Industry Europe – Issue 22.10

Page 7

COMMENT

BILLJAMIESON

|

Executive Editor of The Scotsman

A monstrous game of bluff Did we ever think the euro crisis had really gone away?

T

he hope was that the dramatic summer pledge of Mario Draghi, the European Central Bank President, to do “whatever it takes” to avert a continental financial crisis and collapse of the euro would defuse the ticking bombs within the single currency area. And so for a time it seemed to succeed. Greek and Spanish bond yields fell from stratospheric levels. The euro strengthened. The fear gauge relaxed. But this was to overlook a key feature of Mr Draghi’s offer of salvation. It came with strings. The biggest string of all was that countries seeking the financial assistance being offered by the ECB needed to formally apply for it. This has not gone down at all well in the finance ministries of countries where help is desperately needed. Not only do they fear that such an admission would weaken what remained of their credibility in financial markets, but also that the admission would be taken as effective agreement to the imposition of austerity measures. The ECB shows no signs of budging: it’s a generous offer on the table but them’s the rules. But now, looking at the hardening mood in Spain, Portugal and Greece, Mr Draghi’s bluff could be about to be called in the most spectacular fashion. The eurozone crisis displays every sign of being about to re-erupt. In recent weeks figures from both eurozone member countries and from Brussels-based Eurostat suggest that major trouble lies ahead. Unemployment across the single currency area has risen to a new high of 11.6 per cent, while early readings of inflation in October point to price pressures remaining persistent with a 2.5 per cent year-on-year increase and little indication they are going to ease any time soon. With external devaluation denied, internal devaluation is reaping a whirlwind of weak economic activity and falling wages across the weaker economies. In Spain, now with

an unemployment rate of almost 26 per cent, this looks a truly toxic combination. The stronger the downward pressure of recession the more difficult it is for governments to reduce their debt burden. The debt to GDP ratio of the currency union has now reached 90 per cent – and there is no sign this is going to be reduced any time soon.

“The Spanish Government, for which the OMT appears to have been tailor-made, has yet to make the application to EU authorities for a line of credit, which is the minimum condition it must satisfy in order to qualify for ECB bond-buying support.” Little wonder that in countries such as Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain there is a deepening apprehension over escape hatches being closed and walls closing in. A full bail-out for Spain and perhaps another for Italy are looming on the horizon while Greece continues to be paralysed by 48-hour general strikes in protest at a proposed new wave of austerity. All this lends growing credence to concerns that Mr Draghi’s bluff is about to be called. Eurozone policymakers are fearful it will be. The head of the Austrian central bank has urged the ECB to activate its latest bond-purchase plan, Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT), in order to prove its effectiveness. The fear is that market confidence in the OMT programme is ebbing. Spanish government yields are edging back up from the ‘lows’ reached in the immediate aftermath of Draghi’s original announcement.

No takers According to the rules that Mr Draghi attached to the OMT offer, there is no government’s bonds it is allowed to buy. Says Stephen Lewis, economist with Monument Securities, “The Spanish Government, for which the OMT appears to have been tailormade, has yet to make the application to EU authorities for a line of credit, which is the minimum condition it must satisfy in order to qualify for ECB bond-buying support.” Of the governments currently subject to bailout terms, ECB officials have made clear that neither the Irish nor the Portuguese qualified for the OMT because they did not have full market access. The ECB, with a deeply apprehensive Germany breathing down its neck, is in no mood to play Lady Bountiful. Relations between the ECB and the finance ministries of deeply indebted eurozone countries will have been further strained by an admission by the European Central Bank that it had miscalculated the ‘haircuts’ it applied to Spanish government debt supplied by banks as collateral for loans. The error arose in the classification of Spanish government securities – easy to shrug off as a minor administrative error but one that will have done nothing whatever for the reputation and credibility of the ECB. The focus in eurozone deliberations has returned to Greece and in particular whether more bail-out money could be disbursed. But it seems the German Government is unhappy with the recent drift of events. How long can Greece keep going without more funds? While the Greek Government had earlier said that it would run out of money on 16 November, there is, says Lewis, a general assumption that it would be able to keep going, if necessary, until early December. Fingers are crossed that this is so, and that events in Portugal and Spain do not provoke a more immediate test of Draghi’s n rescue fund conditions. Industry Europe 7


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Gearing up Gazelle

5min
pages 222-226

Energy is all around us, just waiting to be released

4min
pages 218-221

Adding precision and value to materials handling

4min
pages 202-204

Inspirational furniture design from the Black Forest

3min
pages 214-217

Making connections GN Netcom

5min
pages 208-211

Solutions in particleboard Forestia

3min
pages 212-213

Working for a clean environment IP Cleaning

6min
pages 205-207

Hi-tech polymer solutions Nolato

4min
pages 198-201

Opening up a better future SIBO

4min
pages 193-197

Where process-performance and precision meet

4min
pages 190-192

Winds of change East Metal

6min
pages 180-185

Hearing the difference GN Otometrics

4min
pages 172-175

Values rooted in history Cividale

4min
pages 176-179

Taking non-invasive diagnostic technology further

7min
pages 169-171

Setting new standards in industrial weighing

5min
pages 166-168

Testing, life sciences and renewable energies

4min
pages 161-165

Delivering innovative electronics Heried

4min
pages 154-157

On-board automation Smart Automation

3min
pages 158-160

Specialist shipyard products Damen

4min
pages 150-153

Safe and sound Consilium

6min
pages 146-149

Strong and beautiful Wollsdorf

7min
pages 136-145

Keeping cool EPTA

5min
pages 128-132

Success – from micro to macro Windhager

6min
pages 124-127

In search of excellence Elmo

4min
pages 133-135

Refrigeration innovation Hauser

4min
pages 116-119

Energy-efficient ventilation systems Nuaire

5min
pages 120-123

Tunnel vision Normet

5min
pages 112-115

Driving force for positive change CLAAS

5min
pages 109-111

Catering for every need LOT Catering

6min
pages 96-100

Powered up Slovenské élektrárne

5min
pages 84-87

Pick of the crop Pick

4min
pages 104-108

Global brand with a regional flavour Lambertz

5min
pages 92-95

True taste of success OSM Olecko

4min
pages 101-103

Serbia’s green energy Hidroelektrane

5min
pages 88-91

High voltage, high performance Trench

4min
pages 79-83

Shining light Tamlite

5min
pages 72-75

Bringing the Far East to Europe L-Fashion

6min
pages 64-67

Sustainable and secure Infineon

4min
pages 76-78

When performance matters Noratel

4min
pages 68-71

Croatian quality Galeb

4min
pages 60-63

Winning on competence Skanska

4min
pages 53-59

Danish design and function Vrøgum

4min
pages 50-52

A clear view Stakla

4min
pages 38-40

Clear advantage Rolltech

5min
pages 46-49

Power and precision Schiess

4min
pages 30-33

Crowning glory Tondach

6min
pages 41-45

New sensors at the heart of pump efficiency

5min
pages 26-29

Investment in precision Linamar

5min
pages 34-37

Focus on France Ian Sparks reports from Paris

4min
page 23

Energy news The latest from the industry

10min
pages 11-13

Technology spotlight Advances in technology

3min
page 22

Winning business New orders and contracts

6min
pages 16-17

Russia tightens grip on Europe’s gas

8min
pages 8-10

Bill Jamieson A monstrous game of bluff

4min
page 7

Going for energy efficient gold

5min
pages 14-15

Linking up Combining strengths

7min
pages 18-19

Moving on Relocations and expansions

3min
page 20
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.