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Old 07-06-2015, 05:56 AM   #381
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The ugly side of the Greek crisis is rearing its head - it has inspired one writer to make a really baaaad pun. Still, for those who like their financial news accented with the smell of napalm...


‘Acropolis Now’ — stocks are toast - MarketWatch
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Old 07-06-2015, 07:12 AM   #382
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The Greek Finance Minister has announced his resignation. Yanis Varoufakis was widely reviled by the other EU finance ministers during the previous negotiations, he's saying that he is stepping down in order to make future negotiations easier.
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Old 07-06-2015, 07:28 AM   #383
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So what happens now? The markets should be interesting this week. ...
Down less than 1% 5 minutes before the open. Not a big deal.

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No, the euro remains just as flawed as ever. ...
I'm pretty sure this whole 'different governments - one currency' issue was a BIG concern at the start, it seems like an obvious problem. They will either figure it out going forward, or as one poster linked - Germany goes back to the DM, or something else.

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Interesting take on the Greek crisis from Thomas Piketty here: ...
OK, but we can't fix today's problems by basing them on the sins of the past. Today's problems require today's solutions. We learn from the past, but we can't hold today's generation to issues of previous generations.

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Old 07-06-2015, 07:39 AM   #384
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I am very interested in this discussion. As for input, I don't have the macro economic knowledge that many of the other posters can share. From personal experience, I was in Greece just a few weeks ago. First trip. Generally, I thought the Greek people were kind, but Athens was deplorable. Crime and prostitution everywhere. We were stuck in the middle of a communist protest. I was with my young nieces and mother and I was on edge the whole time. I left Greece assuming I would never be back due to some type of civil unrest- and this was before the collapse.

Oh and as a side note- we couldn't find any business that took a credit card. Cash only.


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Old 07-06-2015, 07:47 AM   #385
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I am very interested in this discussion. As for input, I don't have the macro economic knowledge that many of the other posters can share. From personal experience, I was in Greece just a few weeks ago. First trip. Generally, I thought the Greek people were kind, but Athens was deplorable. Crime and prostitution everywhere. We were stuck in the middle of a communist protest. I was with my young nieces and mother and I was on edge the whole time. I left Greece assuming I would never be back due to some type of civil unrest- and this was before the collapse.

Oh and as a side note- we couldn't find any business that took a credit card. Cash only.


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Maybe you were in a different part of Athens than I. Or, maybe things decayed badly in a few weeks.

Was there at the beginning of May. They took credit cards. Didn't see or have any reports of crime. We were by the Parliament building. This may be a factor since the police presence is heavy there. We were there on May day and there was a Communist demonstration (surprise?) but it was pretty small.
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Old 07-06-2015, 07:54 AM   #386
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I was in the center. We stayed in the "good neighborhoods" and found them troubling. Buildings decaying everywhere. Only the hotel would take a credit card.

I have spent time world wide. I personally found Athens to be very run down and i was on edge. We went several places outside of Athens that were lovely.

Just my personal experience and it happened to be before the banking issues.


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Old 07-06-2015, 08:00 AM   #387
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Except for oil, the market is a big yawn this morning. So much for the massive discount on stocks due to Greek problems.
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Old 07-06-2015, 08:00 AM   #388
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I was wrong in how I thought Greece would vote. But Greece is in trouble no matter what the outcome of the referendum.

Perhaps Europe will agree to a fiscal union. A monetary union without discipline is unlikely to work, and a fiscal union with one master over all countries' fiscal policy should work. "should" not "will".
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Old 07-06-2015, 09:12 AM   #389
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Here is a good summary of the dire shape that Greece is in:
Why Greece has to drop the Euro

It seems there is no way out. Massive devaluation voted for by the people.
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Old 07-06-2015, 09:24 AM   #390
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I was in the center. We stayed in the "good neighborhoods" and found them troubling. Buildings decaying everywhere. Only the hotel would take a credit card.

I have spent time world wide. I personally found Athens to be very run down and i was on edge. We went several places outside of Athens that were lovely.

Just my personal experience and it happened to be before the banking issues.


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OK. I guess growing up in Chicago toughened me up to city issues.

Some of the "decay" you saw was a huge part of the problem Greece is facing. One of the most mind boggling things I saw in Greece were apparent buildings under construction that were not, and were occupied. It is one of the tax avoidance schemes that "everybody does." But it makes the place look like a country occupied by squatters.
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Old 07-06-2015, 10:29 AM   #391
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Greece is now in the grease...
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Old 07-06-2015, 10:42 AM   #392
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I'm pretty clueless about the US relationship to the IMF, but I'm guessing that we support the IMF financially to some extent. Does that mean that I'm subsidizing Greece via the favorable IMF loans? Or even more so if they do not repay? Just wondering.
As far as I know (which is, unfortunately, also not that much), the IMF debt is senior to virtually all other debts. They will be repaid. It's the ECB (European Central Bank) that will have to write off losses for the most part.

The IMF is indeed funded with US money as well, and has a heavy US representation.
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Old 07-06-2015, 10:51 AM   #393
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It has been pointed out (notably by Margaret Thatcher decades ago) that the common currency was doomed to fail in the absence of central government, which is a nonstarter in Europe.
It was a well-known flaw at the launch of the Euro. Basically, the choice was a euro without the (long-term) necessary political and economic structure, or no euro.

If I remember well it was mostly Mitterand who forced the Germans to go along with the euro, but he couldn't get the platform to go any further. The assumption (prayer?) was that the flaws could be fixed afterwards.

They never were fixed.
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Old 07-06-2015, 11:01 AM   #394
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Greece is now calling for 30% debt forgiveness. It appears Greece must have a "debt haircut" if it is to move forward with the Euro. The Euro nations absolutely cannot allow this because it would embolden leftist groups in Spain and elsewhere to demand similar debt relief. In short, the EU cannot provide what Greece must have and "Grexit" thus appears all but inevitable.
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Old 07-06-2015, 11:03 AM   #395
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Folks, let's keep the thread clean and respectful.
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Old 07-06-2015, 11:03 AM   #396
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Some of the "decay" you saw was a huge part of the problem Greece is facing. One of the most mind boggling things I saw in Greece were apparent buildings under construction that were not, and were occupied. It is one of the tax avoidance schemes that "everybody does." But it makes the place look like a country occupied by squatters.
Many countries have strange tax things like that. In Amsterdam it used to be the case that you paid taxes based on how wide your house was.

That's why it has so many narrow houses with twice or three times the depth of elsewhere.

In Spain some rural areas have old farms on them. If the old farm disappears, the land will become a natural park permanently and worthless. However, as long as the farm is still intact, there is a good chance it can be rezoned into an urban area eventually.

So you end up with an abandoned area of old farmhouses, just enough to keep it standing, in the hopes it will be a bonanza one day. Best chance for said bonanza by the way is having family ties with the local major ....

Never mind the empty tracts of perfectly good farm land that have to stay empty because the EU is paying the owner money to NOT plant olives on said land.
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Old 07-06-2015, 11:31 AM   #397
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I was in the center. We stayed in the "good neighborhoods" and found them troubling. Buildings decaying everywhere. Only the hotel would take a credit card.

I have spent time world wide. I personally found Athens to be very run down and i was on edge. We went several places outside of Athens that were lovely.

Just my personal experience and it happened to be before the banking issues.


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I remember when I was still in elementary school, they were saying some of the famous ruins were deteriorating due to heavy pollution in Athens.

But I would have thought they used EU and other funds to restore all the big sites?
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Old 07-06-2015, 11:35 AM   #398
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Clearly the market is expecting a resolution, given the lack of uncertainty-fueled panic.
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Old 07-06-2015, 11:41 AM   #399
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Tangled webs...
With all of the emphasis on Greece and the European Union, it's easy to forget that world markets are affected by concurrent moves that don't immediately seem to be related.
China is in a somewhat unstable condition, as the Chinese Government has been doing the equivalent of quantitative easing, allowing investors low interest rates to borrow in leverage buying of Asian stocks, which now look to be overvalued. As the government attempts to slow the damage with more easing, the results may be uncertain. Chinese brokerage funds are joining to avoid a 1929 type crash. The Chinese market has doubled in the past year. Shanghai market PE ratios are super high, and therein lies the worry.

Not to change the subject, but it's not all about Greece, and the world markets may be bouncing around over the next two weeks as the Chinese shadow banking finds a base.

Just sayin'
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Old 07-06-2015, 11:48 AM   #400
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Clearly the market is expecting a resolution, given the lack of uncertainty-fueled panic.
What we don't know is how much the market has built in expectations of a default and Greek exit. Since the bonds are close to 16% now, maybe this is mostly discounted?
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