Banks Bet Greece Defaults on Debt They Helped Hide

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Bets by some of the same banks that helped Greece shroud its mounting debts may actually now be pushing the nation closer to the brink of financial ruin, Nelson D. Schwartz and Eric Dash report in The New York Times.

Echoing the kind of trades that nearly toppled the American International Group, the increasingly popular insurance against the risk of a Greek default is making it harder for Athens to raise the money it needs to pay its bills, according to traders and money managers.

These contracts, known as credit-default swaps, effectively let banks and hedge funds wager on the financial equivalent of a four-alarm fire: a default by a company or, in the case of Greece, an entire country. If Greece reneges on its debts, traders who own these swaps stand to profit.

“It’s like buying fire insurance on your neighbor’s house — you create an incentive to burn down the house,” said Philip Gisdakis, head of credit strategy at UniCredit in Munich.

As Greece’s financial condition has worsened, undermining the euro, the role of Goldman Sachs and other major banks in masking the true extent of the country’s problems has drawn criticism from European leaders. But even before that issue became apparent, a little-known company backed by Goldman, JP Morgan Chase and about a dozen other banks had created an index that enabled market players to bet on whether Greece and other European nations would go bust.

Last September, the company, the Markit Group of London, introduced the iTraxx SovX Western Europe index, which is based on such swaps and let traders gamble on Greece shortly before the crisis. Such derivatives have assumed an outsize role in Europe’s debt crisis, as traders focus on their daily gyrations.

A result, some traders say, is a vicious circle. As banks and others rush into these swaps, the cost of insuring Greece’s debt rises. Alarmed by that bearish signal, bond investors then shun Greek bonds, making it harder for the country to borrow. That, in turn, adds to the anxiety — and the whole thing starts over again.

On trading desks,  debate is fierce over what exactly is behind Greece’s recent troubles. Some traders say swaps have made the problem worse, while others say Greece’s deteriorating finances are to blame.

“This is a country that is issuing paper into a weakening market,” said Ashish Shah, co-head of credit strategy at Barclays Capital, referring to Greece’s need for continual borrowing.

But while some European leaders have blamed financial speculators in general for worsening the crisis, the French finance minister, Christine Lagarde, last week singled out credit-default swaps. Ms. Lagarde said a few players dominated this arena, which she said needed tighter regulation.

Trading in Markit’s sovereign credit derivative index soared this year, helping to drive up the cost of insuring Greek debt, and, in turn, what Athens must pay to borrow money. The cost of insuring $10 million of Greek bonds, for instance, rose to more than $400,000 in February, up from $282,000 in early January.

On several days in late January and early February, as demand for swaps protection soared, investors in Greek bonds fled the market, raising doubts about whether Greece could find buyers for coming bond offerings.

“It’s the blind leading the blind,” said Sylvain R. Raynes, an expert in structured finance at R&R Consulting in New York. “The iTraxx SovX did not create the situation, but it has exacerbated it.”

The Markit index is made up of the 15 most heavily traded credit-default swaps in Europe and covers other troubled economies like Portugal and Spain. And as worries about those countries’ debts moved markets around the world in February, trading in the index exploded.

In February, demand for such index contracts hit $109.3 billion, up from $52.9 billion in January. Markit collects a flat fee by licensing brokers to trade the index.

European banks including the Swiss giants Credit Suisse and UBS, France’s Société Générale and BNP Paribas and Deutsche Bank of Germany have been among the heaviest buyers of swaps insurance, according to traders and bankers who asked for anonymity because they were not authorized to comment publicly.

That is because those countries are the most exposed. French banks hold $75.4 billion worth of Greek debt, followed by Swiss institutions, at $64 billion, according to the Bank for International Settlements. German banks’ exposure stands at $43.2 billion.

Trading in credit-default swaps linked only to Greek debt has also surged, but is still smaller than the country’s actual debt load of $300 billion. The overall amount of insurance on Greek debt hit $85 billion in February, up from $38 billion a year ago, according to the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation, which tracks swaps trading.

Markit says its index is a tool for traders, rather than a market driver.

In a statement, Markit said its index was started to satisfy market demand, and had improved the ability of traders to hedge their risks. The index and similar products, it added, actually make it easier for buyers and sellers to gauge prices for instruments that are traded among players over the counter, rather than on exchanges.

“These indices have helped bring transparency to the sovereign C.D.S. market,” Markit said. “Prior to their creation, there was no established benchmark index enabling investors to track the performance of segments of the sovereign C.D.S. market.”

Some money managers say trading in Greek swaps alone, not the broader index, is the problem.

“It’s like the tail wagging the dog,” said Markus Krygier, senior portfolio manager at Amundi Asset Management in London, which has $40 billion in global fixed-income assets. “There is a knock-on effect, as underlying positions begin to seem riskier, triggering risk models and forcing portfolio managers to sell Greek bonds.”

If that sounds familiar, it should. Critics of these instruments contend swaps contributed to the fall of Lehman Brothers. But until recently, there was little demand for insurance on government debt. The possibility that a developed country could default on its obligations seemed remote.

As a result, many foreign banks that held Greek bonds or entered into other financial transactions with the government did not hedge against the risk of a default. Now, they are scrambling for insurance.

“Greece is not a small country,” said Mr. Raynes, at R&R in New York. “Credit-default swaps give the illusion of safety but actually increase systemic risk.”

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Greece should call everybody’s bluff and simply declare insolvency and a moratorium on all obligations.

Think its time the US government and the governments of this world get on these financial institutions, shut them down, restart them with a new set of rules and regulations so things like this current economic mess never happen again. Then again I hold no faith in this world, to entrust a few to take a logical approach would be unheard of… if its a global economy then treat it like a global economy, citizens have to keep budgets and so should governments. No more tax and spend pork barrell projects.

The problem with the system is that the capitalist are creating the policies; when it should be the government that creates polices that capitalist work within; the tail is wagging the dog. I’m all for profit but it is a select few controlling and manipulating the system and driving markets and making profits. We are letting the bankers and Wall Street create tools to disrupt and cause ciaos instead of harmony and it must stop.

Currency was meant to assist with trade and manage economy it should not be a committee, this is the problem.

The problem with the system is that the capitalist are creating the policies; when it should be the government that creates polices that capitalist work within; the tail is wagging the dog. I’m all for profit but it is a select few controlling and manipulating the system and driving markets and making profits. We are letting the bankers and Wall Street create tools to disrupt and cause ciaos instead of harmony and it must stop.

Currency was meant to assist with trade and manage economy it should not be a commodity, this is the problem.

I agree Greece should call the bluff! They should go back to the Drachma.

Not all countries are equal. The Greek economy is based on tourism and agriculture, Germany destroyed their industry during WWII and it never was rebuilt. The Greeks need tourism to survive and the Euro killed that.

the idea od Credit Default swaps as safety is ludacrous….
for one the insuring party does not have the money to pay the insure obligation.
Greece should just declare insolvency…..

Or, a large entity such as Germany or a group of countries could sell a ton of these CDSs, which typically have terms up to 5 years.

Then, offer to buy from Greece as much long-term debt as they need to sell to make payments on their debt for 5 years. They don’t default, and you keep all of the money from selling the CDSs.

A side problem is that those banks that bought the CDSs from you must be bailed out for their losses.

The Greeks officials behind this blatant deception had a willing accomplice, namely Wall Street investment bankers. The same bankers armed with the knowledge that Greece has a hidden weakness began to amass CDS positions that push the cost of Greek debt higher, exacerbate the risk of default while creating a profit opportunity for the bankers. Just watch the bankers pile on with increasing bets against Greek solvency if the upcoming 10 year auction goes poorly. The bankers hope is to help the vortex of this storm to reach critical mass and create a tornado that threatens the Greeks ability to borrow at any price. They will liquidate these bets just before the inevitable bailout from the EU puts a floor under Greek bond prices. In a familiar refrain the bankers profit will come at great cost to many innocents and taxpayers, not to mention creating a global economic threat. In the sequel these same bankers will use the same derivatives to target Portugal and Spain. Somebody put a leash on these guys!

How closely does this kind of accounting mimick that which defines the health of our corporate firms and our nation? At least someone keeps an eye on it for us at the OMB. How many of us understand the extent of our own positions in time? I see you can point your phone and click a purchase of what lays right before your eyes. I hear folks say they always check their balance before they make a purchase. That is meaningless. Unless you have a full accounting of all outstanding debits and credits as well as plan for expected and unexpected rate adjustments to what you pay on existing debt, you are right in the crosshairs of the Captain’s sights. Does anybody know what tide it is? Does anybody really care? About tides? I know that’s a real thriller when you add on a tsunami.

The EU should threaten to close down local offices of Goldman Sachs all over the continent! Also ban and close JP Morgan Chase and all those practicing such blatant market manipulations because they are threatening the stability of the entire EU economic system. Basically the same manipulators that caused the recent economic meltdown are at it again! It is not enough for GS to make $60,000,000,000 a day but now their greed and manipulation is being used to bankrupt entire countries. Truly despicable!

Rajiv Radhakrishnan March 6, 2010 · 9:23 am

“It’s like buying fire insurance on your neighbor’s house — you create an incentive to burn down the house”.

This statement captures the issue perfectly.

The purchase of credit default swaps must now be based on the principles of insurance; i.e. the need for insurable interest.

A payout from the protection seller must only benefit those who have an interest in the default occurring and are financially worse off because of it. Otherwise, as the statement describes above, it creates incentive for the default event to occur which leads to the issue of “control”.

In theory, when it comes to gambling, the speculator should have no control over the outcome of events; i.e. it’s obvious you wouldn’t let a football player bet that his team lose.

However, with credit default swaps and Greece, the speculators exacerbated Greece’s downfall. Speculators bought up Greek credit default swaps, the spreads widened, confidence in Greece diminished, and thus more buyers purchased Greek credit default swaps to protect themselves, and the cycle continued.

Prospective lenders to Greece were put off by the increase in spreads of Greek credit default swaps and thus Greece was pushed further into trouble because of this vicious cycle.

This is unlikely to have occurred if the speculator has an insurable interest in Greece’s downfall. They would still have control of how the credit default market would work but they wouldn’t exercise their control to influence a Greek tragedy as it would affect them financially. e.g. an driver would not purpose crash his own car, the insurer’s reimbursement package will only ever put him finically in the same place he enjoyed before the crash at best.

One question the SEC should ponder on is : What was exactly the role of Mr.Mario Draghi (Governor of Italian Central Bank) while he was working for Goldman Sachs back in 2005/2006 ?? Was he not in charge of “opening doors” in European Governments in order to introduce all those derivative products, which were sold by Goldman & Sachs, and others?

Greece and Spain won’t pay back. This was a calculated Risk, and a Lesson for the Banking System. The only thing Germans can do is:
REPOSSESS 170 Leopard 2AEX Battle Tanks from Greece, and 190 Leopard 2A6E Battle Tanks from Spain.
U.S.A must REPOSSESS 170 F-16 Jet Fighters from Greece, … the rest is gone with the wind …forever …
Greece must stop paying lucrative pensions with borrowed money, reform the free health care system, and cut down, 4 times the military budged.
//www.defenseindustrydaily.com/Greece-in-Default-on-U-214-Submarine-Order-05801/
Don’t worry; the ECB, the Fed or both will print the money.
And all of us will share the pain, with our hard-earned money.
Bad is never good until worse happens.

there seems to be a few important facts that no one commenting seems to have picked up on…The population of the ENTIRE country of Greece is less than the city of Los Angeles( apprx 11mill). Why do they need 1 TRILLION dollars in bailout?!?!? (17% of that provided by US, the U.S. taxpayer through the IMF) The Greek gov’t OVER promised pensions and pay to government employees (which accounts for 1/3 of the population), So, the IMF is giving them a bailout contingent that they cut the budget. The demands for cutting their budget include: not paying the pensions and benefits promised and privatizing healthcare. At this point, they are not paying the employees ANY money, which in turn led to riots, protests, and 3 innocent people being killed!! So, let me get this straight, a socialist gov’t screwed up their own country, they are being told to reduce number of Union employees and privatize healthcare while our government is doing the very same thing that put Greece in this position. AND to top it all off, we have Goldman Sachs, who is in BED with Washington, making money on betting they will default!!! So, when our credit rating goes down, we turn into Greece and default on all of our debt to China, who will bail us out tell us what to do?

Carlos E. Comesana July 19, 2010 · 6:01 pm

This is a shame! Stop CDS and CDO trades now! Place all of them at an responsible international public exchange and liquate all of them within a logical time frame.