"Two Graphs That Tell It All On Spain by Edward Hugh
First, the one year Euribor reference rate, which has been falling since the ECB started lowering interest rates in the autumn of last year.
And secondly the chart showing the average rate of interest charged by Spanish banks on new mortgages, which as we can see, has been rising steadily since December 2007.
The average interest rate charged by Spanish banks for new mortgages in January 2009 was 5.64%, meaning that the average cost of a new mortgage had gone up by 10.2% over January 2008 (when the rate was 5.1%), and by 1.1% when compared with December 2008. Meanwhile the Euribor reference rate looks set to close this month at all time record lows of 1.91%. In January - the last month for which we have data on mortgage lending - the Euribor rate was 2.27%.
The reasons lying behind this upward movement in Spanish mortgages are twofold. On the one hand the Spanish banks are having increasing difficulty raising finance due to their perceived risk level, and on the other they themselves have have been forced to raise the risk premium they charge to clients due to the rising levels of non performing mortgages they have on their books.
Basically what this means is that the ECB policy isn’t working in Spain, and that despite the massive quantities of liquidity provided, the monetary conditions continue to tighten, and doubly so give that the real value of the rates charged (ie the inflation adjusted value) keeps rising automatically as inflation falls."
- Edward Hugh Says:
March 28th, 2009 at 2:04 pmLook, someone could say “better the eurozone had never been created”, and they could have a good argument. But it has been created, and it exists, and we can’t simply turn back the clock. Or at least we can, but there will be a very high price to pay.
It’s like the mum who says “I wish I hadn’t gotten pregnant so young”, but she had, and that is that.
- Edward Hugh Says:
March 28th, 2009 at 2:02 pmHello Horace,
“only a Spanish problem or is it happening also elsewhere in Western Europe (and to which extent)?”
I don’t know, basically, since I don’t have the data. I would doubt it - in Ireland or Greece perhaps - since there aren’t the same quantities of bad assets piling up everywhere. Anyone reading this have any input to offer?
“If they, for political reasons, don’t opt for the latter choice, do you think that leaving the euro is better that staying in this situation?”
Well I think if they don’t, for political reasons, opt for this, then we are all, collectively commiting hari-kiri (or ritual suicide), as far as I can see. But then they are quite free to decide to do that.
Basically - look at the Almunia Syllogism post - my view is that any country voluntarily leaving the eurozone at this point (from the bottom, bankrupt, end) would be crazy, since it would get torn apart by the markets, since leaving would be an open admission that it couldn’t keep up the pace).
The only country that I could envisage leaving from the “top” end would be France (which is reasonably healthy under our new definition of “healthy”), but if the healthy country left, that would also be sending a strong signal to the markets that they could eat the rest for breakfast, and since France isn’t an island (not even the UK is that) then it needs an environment, so it isn’t very clear to me that even someone like France leaving would be a rational act.
So, if we can imagine that none of the ones about to go bankrupt are going to leave, we reach the much more to the point question as to whether countries can be allowed to go bankrupt inside the zone.
If the only reasonable answer is that we can’t have an “Argentina” in the zone, then this country either needs to be bailed out, or the zone needs to cease to exist.
Since bailouts without strings are absolutely useless, then we are pushed towards strong political union.
So the question is, who would “opt” to leave? I think no one. The risk is that the thing simply blows up. Remember the causal chain:
Financial crisis -> real economic crisis -> political crisis
(with feedback loops)
Well basically we are about to move on to the political crisis stage (we are already begining to see signs of this in the East) as people in one country after another get angry about a mixture of being unemployed, losing their home, and unemployment benefit running out.
So we may well then get a bout of “irrationalism”, and who knows how all that would end up. I have no crystal ball, I just hope someone does something before we get there.
But you can see where Spain is headed from the charts, the more time passes, the more mortgage and commercial loan defaults there are, the more the country risk level (sovereign spread) rises and the more the bank risk level rises, resulting in higher borrowing costs for the government, the banks and the individual household, regardless of interest rate policy at the ECB.
So either you clean out all those bad loans piling up, or this explodes. I obviously hope we will go down the former route.
If things do just blow up though, then there would simply be a huge crater left on Kaiserstrasse where the ECB building used to be, as no one individual country would be willing to take on the responsibilities left (think of all those bit of paper they are buing up).
Basically the whole is greater than the sum of the parts, and the total debt which has been generated by having the eurozone is much, much greater than what would have been created by individual states (all added up). So no one is going to be capable of taking it on.
So then we would have the counterparty risk element (remember Lehman Bros) and it would be look out Tokyo, look out New York time.
So basically, no one would benefit from either leaving the zone, or from the zone disintegrating, although many market participants and “groupie” cheerleaders look more like children playing with matches near a box of ready-primed dynamite to me, as I say somewhere “gee, its gone dark in here, let’s strike one of these……..boom”
@ Don,
I hope, in passing, I have answered your question. Basically, getting its own curerncy back wouldn’t help at this point, since all the debts would need to be repaid in another currency, or you default, and become a cross between Argentina, Cuba and Serbia.
Flat broke, and no one willing to lend you any money."
March 27th, 2009 at 5:20 pm
Doesn’t this argue for either more subsidies from the other countries or, sad to say, Spain having its own currency?