, then economies are not going to be able to grow.
Finally, it is going to depress asset prices. For all the reasons outlined above, the debt crisis is going to slow global growth. That is bad for just about every class of asset, from equities, to bonds, to commodities (although probably not for gold, which is usually the one clear beneficiary of a monetary crisis). Clearly enough, that is going to depress the markets as well. But it is also means investors are going to be very cautious. The constant threat of defaults, the worries that it will lead to a fresh banking crisis, and the nervousness over which country is likely to be targeted next, will all make any kind of bull market very hard to sustain. And the lower asset prices are, the lower growth will be as well.
In many ways, we’d be better off with a Lehman moment. A quick, sharp crisis that ended with Greece defaulting on its debt, re-establishing its own currency, and one or two over-exposed banks being bailed out, would be better than a saga that drags on for years with no clear resolution. But it isn’t going to happen. The global economy suffered from the Lehman collapse – but was able to start recovering the following year. Unfortunately, this crisis will take far longer to resolve.

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