GGreece on verge of euro exit
- 3 hours ago
- Business
- 224

The Greek prime minister says he does not want a rupture with Europe but he may not be able to avoid a rupture with the euro.
It was striking that Alexis Tsipras echoed the words of a top banker to whom I spoke today when warning that the European Central Bank's [ECB] decision to freeze emergency lending to Greek banks a week ago is causing a humanitarian disaster.
Because even encumbered by savage restrictions on cash transfers and withdrawals, Greek banks are just days away from running out of cash and collapsing.
In those circumstances, not only would millions of Greeks lose their savings, but companies would collapse. And Greece would run out of vital imported food, raw materials and medicine.
Greek banks are desperately in need of a lender of last resort to save them, and the Greek economy.
And sad to say no banker or central banker to whom I have spoken believes the ECB can fulfil that function - because it is struggling to prove to itself that Greek banks have adequate assets to pledge to it as security for new loans.
There are only two options. The Bank of Greece could make unsecured loans to Greek banks without the ECB's permission - which would provoke a furious reaction from Eurozone leaders and would be seen by most of them as tantamount to leaving the euro.
Or it can explicitly create a new currency, a new Drachma, which it could then use to provide vital finance to Greek banks and the Greek economy.
This huge risk, of a Greek exit from the euro, is tonight preoccupying governments, central banks and investors all over the world.
Monday will be a very hairy day on markets.
And although the ECB is expected to continue to refuse to rescue Greek banks, it will chuck billions of euros at bond markets, to prevent the borrowing costs of other vulnerable euro economies rising too far and too fast.
- Greek banks 'days away from running out of cash'
- A referendum that will sink or rescue the Greek economy
- Greece bossed by European Central Bank
- Existential threat to euro from Greek exit
- Greece's bank holiday from hell
- Peston: ECB to turn off emergency Greek help
- ECB faces monumental decisions on Greece
- Why bankers believe Greece will do a deal with its creditors
- Dire warning from Greek bank boss
- How long to Greek capital controls?
- Is there any way Greece can avoid default?
- Will ECB keep Greece afloat for another week?
- Greece isn't any old troubled debtor
- Is Chancellor right to want surplus in normal times?
- Does the Queen's Speech make economic sense?
- Inequality is bad for growth, says OECD
- Don't be scared of deflation, yet
- Interest rates would be higher without immigrants
- Bank expects weaker recovery
- GE2015 and the economy
- An election that really matters
- Has Miliband said a proper sorry?
- Did Labour over-spend?
- Should Tories put the chancellor in straitjacket?
- The huge choice for voters
- Why SNP matters to whole of UK
- How serious for us is the Greek tragedy?
- IMF says UK still in deficit in 2020
- How SNP tests Labour's economic credibility
- Can Tories increase supply of affordable housing?
- Is Ed Miliband constrained by budget responsibility lock?
- Why aren't Labour and Tory rowing about growth?
- Labour to promise 'Budget responsibility'
- Who wins from inheritance tax giveaway?
- US Treasury warns of hung parliament
- Miliband as Thatcher not Foot?
- Are non-doms bad for UK?
- Weep for falling productivity
- Who to trust - business leaders or economists?
- Living standards back at May 2010 level
- Why have Osborne and Balls neutered themselves?
- Zero inflation means lower interest rates for longer
- Can Osborne get off the rollercoaster?
- A £6bn Budget windfall
- How generous is the minimum wage increase?
- Productivity is almost everything
- The power of Le Pen
- The NHS, devolution, and the election
- Will the Budget scale back spending cuts?
- Is the Treasury prepared for the next crash?
- Will this be history's dullest budget?
- Did bankers scam the bank rescue scheme?
- Living standards not quite back to peak
- How Labour pays for student fee cut
- Student-fee questions for Miliband
- How many cheers for migration?
- The long road to NHS devolution
- How the falling oil price is hitting Russia
- Syriza dumps Marx for Blair
- Euro's existential threat
- The deflation that isn't deflation
- Greece and the Eurogroup need a marriage counsellor
- What is Baltic saying about global slowdown?
- Where is the deal between Athens and Berlin?
- UK plans for possible Greek euro exit
- Little space for compromise between Athens and eurozone
- Global debts rise $57tn since crash
- IFS spells out general election choice
- Why Syriza wants a five-month cool-off
- A slower recovery
- Why aren't markets panicking about Greece?
- Can Labour pay for university fee cut?
- Why no le Pen or Farage at Davos?
- A lucky chancellor
- Peston: Will euro QE work?
- Why extreme inequality hurts the rich
- BP sees $50 oil for three years
- How Osborne would run a budget surplus
- QE is a eurozone palliative, not cure
- Could 'good' low inflation become 'bad' deflation?
- Cheer or boo for low inflation?
- Eurozone deflation threat to UK
reece on verge of euro exit
- 3 hours ago
- Business
- 224

The Greek prime minister says he does not want a rupture with Europe but he may not be able to avoid a rupture with the euro.
It was striking that Alexis Tsipras echoed the words of a top banker to whom I spoke today when warning that the European Central Bank's [ECB] decision to freeze emergency lending to Greek banks a week ago is causing a humanitarian disaster.
Because even encumbered by savage restrictions on cash transfers and withdrawals, Greek banks are just days away from running out of cash and collapsing.
In those circumstances, not only would millions of Greeks lose their savings, but companies would collapse. And Greece would run out of vital imported food, raw materials and medicine.
Greek banks are desperately in need of a lender of last resort to save them, and the Greek economy.
And sad to say no banker or central banker to whom I have spoken believes the ECB can fulfil that function - because it is struggling to prove to itself that Greek banks have adequate assets to pledge to it as security for new loans.
There are only two options. The Bank of Greece could make unsecured loans to Greek banks without the ECB's permission - which would provoke a furious reaction from Eurozone leaders and would be seen by most of them as tantamount to leaving the euro.
Or it can explicitly create a new currency, a new Drachma, which it could then use to provide vital finance to Greek banks and the Greek economy.
This huge risk, of a Greek exit from the euro, is tonight preoccupying governments, central banks and investors all over the world.
Monday will be a very hairy day on markets.
And although the ECB is expected to continue to refuse to rescue Greek banks, it will chuck billions of euros at bond markets, to prevent the borrowing costs of other vulnerable euro economies rising too far and too fast.
- Greek banks 'days away from running out of cash'
- A referendum that will sink or rescue the Greek economy
- Greece bossed by European Central Bank
- Existential threat to euro from Greek exit
- Greece's bank holiday from hell
- Peston: ECB to turn off emergency Greek help
- ECB faces monumental decisions on Greece
- Why bankers believe Greece will do a deal with its creditors
- Dire warning from Greek bank boss
- How long to Greek capital controls?
- Is there any way Greece can avoid default?
- Will ECB keep Greece afloat for another week?
- Greece isn't any old troubled debtor
- Is Chancellor right to want surplus in normal times?
- Does the Queen's Speech make economic sense?
- Inequality is bad for growth, says OECD
- Don't be scared of deflation, yet
- Interest rates would be higher without immigrants
- Bank expects weaker recovery
- GE2015 and the economy
- An election that really matters
- Has Miliband said a proper sorry?
- Did Labour over-spend?
- Should Tories put the chancellor in straitjacket?
- The huge choice for voters
- Why SNP matters to whole of UK
- How serious for us is the Greek tragedy?
- IMF says UK still in deficit in 2020
- How SNP tests Labour's economic credibility
- Can Tories increase supply of affordable housing?
- Is Ed Miliband constrained by budget responsibility lock?
- Why aren't Labour and Tory rowing about growth?
- Labour to promise 'Budget responsibility'
- Who wins from inheritance tax giveaway?
- US Treasury warns of hung parliament
- Miliband as Thatcher not Foot?
- Are non-doms bad for UK?
- Weep for falling productivity
- Who to trust - business leaders or economists?
- Living standards back at May 2010 level
- Why have Osborne and Balls neutered themselves?
- Zero inflation means lower interest rates for longer
- Can Osborne get off the rollercoaster?
- A £6bn Budget windfall
- How generous is the minimum wage increase?
- Productivity is almost everything
- The power of Le Pen
- The NHS, devolution, and the election
- Will the Budget scale back spending cuts?
- Is the Treasury prepared for the next crash?
- Will this be history's dullest budget?
- Did bankers scam the bank rescue scheme?
- Living standards not quite back to peak
- How Labour pays for student fee cut
- Student-fee questions for Miliband
- How many cheers for migration?
- The long road to NHS devolution
- How the falling oil price is hitting Russia
- Syriza dumps Marx for Blair
- Euro's existential threat
- The deflation that isn't deflation
- Greece and the Eurogroup need a marriage counsellor
- What is Baltic saying about global slowdown?
- Where is the deal between Athens and Berlin?
- UK plans for possible Greek euro exit
- Little space for compromise between Athens and eurozone
- Global debts rise $57tn since crash
- IFS spells out general election choice
- Why Syriza wants a five-month cool-off
- A slower recovery
- Why aren't markets panicking about Greece?
- Can Labour pay for university fee cut?
- Why no le Pen or Farage at Davos?
- A lucky chancellor
- Peston: Will euro QE work?
- Why extreme inequality hurts the rich
- BP sees $50 oil for three years
- How Osborne would run a budget surplus
- QE is a eurozone palliative, not cure
- Could 'good' low inflation become 'bad' deflation?
- Cheer or boo for low inflation?
- Eurozone deflation threat to UK













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