Given last week's break of 1.4000 by the euro as the focus on the Greek debt
situation continues, I thought it would be good to take a deeper dive into where
the different countries that make up the euro stand.
First, the S&P
risk ratings of countries in the euro are:
| AAA |
France, Germany, Austria, Finland, Netherlands,
Luxembourg, Lichtenstein. |
| AA+ |
Belgium and Spain, |
| AA |
Ireland and Slovenia, |
| AA |
Italy |
| A+ |
Portugal, Slovakia and Andorra |
| BBB+ |
Greece |
| |
| Non-euro EU Member
countries: |
| AAA |
UK, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, |
| A |
Czech Republic and Malta |
| A- |
Poland and Estonia |
| BBB |
Lithuania and Bulgaria |
| BBB- |
Hungary |
| BB+ |
Romania |
| BB |
Latvia |
Looking at
these ratings, Greece's position among the euro countries is clear. Last week
Greece issued a 10-year bond that was oversubscribed, only after they raised the
interest rate 0.3 percent. This made it a little more expensive for the Greek
government to fund their debt. Since the auction, the bonds have fallen in value
to a yield of 6.86 percent — 4.05 percent above German 10-year bonds. A spread
of this magnitude has not occurred previously between euro countries and is the
kind of differential that gets economists and analysts discussing how a basket
currency like the euro can endure this kind of internal pressure. After all, it
would appear that Greek bonds would be more attractive than the lower-yielding
German bonds that have the same currency risk. In practice though, it is a moot
point because this is a clear case where higher yield may not be attractive to
investors. The risks are clearly so high Greek bonds may not attract funds from
other euro-based government bonds, making it a non-issue for now. But what
happens in the future when Greece gets its act together? Again, this is not an
issue because the Greek bonds should rally, reducing the yield. This sets up an
arbitrage situation for those who trade euro-based bonds, and as long as things
don't get too far out of whack (financial market jargon), internal pressures of
the euro-based government bond markets will not build up enough to disrupt the
currency. Having said this or other similar circumstances are not enough to
break the euro apart, there could be other less serious
repercussions.
Greece is not the only country in the euro zone that has
debt problems as can be seen from the debt ratings which are not perfect, but do
provide a good indication at a glance of where problems lie. What ratings don't
show are news bites, such as S&P firing a warning shot across the UK's bow
over concerns about the health of the British banking system last
week.
Ireland, for example, has taken a hard-line approach and cut public
sector salaries by between 5 and 15 percent. Portugal and Spain are scheduled to
publish new budgets in the next month. Given the amount of scrutiny the euro
zone is under, the content of these budgets could add to the negative sentiment
that is building against the euro if they are viewed as not being substantial
enough. Questions about the viability of Greece's budget, which is already
known, and the sell-off in the newly issued bonds tell us how much credence the
markets had in their proposal. More of the same from Portugal and Spain will
undoubtedly push the euro lower.
I find it interesting that by creating
the European Union and the euro, the Europeans have created a structure that at
some time inevitably would create its own problem of systemic risk for the
member countries and others (like Switzerland) in the region.
We also
have to look at the U.S. economy and how it is likely to compare to the European
economy. If we take an unscientific snapshot, last week's euro data had
unemployment rising to 10 percent, while U.S. GDP for Q4 jumped to 5.7 percent,
far higher than expected. Today's National Manufacturing Index rose to 58.4 from
55.5 in January (a reading above 50 signifies growth). Recent European data is
lagging the U.S.
The technical analysis is interesting. The euro broke
down through the 200-day moving average line on January 20 when it was at
1.4290. The last time the line was crossed and there was a trend change was on
May 7, 2009, which shows what a long-term indicator this can be. The 200-day
support line had been touched three times since December 22, 2009, but held as
support until the break. On Friday the euro finished right on the old support at
1.3856 from June 15, 2009. With this level breaking this morning, the next
support is at 1.3424 from May 18, 2009, setting up a potential drop to this
level that would not be out of the question. Going back to economic
fundamentals, this week we get the unemployment data on Friday. A good number
might provide the momentum for the US$ to push the euro down further. The trend,
at this point, makes a weaker euro more likely than not.