The Greek Butterfly Effect

Submitted by Northman Trader

The Greek Butterfly Effect

Many times nothing happens for a long time. Then all of a sudden everything happens at once. Like a dam break. It builds slowly and then it bursts. Example: Who would have ever thought the Confederate flag would be taken down across the South during the same week that a rainbow flag is symbolically hoisted across the entire country? Just because things seem unthinkable doesn’t mean they won’t happen.

Take the global debt construct as another example. For decades the world has immersed itself in ever higher debt. The general attitude has been one of indifference. Oh well, it just goes higher. Doesn’t really impact me or so the complacent rationalize.

When the financial crisis brought the world to the brink of financial collapse the solution was based on a single principle:

Make the math workable.

In the US the 4 principle “solutions” to make the math workable were to:

1. End mark to market which had the basic effect of allowing institutions to work with fictitious balance sheets and claim financial viability.

2. Engage in unprecedented fiscal deficits to grow the economy. To this day the US, and the world for that matter, runs deficits. Every single year. The result: Global GDP has been, and continues to be overstated as a certain percentage of growth remains debt financed and not purely organically driven.

3. QE, to flush the system with artificial liquidity, the classic printing press to create demand out of thin air.

4. ZIRP. Generally ZIRP has been sold to the public as an incentive program to stimulate lending and thereby generate wage growth & inflation. While it could be argued it had some success in certain areas such as housing, the larger evidence suggests that ZIRP is not about growth at all.

If ZIRP’s true goal were to stimulate growth the result of this:

 

…would not have produced this:

 

No, ZIRP’s true purpose is actually much more sinister:

To make global debt serviceable. To make the math work without a default.

Here’s the reality: If we had “normalized” rates tomorrow the entire financial system would collapse under the weight of the math. In short: Default.

Which brings us to Greece the butterfly, the truth and indeed the future:

Greece for all its structural faults is the most prominent victim of fictitious numbers. From the original Goldman Sachs deal to get them into the EU based on fantasy numbers and to numerous bail-outs, the simple truth has always been the same: The math doesn’t work.

It never has and it never will until there is a default on at least some of the debt.

And in this context the Greek government’s move to call for a public referendum on July 5 may be a very clever strategic move as it forces the issue of math.

Here’s the strategic frame-up:

Ultimately what Greece needs is debt relief. Big time debt relief to make the math work.

The global cabal of creditors, ECB, EU, and IMF do not want that.

Why not? Because the very second they do this the classroom will look like this:

 

Everybody would want a cut on their debt starting with Italy, Spain, Portugal etc. and the dominos would be rolling.

No, they do not want this as a default would require acknowledging that debt matters.

What are the alternatives?

Greece’s referendum move risks putting a debt deal up for a vote to citizens. When has that ever happened? Have Americans every voted on their government’s debt spree? Have citizens ever had a say on their central bank’s policies and balance sheet expansions? The answer is no. This so ever important element of our global economic system is completely removed from voters.

And so Yanis Varoufakis is very much correct in highlighting this open secret:

Democracy deserved a boost in euro-related matters. We just delivered it. Let the people decide. (Funny how radical this concept sounds!)

No, voters are very much not permitted to participate in this decision making process. And hence the only reason a Greek referendum may actually proceed is this: To make an example of Greece. You want to default? Watch what we will do to Greece.

But that’s a big gamble for the EU, for the ECB, the IMF and everybody else including China and the US.

Why? Because all of them have carefully orchestrated a construct that they do no want to see disturbed. It’s not an accident that we have seen 46+ rate cuts this year. It’s not an accident that China announced another rate cut just a day after Chinese stocks plummeted 7% this past Friday. It was no accident that the Fed’s Bullard talked about QE4 in October the moment US stocks got close to a 10% correction.

No, you see their primary mission in their timed actions and their words: To make the math work. And to continue to make the math work.

And hence Janet Yellen is not delaying rate hikes because she is “data dependent”. She is dealing in reality: Over $18 trillion in US debt (and ever growing) a large portion of which needs to be refinanced over the next 5 years. And higher rates will become an ever larger burden on the discretionary budget of the US. And the world, heavily indebted that it is, has the same problem:

Math.

So this next week is not so much about Greece the butterfly, but it is about keeping the butterfly from becoming a hindrance to the math working globally. And the Greek government knows this. They are negotiating on the basis that a bad Greek deal from Europe’s point of view is better than a default. Angela Merkel wanted a concluded Greek deal before markets open on Monday. Now she has a mess.

And in the world of gamesmanship every percentage drop in the #DAX will enhance Greece’s negotiation stance.

This past week saw a massive rally in the #DAX in the hopes that a deal would certainly be positively concluded. Now this weekend all this bullish sentiment may find itself tested come Sunday night and Monday morning unless Europe blinks quickly. China is doing its part to support the construct with this latest rate cut, but the ECB can’t be happy about its QE program challenged by the constant Greece distraction:

As we outlined in technical charts a default of Greece would risk a structural repeat of 2011:

And it couldn’t come at a worse time:

No, odds are they’re not going to let Greece default. They can’t afford to. The math has to work.

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11 Comments
Welshman
Welshman
June 28, 2015 10:25 am

If Greece bails, then Portugal, Spain, Italy, and France will want relief. Then the student loan crowd will want relief, next will be homeowners in the G-7 that are underwater on their home loans. To keep consumption up the .01% have loaded the debt slaves up to the point of exhaustion, the world is broke and broken.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
June 28, 2015 10:36 am

In 1843, The Virgin Mary told Sister Madeleine Pourcain: “Universal bankruptcy. Here is the sixth plague, the crisis of commerce. Commerce approaches its end because the wheel of the cart no longer has its pivot, confidence.” The hand writing is on the wall for those smart enough to read and understand. Time to stock up plenty of food. ammo and Christian Prepper friends and all become self sufficient because the Urban Savages will soon fan out of their ruined cities intending to dine on American bush-meat (Long Pork). If that is not “The Days of Noah” end of rampant liberalism and fiat money Socialism, then inform us of what will be..

Welshman
Welshman
June 28, 2015 11:02 am

This July 5th vote in Greece on their debt is a no brainer. Greece is in a depression and has been a colony of Germany for the last 25 years.

kokoda
kokoda
June 28, 2015 11:24 am

Greek Plus:
The dictators don’t want citizens to declare policy – that would be anathema to the scum lords.

Greek Minus:
The bankrupt EU Banks over 4 years had their toxic loans from Greece moved to the ECB, IMF, so they will now survive a Greek exit. Back in 2010-2011, Greece had the Troika over a barrel – that is when they should have exited to make the Banks eat their losses. Now, the EU taxpayers will fund any losses.

A Greek exit now would be a disaster for their economy/citizens, but they deserve it with all their gold-plated benefits that the politicians promised to collect their votes.

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 28, 2015 11:39 am

There are two choices in life: You produce as much as you consume or you are in debt to those that provide you what you consume but don’t produce.

If you’re in debt to someone, you have to do his bidding or you get cut off from those things he supplies you that you rely on to live.

This is as true for a nation as it is for an individual.

dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
June 28, 2015 1:14 pm

While I did go small-scale short the SPX (indirectly) on Friday, I am far from sanguine that this latest Greek Melodrama will tank Wall Street.

Markets are not mechanistic systems. Often, a cause of an expected effect seems to produce the unexpected, opposite effect.

We’ll see what happens tomorrow AM.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
June 28, 2015 3:03 pm

“The Greeks don’t want no freaks”. Fuck the EU, go Icelandic.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ms0VIKlp0CU

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
June 28, 2015 6:55 pm

Administrator: The “Schlock Market” is totally rigged and a lagging indicator; only fools and lackeys give it any mind. It may go up for a couple weeks while everyone else (except big banksters printing money) freezes like deer in a headlight waiting to see if a miracle happens and the world finds a way to pay down debt instead of going bankrupt.

overthecliff
overthecliff
June 29, 2015 8:48 am

I think Admin has the market events of the day pegged.

The markets usually have panics when “everybody” thinks they will go up. That is not the case now.

Look ! Look! at Greece. What is going on that they don’t want us to see?