Showing posts with label Cyprus and Troika. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cyprus and Troika. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

30/4/2013: The latest from the island nuked by the Troika 'rescuers'



Cypriot Parliament has narrowly (29:27 votes) approved the EU 'rescue' package agreement that covers EUR 17 billion in funds, according to the majority of the media analysts. Alas, the devil of the package is in the details.

Cyprus is not (repeat - not) getting EUR 17 billion in funds. Instead the package lists the following sources of funding:
- EUR 1.2 billion to be raised via losses on junior bonds in Popular and BoC
- The “bailin” of uninsured depositors (deposits in excess of EUR 100K) and senior bondholders is set to yield €8.3 billion
- EUR 10 billion loan from the euro zone and the IMF of which the IMF will provide EUR 1 billion (http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2013/pr13103.htm)
- EUR 1 billion from rolling over domestically-held government bonds, plus EUR 100 million from extending Russian bilateral loan
- EUR 0.4 billion from gold sales by the Cypriot central bank and EUR 0.5 billion from privatizations

Grand total is, therefore, EUR 1.2 + 8.3 + 10 + 1.1 + 0.9 = EUR 21.5 billion.

Per preliminary MOU, Cyprus 'programme' has three core pillars:

"The first pillar aims to restore the health of the financial system and minimize the contingent liabilities from the banks to the state." This includes haircuts on depositors and bondholders in the first stage - as confirmed in the today's approval vote. In later stages, this involves "a substantial reduction in the size of the banking system in relation to the economy as well as in restructuring and recapitalization of one of the banks."

“The second pillar entails an ambitious and well-paced fiscal adjustment that balances short-run cyclical concerns and long-run sustainability objectives, while protecting vulnerable groups. In addition to the fiscal consolidation already underway—estimated at about 5 percent of GDP— an additional 2 percent of GDP in measures will be implemented during the program period, including by raising the corporate income tax rate from 10 to 12 ½ percent and the tax rate on interest income from 15 to 30 percent. An additional 4½ percent of GDP in measures will be needed over the medium term to achieve a 4 percent of GDP primary surplus by 2018, which is required to put debt on a firmly downward path. There will be protection for the most vulnerable groups. The social welfare system will be reviewed to streamline administration costs, minimize the overlap of existing programs, and improve their targeting to ensure that public resources reach those in need."

The third pillar, per usual IMF waffle, involves 'structural reforms'. “To complement the fiscal consolidation efforts, the program will undertake substantial structural reforms aimed to improve the effectiveness of the public sector. The state’s capacity to collect revenues will be strengthened with the implementation of a comprehensive reform agenda to modernize and harmonize procedures, improve internal coordination, and exploit economies of scale. Public financial management reforms will include the implementation of a medium-term budget framework and the adoption of a law on fiscal responsibility. In addition, to enhance the efficiency of the economy and reduce public debt, viable state-owned enterprises will be privatized. Finally, based on an assessment of needs, the program will supplement the recent reform of the pension system with additional measures to ensure its long-run sustainability.

In short, Cyprus gets the usual Troika 'Package +' of big-bang commitments delivery of which will be measured as common not by achieved sustainability or risk metrics, but by passed legislation and enacted legal changes (paper ahead of real impact). And the '+' bit refers to the total wrecking of the Cypriot economy under the reforms of the banking sector and international financial services sector, plus tax hikes which will assure that if there is any oil / gas off-shore, Cypriots will be out with shovels and snorkelling masks to dig every hydrocarbon molecule out to repay these debts.

Friday, April 19, 2013

19/4/2013: Mountains to climb, canyons to wade across

Nice visual from Pictet gang, sizing up two banking systems:


That was pre-'rescue' of Cypriot economy from itself by the 'benevolent' Troika Partners...

Recall, the package deal includes scaling back Cypriot banks to ca x3 GDP, or cutting the sector back to just about where it was in mid-2012 for Iceland, given the magnitude of GDP contraction from 2012 levels that this would require. It will be the case of roughly 'Look to your left, look to your right - either both of the bank clerks next to you are gone, or you are gone with one of them in tow'.

Updated:

And another visual from Pictet folks:

Friday, March 8, 2013

8/3/2013: The Cyprus' Russian Bail-in Dilemma


With the new Government in place and with more urgency than ever before, Cyprus is heading for the last ditch effort to secure the bailout from the Troika.  However, all indications are there will be no agreement in March, pushing any potential deal closer to the June 3 when EUR1.415 billion of Government bonds come to maturity. The bonds amount to a massive 9.65% of the country GDP and are unlikely to be rolled over unless at a punitive yields.

Cyprus original request for the bailout dates back to June 2011, looking for up to EUR17bn (ca 100% of GDP) and the current foot-dragging from the EU is a clear signal of Frankfurt's and Brussels' conviction that the acute peripheral crisis is now over and there is little risk of contagion from Nicosia. If the full EUR17bn were granted, the bailout would push Cypriot Government debt to ca 145% of GDP, well ahead of the IMF-set sustainability threshold of 120%.

Furthermore, the EU policymakers clearly perceive Cypriot crisis to be distinct from other peripheral states while Cypriot banking system (the cause of the crisis) to be decoupled from the rest of the euro area. The former smacks of the usual euro area denialism, while the latter is probably closer to truth. Nonetheless, someone has to be concerned with sustainability of any debt in excess of 90-100% of GDP in an economy that is about to take a massive hit at the heart of its growth engine: banking and associated exportable services.

Cypriot banks hold assets valued at 8 times the country GDP (roughly EUR 120 billion worth of assets), with deposits of roughly EUR70 billion recorded prior to the recently started 'quiet' bank runs. Within last week alone Cyprus banks lost just over 2% of their deposits. Around 42-43% of these deposits belong to foreign (primarily British and Russian) residents.

The latter are now at the crosshair in the EU vs Cyprus war for bailing-in the depositors in insolvent Cypriot banks.

In 2012, there were some 60,000 Russian expatriates living in Cyprus, a country with the total population back in 2011 at 1.116 million. Russia was the second largest source of tourists inflows into Cyprus in 2011-2012 and Russia received FDI of USD12.3bn via Cyprus (although probably 99%+ of this was recycling of funds that originally left Russia for Cyprus). In 2011 Russia extended a EUR2.5 billion bilateral loan to Nicosia. Despite common theme in the press about Cypriot banking system being used for Russian tax evasion, Russia and Cyprus have signed and ratified the Protocol to the Double Taxation Treaty.

At the end of 2011, many, but not all and not even majority, of the non-Euro deposits in Cypriot banks originated from Russia - amounting to ca EUR18 billion (more than 100% of the Cypriot GDP), but just 20% of the total deposits in the country. Russians are also major holders of equities in BOC and CPB banks. These Russian deposits have declined since then. More ominously, the accounting of these deposits is somewhat dodgy. There are many conflicting figures out there.

Below is the table - courtesy of the Piraeus Bank - detailing the deposits structure in Cypriot banking system through early 2012:



In contrast, Fitch (via International Herald Tribune) reported slightly different figures that are at odds with both above figures and the Min Fin claims (see below):


According to the Min Fin, as of end of 2012, Cyprus banks deposits remain around EUR70 billion and less than EUR30 billion of these are accounted for by foreign depositors, with Russian deposits standing around EUR15 billion. The problem is that all of the above figures include deposits in Cyprus-regulated pure Russian banks, such as division of VTB, for example, which are not going to be covered by the bailout or the haircuts.

A recent estimate by the Euromoney puts non-domiciled Russian deposits in Cyprus closer to 7-10% of total deposits or EUR5-7 billion.


Confusion aside, it is relatively clear that so-called Russian 'oligarchs' funds, while prominent in the overall deposits volumes, are neither the source of the Cypriot problems, nor a source for the sustainable solution to that problem. Even a 50% bail-in of these would not deliver (given the existent EUR100,000 guarantee on deposits, and the fact that large volumes of the Russian money is most likely held in the names of EU-registered entities) Cypriot system to health or even to contribute more than EUR2-2.5 billion to the EUR17-17.5 billion bailout.

Matters are worse, when it comes to bail-in of Russian depositors, when one considers the existent and growing links between the real economies of the two countries. In 2008, Cypriot economy gained EUR1.9 billion (11% of GDP) from tourism trade surplus. Inflows of Russian visitors to the island were up 55% in 2011 in y/y terms and they now represent the second largest source of tourism revenues after the UK (although Russian tourists account for only around 8-10% of all visitors to the island, as opposed to the UK tourists who accounted for closer to 50%). A loss of Russian tourism in the wake of any bail-in would be pretty hard to offset for Cyprus' economy left without the core pillar of International Financial Services. Country income from accounting and legal services amounted to ca EUR700 million or 4.0-4.1% of GDP in 2008, and much of that came from Russian residents, businesses, investors and depositors.

Russian investments in real estate in Cyprus (excluding Russians resident in Cyprus) amounted to ca 7% of total real estate investment back in 2006, a rate that is 1/10th of the UK residents investments there, but nonetheless - significant support for the economy. And this excludes investments by Russian nationals resident in Cyprus.

Overall, prior to the crisis, Russian business and individual activities in Cyprus contributed closer to EUR600-800 million in annual revenues to the economy, excluding taxes and wages. Applying some multipliers to that suggests overall GDP contribution from Russian-linked activities to Cypriot GDP of some EUR2 billion annually or up to 11.7% of the country GDP.

In other words, bail-in of Russian depositors can gain Cyprus some EUR2-3 billion under very adverse conditions imposed on non-resident depositors and cost Cyprus some EUR0.75-1 billion in annual economic losses. How fast does this math start spelling net loss? And how fast does this math start spelling inability to service 120% or so debt/GDP ratio post bail-in?