Posted on 06/20/2015 8:21:24 AM PDT by Kaslin
The mad dash and perhaps last dash for euros in Greece is on. Some will undoubtedly be frozen out as soon as the ECB halts emergency liquidity assistance (ELA) to Greek Banks.
Emergence Meeting Monday, Unscheduled ECB Conference Call Today
There's an Emergency Meeting of Eurozone Leader on Monday to discuss Greece, but the ECB may very well act in advance. Once ELA is removed, Greece will soon be forced to issue capital controls.
Greek banks have continued to suffer withdrawals amid concerns that Athens and its creditors will fail to strike a deal to avoid a debt default.Question of Collateral
The eurozones top central bankers are set to decide in the next few hours whether to approve an increase in emergency loans to Greeces banking system after talks on Thursday between finance ministers failed to strike an agreement to prevent the country from defaulting on its debts and potentially crashing out of the currency bloc.
Depositors pulled out more than 1bn on Thursday from the countrys four systemic banks, bringing the total for the week to 3bn - three times the average weekly amount over the past two months.
Greece has already seen more than 30bn of deposit flight this year in an orderly process under which depositors notify their bank of withdrawals and take the cash out 24 hours later.
The latest withdrawals came as eurozone leaders were summoned to an emergency summit on Monday in a last-ditch effort to prevent Greece from defaulting on its debts and potentially crashing out of the EUs common currency.
The European Central Banks governing council will hold an unscheduled conference call on Friday where they will decide whether to allow a rise of around 3bn in Emergency Liquidity Assistance available from the Bank of Greece, the countrys central bank.
A two-thirds majority of voting members of the council would be needed to block the rise. The council, made up of the ECBs top six officials and the governors of member states central banks, could also approve a smaller rise.
The request for an increase came from the Greek central bank on Thursday evening -- just a day after the ECB backed a 1.1bn rise in ELA that took the figure of emergency loans available to 84.1bn. Greek banks are thought to have around 95bn-worth of collateral that they can use in exchange for the loans under the current terms of the loans.
According to people briefed on eurozone planning, Greeces central bank could request that Mr Tsipras legislate for capital controls if no agreement is reached at the Monday night summit, called for 7pm.
The EU will rescue Greece once again by kicking the can down the road again. Look for a temporary postponement of notes due.
What are the odds that the ECB will blink, not calling the debt, or even give the Greeks more money to waste?
It appears that the ATM’s in Greece are forming long lines. Reportedly the big boys have been pulling their Euros out for weeks now.
The well-connected never get hurt. And offer token sympathy to the poor slobs who get their information only when it’s too late.
What will be the effect on US banks? The stock market?
The Greeks love to spend German taxes.
This is like watching two cats, starting from opposite sides, try to walk across the same wire. Each thinks the other should back up.
Weekend of Fear in Greece as Monday Brings Salvation or Ruin..
My guess is some short term volatility in the US markets, finishing with a small upside. Most US banks won’t be impacted. Long term, if Greece leaves the Euro, the dollar should slip against the Euro, helping exporters and hurting tourists. If Greece goes back to the drachma, it should boom as a tourist destination.
The big boys have had plenty of time to get their affairs in order.
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