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Cyprus bailout: The wrong signal
1. http://marketsandbeyond.blogspot.com/
http://www.pcgwm.com/
Cyprus bailout: The wrong signal
Cyprus, the eastern Mediterranean island, becomes the fifth country to be rescued: euro
zone Finance Ministers agreed on a EUR 10 bn loan; the novelty of the rescue is a tax on
deposits with banks in Cyprus to amount to EUR5.8 billions. Mrs Merkel (and nobody
contradicted her) found that Cyprus is a centre for money laundering (from Russia and the
Middle East) and therefore depositors should be taxed to participate in the bailout; well, if
it is the case (and probably it is), the country should not have been admitted within the
euro zone in the first place and probably the EU, since these accusations have been
running for so many years; by the way, France, the UK, Luxembourg, The Netherlands,
Italy, Spain should also be concerned (money laundered via banks and/or real estate).
Others explained that a EUR 17 billion loan would overburden the debt/GDP ratio in a way
where Cyprus would not be able to repay which is right at 200%. Frankly, EUR 10 billion
lending does not change the conclusion anyway, at +/- 150% ratio.
Bank accounts were frozen and the tax will be immediately levied on Tuesday when banks
reopen (subject to a positive vote at the Parliament of Cyprus).
The levy is:
6.75% tax on deposits below EUR 100,000
9.9% tax on deposits above EUR 100,000
I would remind the reader that Cyprus banks were meant to go under immediately after
the haircut was decided on Greek debt (EUR 4.5 billion loss) and nobody foresaw the
problem coming? I do not believe it but since the fiscal situation of Cyprus has
deteriorated markedly (oh! Yes, I had forgotten that Presidential elections in Cyprus were
held late February 2013…).
Besides the morally disputable action –why punishing the honest citizen who has saved all
his life and in addition may have loans on the other side? – It is a very dangerous action
sending a clear signal to all European citizens and the rest of the world: Europe is no
longer a safe place for depositors; we knew that artificially low rates and rising
inflation were in motion to deprive savers, but Saturday’s decision is a leapfrog in the
wrong direction. I understand Mrs Merkel who wants to send a tough signal to her public
opinion and Parliament. I am not either convinced by the reason given by the Dutch
Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem: “As it is a contribution to the financial stability of
Cyprus, it seems just to ask a contribution of all deposit holders”, so what about the
Greeks, Portuguese, Irish and Spanish? And what about senior and junior lenders: I would
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2. http://marketsandbeyond.blogspot.com/
http://www.pcgwm.com/
be most interested to see whether they will be hit and if yes, in which magnitude (no
details on this-probably banks mainly financed themselves via deposits; I did not look at
aggregated Cypriot bank’s balance sheets)?
This is creating a precedent which will hit the confidence in the euro zone
institutional environment and safety for depositors. Despites all assurances
yesterday and today, particularly in Spain, that Cypus is a special case (it is ALWAYS a
special case), residing in a trouble euro zone country, I would be very very worried and
would not wait to get most of my saving in a safe place (i.e. outside the euro zone -the
nearest is London). No depositor in the euro zone is safe any longer with his savings: each
country could impose such a tax for whatever reason, good or bad (remember Roosevelt
stealing gold from Americans in April 1933). This would be politically correct: tax all
deposits above EUR100.000 in countries receiving EU money, and why not in countries
with disastrous public account (France and Italy). Not the way forward for a sustainable
fiscal consolidation to create the bedrock of future prosperity.
In the meantime France will not abide by the Maastricht criteria in 2013 (and 2014, I bet),
or 8 years over the past 11, without any sanction, despite repeated assurances. Another
wrong signal: the rules do not apply the same way to every euro zone country.
Source:
Bloomberg: Europe Braces for Fresh Turmoil With Cyprus Deposit Levy
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-03-17/europe-braces-for-renewed-turmoil-as-
cyprus-deposit-levy-at-risk.html
Financial Times: Cypriot bank deposits tapped as part of €10bn eurozone bailout
http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/33fb34b4-8df8-11e2-9d6b-
00144feabdc0.html#axzz2NphVijdj
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