Greece Likely to Exit Euro This Year, FX Concept’s Taylor Says

Greece Likely to Exit Euro This Year, FX Concept’s Taylor Says

John Detrixhe and Erik  Schatzker, ©2012 Bloomberg News

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

May 8 (Bloomberg) — Greece will probably leave the euro as soon as next  month as the government runs out of cash and European institutions fail to lend  more to the nation, according to John Taylor of hedge fund FX Concepts LLC.

“This summer I think is very likely,” Taylor, founder and  chief executive officer of FX Concepts in New York, said today in an interview  on Bloomberg Television’s “Inside Track” with Erik Schatzker. “The Europeans  aren’t going to give them the money, the International Monetary Fund’s not going  to give them an OK. They will be out of money in June.”

Greece raised 1.3 billion euros ($1.7 billion) of 26-week  Treasury bills today at a yield of 4.69 percent, compared to 4.55 percent at the  previous auction on April 10, according to the Athens-based Public Debt  Management Agency. Investors bid for 2.6 times the securities offered.

The nation’s political leaders are meeting for a second day to  try to form a government after New Democracy’s Antonis Samaras, who won the most  seats in Parliament, said he couldn’t forge a coalition. Another election may be  held in mid-June if politicians fail to form a governing coalition.

The attempt to form a government now passes to Alexis Tsipras,  the head of Syriza. Tsipras ran on a pledge to overturn Greece’s bailout,  helping Syriza emerge as the country’s second- most voted party. He has said he  will seek to form a coalition with other parties that favor reversing the 130  billion-euro bailout, the country’s second aid package, which came after Greece  carried out the biggest debt restructuring in history.

Greek Debt

“I think that people are feeling the implications of a Greek  exit aren’t so bad,” Taylor said. If Greece leaves the euro, Europeans will  “turn around and huddle together and say, ‘how do I help Portugal and  Spain?’”

Of Greece’s 266 billion euros of debt, about 194 billion  euros, or 73 percent, is held by the European Central Bank, euro-area  governments and the IMF, according to the Greek Debt Management Office in  Athens. In 2010, before the first bailout, Greece owed about 310 billion euros,  all to the private sector.

Tsipras said in Athens today that he wouldn’t agree to join  forces with New Democracy and Pasok, the two Greek parties that have supported  austerity measures in return for international funds. He called on the leaders  of both parties to withdraw their pledges to impose the terms in writing by  tomorrow when he is to meet with both of them to discuss forming a  government.

The 17-nation euro extended its longest run of declines  against the greenback since September 2008 as German Chancellor Angela Merkel  rejected government stimulus as the way to spur economic growth, setting up a  clash with French president-elect Francois Hollande.

“Merkel is in a position where she can’t go too far to push  the Greeks to stay in or to give too much money to them,” Talyor said. “I also  feel passionately that the euro is effectively a breakup.”

The euro declined 0.4 percent to $1.30 at 9:01 a.m. in New  York after sliding to $1.2955 yesterday, the weakest level since Jan. 25.

–With assistance from Sara Eisen in New York and Marcus Bensasson in Athens.  Editors: Dave Liedtka, Greg Storey

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2012/05/08/bloomberg_articlesM3PF016K50YH01-M3PG7.DTL#ixzz1uI3gyeMi

 


 

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