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Syriza Trounces New Democracy; Greeks Stop Paying Taxes; Run on Greek Banks Escalates; Get Out!
Townhall.com ^ | January 26, 2015 | Mike Shedlock

Posted on 01/26/2015 8:11:29 AM PST by Kaslin

As late as yesterday I read numerous mainstream media reports that Syriza would win by three to five percent and would need to form an unstable coalition to rule.

In contrast, here was my January 19 prediction (and rationale): Expect a Blowout Win by Syriza in Greece.

Syriza Trounces New Democracy

The final votes are not counted, but exit polls show a blowout, with incumbent party New Democracy going down in flames.

The Wall Street Journal reports Greece’s Radical Leftist Syriza Party Poised to Win Election, Exit Polls Say.

Syriza appeared set to win between 35.5% and 39.5% of the vote, trouncing the incumbent New Democracy party, which managed to secure just 23% to 27% of the vote, according to the exit polls whose results were issued immediately after voting booths closed.

If Syriza is able to secure more than 150 seats on its own—which the exit polls show is possible—it won’t need coalition partners and will have a freer hand in implementing its platform—something that could lead to ruptures with Greece’s creditors.

The polls also showed that voters backed a handful of smaller parties—ranging from the extreme-right Golden Dawn party to the centrist To Potami party—making it unclear whether Syriza would win an absolute majority in Greece’s 300-seat legislature. According to the polls, Syriza was projected to secure between 146 to 158 seats, depending on the final outcome.

Greece Exit Polls

image: http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-wdUADJqt2uw/VMU_p7mIdfI/AAAAAAAAcH0/oEjLoDyS2LU/s400/Greece%2BPolls.png

Note the double-digit (or near double-digit) trouncing of New Democracy leader and current prime minister Antonis Samaras.

Here's an interesting quote from the Journal.

“Europe is self-destructing,” said Polyxeni Konstantinou, a 56-year-old public-sector worker voting in central Athens. “I voted for Syriza because I hope that it will help change the tragic circumstances that now govern Europe. Will Syriza be able to achieve everything it says? Probably not. But whatever it does achieve, then that will be good for Europe.”

Greeks Stop Paying Taxes

Late last week the Financial Times reported Greeks Stop Paying Taxes in Expectation of Syriza Poll Victory.

A reluctance to pay taxes was much criticised by Greece’s creditors as one reason why the country needed a big international bailout. Now many Greeks are again avoiding the taxman as they bet the radical left Syriza party will quickly loosen fiscal policy if it comes to power in Sunday’s general election.

A finance ministry official confirmed on Friday that state revenues had collapsed this month. “It’s normal for the tax take to decline during an election campaign but this time it’s more noticeable,” the official said, avoiding any specific figures on the projected shortfall.

However, two private sector economists forecast the shortfall could exceed €1.5bn, or more than 40 per cent of projected revenues for January.

Angeliki Mousouri, a dentist who is paying off more than €20,000 of tax arrears, said she missed a monthly instalment due in December.

“I don’t expect to be penalised,” she said. “If Syriza is the government they will show leniency to cash-strapped taxpayers.”

Syriza is set to win the election even though it may not achieve an outright majority, according to opinion polls. Three polls published on Friday showed Syriza leading the centre-right New Democracy party of Antonis Samaras, the prime minister, by 4-5 percentage points.
As late as last Friday polls expected New Democracy would lose but not get trounced.

Voting by Feet (Bank Accounts)

ZeroHedge reports Greek Deposit Outflows Soar In Run-Up To Syriza Victory.
The monthly Bank of Greece balance sheet data for the month of December revealed a significant increase in Greek bank ECB borrowing which rose by €11bn in December to €57bn (including €1bn of Emergency Liquidity Assistance). This is more than the €3bn deposit outflow reported for December. It is thus likely that Greek banks had to borrow even more in December to offset not only their lost deposits but likely reduced access to private repo markets, as it happened before during Greek crisis.

We argued in recent weeks that one indirect way of gauging the pace of bank deposit outflows in Greece on a high frequency basis is to look at the inflows into offshore money market funds such as those based in Luxemburg. Purchases of offshore money funds, one way for Greeks to invest their withdrawn bank deposits, spiked to very high levels this week. These purchases totaled €206m during Mon-Thu this week vs. €91m over the previous week (between Jan 9th and Jan 16th), €54m in the week before (between Jan 2nd and Jan 9th), and €107m for December as a whole (€24m per week between Dec 1st and Jan 2nd).

So there is a sharp acceleration this week. If the €3bn deposit outflow reported by the press for the month of December is accurate and these offshore money market purchases are a good proxy for deposit flows, we should have seen deposit outflows of around €4bn in the first two weeks of January and a large €8bn deposit outflow this week alone.

The fear factor, New Democracy’s biggest weapon, has thus risen sharply this week [and clearly backfired].
The above paragraphs not by ZeroHedge but rather from JPMorgan (no link given).

Run on Greek Banks Will Escalate

I repeat my January 9 warning: Another Run on Greek Banks Begins; Get Out While You Still Can; Buy Gold.

Get Out!

There is no reason to hold money in Greek banks, and every reason not to (even if there is talk of ECB guarantees). At this point, the "Juncker Rule" applies (they will lie when it's serious).

It's serious. Get out!

Get Out Where?

By get out, I do not mean to another European bank. If I were a Greek citizen, I would personally worry that any euro-denominated bank (not just Greek banks) would confiscate my money.

For short-term needs, consider US dollars or euros, in hand, not in Greek bank safe deposit boxes.

For mid- to long-term needs, US treasuries (or US treasury ETFs), German bonds (or German bond funds), and gold look attractive, especially gold.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: albania; alexistsipras; bankruns; bulgaria; eu; europeanunion; greece; greeceelection; macedonia; syriza; turkey
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To: Nervous Tick

Oh... you’re “that guy”.


21 posted on 01/26/2015 8:39:16 AM PST by MrB (The difference between a Humanist and a Satanist - the latter admits whom he's working for)
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To: free from tyranny

Do you really believe that a dark day might come when it would be profitable for Constitutionalists to be seen “working together” with radical Marxists such as Obama? I don’t get what you are saying. Bob


22 posted on 01/26/2015 8:39:51 AM PST by alstewartfan (I would go forsooth to the dragon's tooth If thus a chance were gained! Al Stewart)
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To: exnavy
"Stock up on food and ammo. Global economic meltdown this year."

Maybe those Shemita guys are right, and September 2015 will see a third major economic hit, completing the seven year cycle. ("Shemita" is a Jewish concept referring to a seven-year cycle of debt forgiveness and/or economic downfall.) Both 2001 and 2008 saw major hits to the economy, both centering in September.) This has become a big issue with some Christian evangelicals.
23 posted on 01/26/2015 8:42:57 AM PST by Steve_Seattle
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To: Kaslin

Blame the Greeks if you want - but above all, blame Europe’s statist, elitist financial system and Central Bank, which pumped up the debt a decade ago (just like the US housing crisis) and now is trying to solve the problem with bailouts to banks and QE.

The Greeks should have never been in the Euro in the first place, but it was the Brussels wet dream to create the all powerful, progressive/socialist European super-state.

We have a very similar financial system in the USA, and are moving to the same thing here in the USA too


24 posted on 01/26/2015 8:51:18 AM PST by PGR88
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To: Kaslin

25 posted on 01/26/2015 8:56:57 AM PST by outofsalt ( If history teaches us anything it's that history rarely teaches us anything.)
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To: Sgt_Schultze

Nonsense

It’s “climate change”

RIP Greece . . . all hot Greek women welcome in USA


26 posted on 01/26/2015 9:22:04 AM PST by A_Former_Democrat (Stop calling the plagiarist "Dr." KIng . . .)
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To: Kaslin

“Europe is self-destructing,”

The lack of awareness of the cause and solution while realizing the current situation is like watching a kid with a stomach ache who just downed a gallon of Kool-Aid and handfuls of pop-rocks insisting that candy and kool-aid will make it all better.

Socialism for them in the trouble and they insist socialism will get them out of it even when socialism has never created prosperity


27 posted on 01/26/2015 9:29:14 AM PST by Bogey78O (We had a good run. Coulda been great still.)
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To: alstewartfan

“Do you really believe that a dark day might come when it would be profitable for Constitutionalists to be seen “working together” with radical Marxists such as Obama?”

Not obama, but a radical leftist like bernie saunders or fauxahontas? Possible. Not particularly likely in the near future, but given our debt trajectory in 10 or 15 years?

Greece is hopelessly bankrupt. They’re going to repudiate their national debt. The question is merely when and under what conditions. Looks like the Greek people have decided on sooner rather than later. Their economy is now predominantly black market. The Greek government could raise taxes till they turned blue and they’re still not going to be able to pay their debtors back.


28 posted on 01/26/2015 9:33:39 AM PST by RKBA Democrat (The uniparty: celebrating over 150 years of oligarchy and political control!)
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To: MrB; Dr. Thorne; Nervous Tick
Let's be philosophical about this.

After all it was these very Greeks that pointed out to us around 300 BC that "democracy" begins to die in the very minute that elected politicians discover they can write checks on the public treasury to pay their friends for their votes. At the same time they can financially punish their enemies with taxes.

There you go. Tribalism... Democracy.... Oligarchy.... Tyranny ... Revolution .... repeat for a few millenia. Us? Looking to me like the "Oligarchy" stage is well under way.

29 posted on 01/26/2015 9:33:40 AM PST by Kenny Bunk
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To: RKBA Democrat

“The Greek government could raise taxes till they turned blue and they’re still not going to be able to pay their debtors back.” The same oligarchs who put Greece in that hole are using their puppets to push America into the same hole. If Greece had the means to go to war, the reset could be done, but the oligarchs care not a whit that the Greek people are being sacrificed to show Russia what awaits them if they don’t get onto the debt creation economy.


30 posted on 01/26/2015 9:36:51 AM PST by MHGinTN
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To: alstewartfan
Bush took a page out of the Clinton play book with that statement. As Butch Reno stated; they had to destroy Mt. Carmel at Waco TX to save it, killing 86 people I the process including women and children. Bush's TARP Wall Street bank bailout didn't save anything. It made a few banksters much wealthier and kept a few from going to jail but the financial collapse still looms. TARP just postponed it until the US government gets better prepared to defend itself against the pissed off American people.
31 posted on 01/26/2015 9:40:09 AM PST by drypowder
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To: Kaslin

This whole problem with Greece came to light when some government employee took a look at a satellite photo of Athens and saw all the swimming pools in the backyards. Greece had a tax on building swimming pools, and no one was paying it. That started the whole house of cards to start falling.


32 posted on 01/26/2015 9:45:55 AM PST by blueunicorn6 ("A crack shot and a good dancer")
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To: Kaslin

Have Greeks ever paid taxes? Wasn’t that the big problem during the first meltdown? People didn’t pay property tax, and the tax man didn’t come after them.


33 posted on 01/26/2015 9:48:15 AM PST by SpirituTuo
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To: Kaslin

“Angeliki Mousouri, a dentist who is paying off more than €20,000 of tax arrears, said she missed a monthly installment due in December. “I don’t expect to be penalized,” she said. “If Syriza is the government they will show leniency to cash-strapped taxpayers.””

Yeah, and Obama was going to pay the rent, buy gasoline and pass out magic unicorns too. How’d that work out?


34 posted on 01/26/2015 10:07:43 AM PST by oldfart
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To: exnavy
Angeliki Mousouri, a dentist who is paying off more than €20,000 of tax arrears, said she missed a monthly instalment due in December. “I don’t expect to be penalised,” she said. “If Syriza is the government they will show leniency to cash-strapped taxpayers.”

And Obama was going to pay the rent, buy gasoline and hand out magic unicorns too. How'd that work out?

35 posted on 01/26/2015 10:12:50 AM PST by oldfart
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To: exnavy
Angeliki Mousouri, a dentist who is paying off more than €20,000 of tax arrears, said she missed a monthly instalment due in December. “I don’t expect to be penalised,” she said. “If Syriza is the government they will show leniency to cash-strapped taxpayers.”

And Obama was going to pay the rent, buy gasoline and hand out magic unicorns too. How'd that work out?

36 posted on 01/26/2015 10:12:50 AM PST by oldfart
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To: oldfart

Oops!


37 posted on 01/26/2015 10:13:51 AM PST by oldfart
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To: drypowder

I agree with you totally. Bush let America down, and I can no longer defend him. Actually, from about 2005 on, I refused to defend his policies. “Nation building” INDEED!


38 posted on 01/26/2015 10:14:47 AM PST by alstewartfan (I would go forsooth to the dragon's tooth If thus a chance were gained! Al Stewart)
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To: Kaslin

One can vote against austerity. Austerity doesn’t care.


39 posted on 01/26/2015 10:17:10 AM PST by IamConservative (If fighting fire with fire is a good idea, why do the pros use water?)
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To: spokeshave

Precisely. Nobody has talked about the fact that GD’s support barely dropped in spite of the fact that all their leaders have been jailed and the media has had a blackout on them


40 posted on 01/26/2015 10:21:53 AM PST by Viennacon
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