Sunday, July 5, 2015

Greeks reject austerity, setting up showdown on Euro membership

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Greeks reject austerity, setting up showdown on Euro membership 

[ATHENS] Greece voted against yielding to further austerity demanded by creditors, leaving Europe's leaders to determine if the renegade nation can remain in the euro.
Sixty-one per cent of voters backed Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's rejection of further spending cuts and tax increases in an unprecedented referendum that's also taken the country to the brink of financial collapse.
As the euro fell to a four-week low in Asian trading and Tsipras's supporters filled Athens's central Syntagma Square waving Greek flags, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande called for an emergency leaders' summit on Tuesday.
The result turns the tables on Dr Merkel and Greece's other creditors, who must now decide if a financial rescue of the region's most-indebted country is still possible. It significantly raises the chances of a Greek exit from the single currency, as the country's banks run out of cash and its economy staggers toward all-out collapse.
"The bill for keeping Greece in the euro area - without commitment to reform - has just risen disproportionately," said Mujtaba Rahman, the head of the Europe practice at political consultancy Eurasia Group.
"The hawks in the euro group will win the debate that aid should be given to the country to leave the currency bloc."
BACK TO TALKS
The euro declined in Asian trading, slipping as much as 1.3 per cent to US$1.0970, the lowest since June 1. The single currency was down 0.6 per cent to US$1.1047 at 10.08am in Hong Kong. Stocks also slid, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index shedding 1.1 per cent, and Japan's Nikkei 225 index falling 1.4 per cent.
The Greek result reverberated quickly across Europe's political establishment. Within hours of the first projections, Merkel and French President Francois Hollande called for a summit of euro-area leaders on July 7, with banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co saying a Greek departure from the euro was now the most likely scenario.
ECB LIFELINE
The European Central Bank is meeting Monday to discuss extending a new lifeline to Greek lenders, which have been closed for a week under capital controls that were imposed by Mr Tsipras to stem withdrawals.
"Our immediate priority is to restore the Greek banking system," Mr Tsipras, 40, said in a speech after the result emerged. "I'm confident that the ECB fully realises the humanitarian side of the crisis in our country."
Mr Tsipras has said their can be no deal on a new aid plan that doesn't include a restructuring of debt, now almost 180 per cent of gross domestic product.
Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis has called the EU's approach of excluding talks on up-front debt relief from the aid negotiations as "extend and pretend."
'REALISTIC PROPOSAL'
"Nothing is for free in this world. If Tsipras wants debt relief as he is calling for, he needs to put together a realistic proposal," Wolfango Piccoli, managing director of Teneo Intelligence, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. "The first move has to come from Athens."
The International Monetary Fund, which, with the EU and ECB, makes up the troika of Greek creditors, also argues that debt relief combined with further financial assistance from Europe is necessary to weather the crisis. Debt relief could be achieved through an extending repayments at low interest rates, IMF Chief Economist Olivier Blanchard wrote in a June 14 blog post.
"The only hope of a deal may rest on the IMF convincing euro-zone governments to include a clause promising debt relief in the future, conditional to Greece meeting certain targets," said Diego Iscaro, senior economist at IHS Global Insight. "This will be extremely difficult, but lenders may come to the conclusion that it is the only way to avoid Greece leaving the euro zone."
WAITING FOR TSIPRAS
European leaders are showing no immediate willingness to compromise. They firstly want to wait for see what proposals Mr Tsipras will offer to keep Greece in the euro, according to a European government official with knowledge of the crisis strategy.
The question is whether they can negotiate with a government that has rejected their conditions for staying in the 19-member currency union, after Portugal and Ireland accepted similar measures and emerged from their own bailout programmes.
Mr Tsipras has "torn down the last bridges across which Europe and Greece could have moved toward a compromise," German Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel said in an interview with the Tagesspiegel newspaper.
RESTORING 'DIGNITY'
Mr Tsipras and his Coalition of the Radical Left, or Syriza, swept to power in January after campaigning to end crippling budget cuts forced upon the country by creditors and promising to restore "dignity." Five months of protracted and antagonistic negotiations followed and optimism for a deal toward the end of June was suddenly damped when he called the referendum, putting an end to talks.
European leaders largely characterised the plebiscite as a vote on membership in the euro itself, although Mr Tsipras insists Greece can stay in regardless and said he would return to the negotiating table.
"The mandate Greeks gave is not a mandate for a rupture with Europe, but a mandate of reinforcing our negotiating power to achieve a sustainable agreement," Mr Tsipras said.
STREET PARTY
Syntagma Square turned into a raucous street party on Sunday night as "no" supporters gathered to celebrate. Some danced to music playing from speaker phones, while others took selfies with the crowds in the background.
Waving the white-and-blue Greek flag, John Govesis, 26, said he and his whole family voted "no." "I like freedom, I don't need money from Europe," he said. "This is the only way forward. I have a job, but maybe tomorrow I don't." The country is buckling under the strain of the capital controls and at risk of undoing four decades of integration with Europe.
The economy has already shrunk about 25 per cent over the past six years while the jobless rate is still the highest in the euro region.
PAYING WAGES
Banks will struggle to re-open without significant new aid from the ECB, importers are concerned about paying their bills, and pension payments are being rationed.
The government may also face difficulty in paying wages of civil servants from next week, Piccoli said, and Greece faces the maturity of 3.5 billion euros in bond payments to the ECB on July 20.
"Although the situation is fluid, at this point Greek exit from the euro appears more likely than not," Malcolm Barr, an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in London, said in a report to clients on Sunday. It could come "under chaotic circumstances," he said.
BLOOMBERG

Greeks defy Europe with overwhelming 'No' in bailout vote

Greeks defy Europe with overwhelming 'No' in bailout vote

GreeceVotesNo
Tags: Greece
Greeks voted overwhelmingly "No" on Sunday in a historic bailout referendum, partial results showed, defying warnings from across Europe that rejecting new austerity terms for fresh financial aid would set their country on a path out of the euro.
With nearly a fifth of the votes counted, official figures showed 60.4 percent of Greeks on course to reject a bailout offer from creditors that was the official issue of the ballot. The figures showed the Yes vote drew 40.1 percent. An official projection of the final result is expected at 1800 GMT (1400 EDT).
Officials from the Greek government, which had argued that a 'No' vote would strengthen its hand to secure a better deal from international creditors after months of wrangling, immediately said they would try to restart talks with European partners.
"The negotiations which will start must be concluded very soon, even within 48 hours," government spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis told Greek television." We will undertake every effort to seal it soon."
Euclid Tsakalotos, the government's chief negotiator said talks could restart as early as Sunday evening.
Many of Athens' partners have warned over the past week that a 'No' vote would mean cutting bridges with Europe and driving Greece's crippled financial system into outright bankruptcy, dramatically worsening the country's 5-year-long depression.
If confirmed, the result would also deliver a hammer blow to the European Union's grand single currency project. Intended to be permanent and unbreakable when it was created 15 years ago, the euro zone could now be on the point of losing its first member with the risk of further unraveling to come.
"I believe such a result can be used as a strong negotiating tool so that Europeans can understand that we are not a colony," said Nefeli Dimou, a 23-year-old student in Athens.
Greek banks, which have been closed all week and rationing withdrawals from cash machines, are expected to run out of money within days unless the European Central Bank provides an emergency lifeline. Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis is due to meet top Greek bankers later on Sunday and State Minister Nikos Pappas, one of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's closest aides, said it was "absolutely necessary" to restore liquidity to the banking system now that the vote is over.
However the European Central Bank, which holds a conference call on Monday morning, may be reluctant to increase emergency lending to Greek banks after voters rejected the spending cuts and economic reforms which creditors consider essential to make Greek public finances viable, central bankers said.
In Brussels, EU officials said there would be no comment until the final results are announced.
First indications were that any joint European political response may take a couple of days. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande will meet in Paris on Monday afternoon. The European Commission, the EU executive, meets in Strasbourg on Tuesday and will report to the European Parliament on the situation.
"EU leaders must get together immediately, even on Monday. The situation is too serious to leave to finance ministers," said Axel Schaefer, a deputy head of the Social Democrat (SPD) group in the German parliament.
"You have to have confidence in the ability of the ECB to act. We must use all the possibilities in the EU budget to help Greece, which is still a member of the euro and the EU."
UNCHARTED
A 'No' vote would leave Greece and the euro zone in uncharted waters. Unable to borrow money on capital markets, Greece has one of the world's highest levels of public debt. The International Monetary Fund warned last week that it would need massive debt relief and 50 billion euros in fresh funds.
Greek officials see the IMF report as a vital support for their argument that the bailout terms as they stood would merely have driven Greece further into depression.
Tsipras called the referendum eight days ago after rejecting the tough terms offered by international creditors as the price for releasing billions of euros in bailout funds.
He denounced the bailout terms as "blackmail" and his argument that a 'No' vote would allow the government to get a better deal appears to have convinced many Greeks, particularly among younger voters who have been ravaged by unemployment levels of nearly 50 percent.
"I have been jobless for nearly four years and was telling myself to be patient," said 43-year-old Eleni Deligainni, who said she voted 'No'. "But we've had enough deprivation and unemployment."
Opinion polls over the months have shown a large majority of Greeks want to remain in the euro. But, exhausted and angry after five years of cuts, falling living standards and rising taxes imposed under successive bailout programs, many appear to have shrugged off the warnings of disaster, trusting that a deal can still be reached.

'No' voters begin celebrating in Athens eyeing victory in referendum

'No' voters begin celebrating in Athens eyeing victory in referendum

An anti-austerity 'No' voter celebrates the results of the first exit polls in Athens, Greece on July 5, 2015.
An anti-austerity 'No' voter celebrates the results of the first exit polls in Athens, Greece on July 5, 2015.PHOTO: REUTERS
ATHENS (AFP) - Hundreds of 'No' voters began celebrating in Athens Sunday after early results showed those who rejected further austerity measures in a crucial bailout referendum were poised to win.
Chanting slogans, waving Greek flags and holding aloft 'No' placards, celebrators flocked to the city's Syntagma square and gathered in front of parliament to cry victory, an AFP journalist said.

Greeks defy Europe with overwhelming referendum ‘No’

Greeks defy Europe with overwhelming referendum ‘No’

 A boy holds his mother's vote as she exits a polling booth during the Greek referendum in Thessaloniki on July 5, 2015.
A boy holds his mother's vote as she exits a polling booth during the Greek referendum in Thessaloniki on July 5, 2015.PHOTO: AFP
ATHENS (Reuters) – Greeks voted overwhelmingly 'No' on Sunday in a historic bailout referendum, partial results showed, defying warnings from across Europe that rejecting new austerity terms for fresh financial aid would set their country on a path out of the euro.
With nearly a fifth of the votes counted, official figures showed 60.4 per cent of Greeks on course to reject a bailout offer from creditors that was the official issue of the ballot. The figures showed the Yes vote drew 40.1 per cent.
An official projection of the final result is expected at 1800 GMT. Officials from the Greek government, which had argued that a ‘No’ vote would strengthen its hand to secure a better deal from international creditors after months of wrangling, immediately said they would try to restart talks with European partners.
“The negotiations which will start must be concluded very soon, even within 48 hours,” government spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis told Greek television. "We will undertake every effort to seal it soon.” Euclid Tsakalotos, the government’s chief negotiator said talks could restart as early as Sunday evening.
Many of Athens’ partners have warned over the past week that a ‘No’ vote would mean cutting bridges with Europe and driving Greece’s crippled financial system into outright bankruptcy, dramatically worsening the country’s 5-year-long depression.
If confirmed, the result would also deliver a hammer blow to the European Union’s grand single currency project. Intended to be permanent and unbreakable when it was created 15 years ago, the euro zone could now be on the point of losing its first member with the risk of further unravelling to come.
“I believe such a result can be used as a strong negotiating tool so that Europeans can understand that we are not a colony,” said Nefeli Dimou, a 23-year-old student in Athens.
Greek banks, which have been closed all week and rationing withdrawals from cash machines, are expected to run out of money within days unless the European Central Bank provides an emergency lifeline.
Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis is due to meet top Greek bankers later on Sunday and State Minister Nikos Pappas, one of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s closest aides, said it was “absolutely necessary” to restore liquidity to the banking system now that the vote is over.
However the European Central Bank, which holds a conference call on Monday morning, may be reluctant to increase emergency lending to Greek banks after voters rejected the spending cuts and economic reforms which creditors consider essential to make Greek public finances viable, central bankers said.
In Brussels, EU officials said there would be no comment until the final results are announced. First indications were that any joint European political response may take a couple of days.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande will meet in Paris on Monday afternoon. The European Commission, the EU executive, meets in Strasbourg on Tuesday and will report to the European Parliament on the situation.
“EU leaders must get together immediately, even on Monday. The situation is too serious to leave to finance ministers,” said Axel Schaefer, a deputy head of the Social Democrat (SPD) group in the German parliament. “You have to have confidence in the ability of the ECB to act. We must use all the possibilities in the EU budget to help Greece, which is still a member of the euro and the EU.”
A ‘No’ vote would leave Greece and the euro zone in uncharted waters. Unable to borrow money on capital markets, Greece has one of the world’s highest levels of public debt. The International Monetary Fund warned last week that it would need massive debt relief and 50 billion euros in fresh funds.
Greek officials see the IMF report as a vital support for their argument that the bailout terms as they stood would merely have driven Greece further into depression. Tsipras called the referendum eight days ago after rejecting the tough terms offered by international creditors as the price for releasing billions of euros in bailout funds.
He denounced the bailout terms as “blackmail” and his argument that a ‘No’ vote would allow the government to get a better deal appears to have convinced many Greeks, particularly among younger voters who have been ravaged by unemployment levels of nearly 50 percent.
“I have been jobless for nearly four years and was telling myself to be patient,” said 43-year-old Eleni Deligainni, who said she voted ‘No’. “But we’ve had enough deprivation and unemployment.”
Opinion polls over the months have shown a large majority of Greeks want to remain in the euro. But, exhausted and angry after five years of cuts, falling living standards and rising taxes imposed under successive bailout programmes, many appear to have shrugged off the warnings of disaster, trusting that a deal can still be reached.

What Greece needs is Grunorthodoxy

What Greece needs is Grunorthodoxy

THE problem with the Greek crisis, or Grisis, is that Gregotiators simply aren't Greative enough. Any fool who understands Greconomics will tell you that neither Grausterity nor Grexit offers the besieged country an ideal solution.
This weekend's Greferendum gives Greek voters a Catch 22, or as they say in Greece, Gratch 22. The way of Grausterity will lead to an even longer Grecession and entrench structural Grunemployment, making it Grimpossible for Greece to repay its Greditors. The path of Grexit, however, heads straight to Grinflation and a loss of Gronfidence even if currency Grevaluation could improve competitiveness.
It's time for Greece to think outside Pandora's box. I have a few ideas.
Crowdfunding
Thom Feeney, a London shoe shop employee, has launched a crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo to raise the 1.6 billion euros (S$2.4 billion) that Greece needs to repay the International Monetary Fund.
"It might seem like a lot but it's only just over three euros from each European," Mr Feeney wrote in his campaign pitch.
Hmm, three euros? What's that in, like, everyday terms?
"That's about the same as half a pint in London," according to Mr Feeney, who has raised more than 1 million euros so far.
Seriously, though, the amount of money that Greece is asking for is not insurmountable. It was last negotiating for access to 7.2 billion euros of bailout funds. That's right - 7.2 billion. Warren Buffett puts that kind of money under the table leg to fix a shaky lunch.
Speaking of rich men...
Charity
News this week was that Saudi prince Alwaleed bin Talal has pledged his US$32 billion of wealth to charitable causes, including empowering women, intercultural understanding and disaster relief.
Disaster relief? I think Greece qualifies as a disaster that could use a little relieving, don't you? And after deducting 7.2 billion euros, there will still be plenty of money left over for cultural shows.
But maybe it's too much to ask people to give to Greece and get nothing in return. A more commercial solution might be called for.
Naming rights
Greece isn't without assets. We are talking about the birthplace of one of history's most enlightened civilisations, the birthplace of democracy and major sports events occasionally marred by corruption.
One of the easiest ways to raise money would be to sell naming rights to some of the most famous Greek landmarks. In Singapore, OCBC Bank agreed to pay more than S$50 million to see its name on a few buildings at the new Sports Hub, and that was not even for the main National Stadium. Imagine how much a big multinational would be willing to fork out to have the WalMarthenon in the Samsung Galaxy Acropolis in Athens. I'm not saying it will be an easy sell, but Apple does have about US$178 billion of cash lying around.
Trojan horse
Sometimes, a country in Grisis has got to do what a country in Grisis has got to do.
Way, way, way back in the day, the Greeks built a gigantic wooden horse, stuffed it with soldiers, and subterfuged their way to defeat Troy. There is no need for carpenters in the age of computers - a simple Trojan Horse virus will do. Then, as finely explained in the 1996 movie Independence Day, all Greece has to do is to hire Will Smith to infiltrate IMF or European central Bank headquarters, run the virus on some master server, and remove all traces of Greece's debts. If they can't prove it, they can't claim it.
The bottom line is that Greece's Groblems are not unsolvable, as long as the country can recognise that the Gronventional Grolutions on the table are Grincomplete, at best. When you find yourself standing on the edge of a Griff and the only way out is to take a Greap of Graith, maybe you should just go out with a Grang
.

Malaysian PM says referred "wild allegations" against him to lawyers

Malaysian PM says referred "wild allegations" against him to lawyers

[KUALA LUMPUR] Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Sunday that he had referred "wild allegations" against him to lawyers and would decide any legal steps in a few days.
Najib said he was accused of stealing US$700 million and placing the money in his personal account. "I have referred this to my lawyers and my lawyers will advise me on the best course of legal action that I can take within the country and overseas," Najib told reporters.
The statement comes after a Wall Street Journal (WSJ) report published on Friday said that investigators had traced nearly US$700 million to bank accounts they believed belonged to the prime minister.
Reuters could not independently verify the report.
Najib has previously denied taking any money from the debt-laden state fund or any other entity for personal gain. "I will make the decision in a few days on the next steps that I would take against these wicked accusations," he said.
REUTERS

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