DK Matai's Photos

    
Douglas Ward Kelley
    
Deepak Chopra
    

Enigmatic Greek Saga of Hiding Government Debt via Complex Derivatives -- Has the Greek crisis taken on a decidedly sub-prime feel following revelations that Wall Street investment banks earned hundreds of millions of dollars over the past decade from transactions that helped the country mask billions of dollars of debt? Apparently Greece wasn’t the only EU government to use these types of deals, where a government would raise cash up front in exchange for handing over the rights to future income streams, to hide the extent of their budget deficit(s) and national debt. Such schemes were also popular in some of the other PIIGS countries.

Greece remains the main subject of discussion for EU finance ministers currently meeting in Brussels. The EU appears to have slept through the Greek use of accounting tricks to hide their deficits and is presently engaged in a good deal of collective self-recrimination for not paying closer attention to the true state of Greece’s dismal public finances much earlier. As a result, the EU is to send teams of experts from the European commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund to police the Greek austerity programme and rule whether the package will achieve its aims. The meeting in Brussels was dominated by working out how the unprecedented policing regime would work.

Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said his task was like changing “the course of the Titanic.”

Swaps Disclosure

Brussels based European Union regulators have ordered Greece to disclose details of complex derivative currency swaps after an inquiry by the Greek Finance Ministry uncovered a series of agreements with banks that may have been used to conceal mounting debts. The swaps were employed to defer interest payments by several years, according to a February report commissioned by the Finance Ministry in Athens that is being examined by lawmakers. "While swaps should be strictly limited to those that lead to a permanent reduction in interest spending, some of these agreements have been made to move interest from the present year to the future, with long-term damage to the Greek state," according to the Greek Finance Ministry report.

Genesis of Swaps Requirement

Greece's burgeoning budget deficit caused it to fail the criteria for joining the single European currency in 1999. Member nations had to reduce deficits to less than 3% of GDP and trim national debt to less than 60% of GDP to join. As a result, it joined the euro in 2001. How did it manage to do that?

Complex Derivatives

Shortly after Greece joined Europe’s monetary union, Wall Street investment banks helped the government quietly raise billions of dollars without immediate visible impact. Athens was thus enabled to continue its free-spending ways while appearing to comply with the strict EU deficit regime, because the currency trades took the form of complex derivatives transactions rather than loans.

Christoforos Sardelis, head of Greece’s Public Debt Management Agency from 1999 to 2004, who joined Banca IMI, the investment-banking unit of Italy’s Intesa Sanpaolo SpA has revealed the following: The Greek government turned to Goldman Sachs in 2002 [other sources suggest that this began even before] to get USD 1 billion through complex derivative swaps. The transaction consisted of a cross-currency swap of about USD 10 billion of debt issued by Greece in dollars and yen. Debt was swapped into euros using an historical exchange rate, a mechanism that implied a reduction in debt and generated about USD 1 billion of funding for that year. The agreement was restructured “a couple” of times between 2002 and 2004. The fees, or the spread, that the investment bank was paid on the contracts was “reasonable.”

The New York Times recently reported: Goldman Sachs made about USD 300 million from a swaps agreement with Greece. The firm's bankers, including President Gary Cohn, travelled to Athens in November 2009 to pitch a deal that would push debt from the country’s health-care services into the future. Greece apparently rejected the offer.

Greek Government View of Investment Banks

George Papaconstantinou, the Greek finance minister, has said that the role played by investment banks such as Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan in striking derivatives deals with the Greek government intended to conceal the true state of the public accounts was not unique to Athens. "Greece was not the only country using them [derivatives]."

Trust Undermined

The revelation that Greece participated in such Wall Street transactions has further undermined its credibility within the EU. Greece had already been criticised by the EU for supplying incorrect information about its budget situation in the past.

Rating Agencies

Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings have just begun questioning the Greek government over its use of the swaps. The rating agencies are doing the right thing, but it may be too little too late. S&P, Moody’s and Fitch all cut Greece’s credit rating in December 2009.

. S&P lowered the rating by one level to BBB+ from A- and the country’s debt was put on negative credit-watch;
. Fitch cut Greece’s rating one level to BBB+ from A-; and
. Moody’s cut Greece to A2 from A1.

Faulty Statistics

Greek officials last month pledged to provide more reliable statistics after the EU complained of “severe irregularities” in the nation’s economic figures. The Greek Finance Ministry report blamed “political interference” for the collapse of credibility in Greece’s statistics. There were “serious weaknesses” in data collection, especially with spending figures, as information often came from second-hand sources, the report found. Eurostat, the EU statistics office, has given Greece until the end of the month to provide more information on the swaps.

Legality

Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou visiting Brussels has said the country’s use of swaps agreements was legal at the time. He also said the contracts are no longer legal and Greece has stopped using them.

EU Pledge

After meeting in Brussels last week, EU political heads pledged to support Greece, but they failed to detail what measures they might adopt to rescue the debt-burdened country. EU finance ministers resolved to keep Greece under unprecedented surveillance as the country attempted to slash its budget deficit from its present level of 13 per cent of GDP to less than 3 per cent by 2012. EU finance ministers have also discussed the type of financial assistance they could theoretically provide to Greece, such as direct loans, guarantees of the country’s debt, and purchasing Greek government bonds.

German View

Volcker Wissing, finance committee chief in Germany's Bundestag, called the Greece swap deals a grave breach of trust. The Greek efforts to mask the size of their debt may make it less likely that the Bundestag will be willing to endorse a debt guarantee or loan package for Greece. Michael Meister, financial affairs spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats, states: “Goldman Sachs broke the spirit of the Maastricht Treaty, though it is not certain it broke the law. What is certain is that we must never leave this kind of thing lurking in the shadows again.” Chancellor Merkel's party within the German government coalition aims to push for new rules that will force euro-region nations and banks to disclose bond swaps that have an impact on public finances. Germany's Constitutional Court has already issued rulings that prohibit -– or complicate –- any bail-out for EMU states. German opinion polls suggest that any PIIGS bailout would be equivalent to suicide for the coalition government.

Deficit Control

The problem for Greece is that it now finds itself under extreme pressure to cut its budget deficit by slashing spending and boosting its revenues. EU leaders last week pressed Greece to get its deficit under control and vowed “determined” action to staunch the worst crisis in the euro’s 11-year history. But the result of these past deals with Wall Street banks is that the Greek government has already handed over the rights to big chunks of its revenues, such as airport fees and lottery proceeds, for years to come. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou more than tripled the 2009 deficit estimate to 12.7 percent after ousting two-term incumbent Kostas Karamanlis in October.

Deflationary Shock

Is the EU incubating a "deflationary shock" for all of Europe by forcing PIIGS nations to tighten fiscal policy in the middle of The Great Unwind and The Great Reset without enough monetary stimulus to offset the effect? Do distinguished ATCA members detect an unfolding eerie parallel with the early 1930s?

[ENDS]

We welcome your thoughts, observations and views. To reflect further on this, please respond within Twitter, Linked and Facebook's ATCA Open and related

Socratic dialogue platform of HQR.

All the best


DK Matai

Chairman and Founder: mi2g.net, ATCA, The Philanthropia, HQR, @G140

To connect directly with:

. DK Matai: http://twitter.com/DKMatai

. Open HQR: http://twitter.com/OpenHQR

. ATCA Open: http://twitter.com/ATCAOpen

. @G140: http://twitter.com/G140

. mi2g: http://twitter.com/intunit

- ATCA, The Philanthropia, mi2g, HQR, @G140 --

This is an "ATCA Open, Philanthropia and HQR Socratic Dialogue."

The "ATCA Open" network on LinkedIn and Facebook is for professionals interested in ATCA's original global aims, working with ATCA step-by-step across the world, or developing tools supporting ATCA's objectives to build a better world.

The original ATCA -- Asymmetric Threats Contingency Alliance -- is a philanthropic expert initiative founded in 2001 to resolve complex global challenges through collective Socratic dialogue and joint executive action to build a wisdom based global economy. Adhering to the doctrine of non-violence, ATCA addresses asymmetric threats and social opportunities arising from climate chaos and the environment; radical poverty and microfinance; geo-politics and energy; organised crime & extremism; advanced technologies -- bio, info, nano, robo & AI; demographic skews and resource shortages; pandemics; financial systems and systemic risk; as well as transhumanism and ethics. Present membership of the original ATCA network is by invitation only and has over 5,000 distinguished members from over 120 countries: including 1,000 Parliamentarians; 1,500 Chairmen and CEOs of corporations; 1,000 Heads of NGOs; 750 Directors at Academic Centres of Excellence; 500 Inventors and Original thinkers; as well as 250 Editors-in-Chief of major media.

The Philanthropia, founded in 2005, brings together over 1,000 leading individual and private philanthropists, family offices, foundations, private banks, non-governmental organisations and specialist advisors to address complex global challenges such as countering climate chaos, reducing radical poverty and developing global leadership for the younger generation through the appliance of science and technology, leveraging acumen and finance, as well as encouraging collaboration with a strong commitment to ethics. Philanthropia emphasises multi-faith spiritual values: introspection, healthy living and ecology. Philanthropia Targets: Countering climate chaos and carbon neutrality; Eliminating radical poverty -- through micro-credit schemes, empowerment of women and more responsible capitalism; Leadership for the Younger Generation; and Corporate and social responsibility.
— with Deepak Chopra and Douglas Ward Kelley.
  • Anna Novikov, Princess Maya and Fransisko Condro like this.
    • Richard Gerber
      I think it should be referred to as a Greek Tragedy the looters have already done their damage. The people that arranged and orchestrated this escaping with legalized loot in the form of fees, commissions and gambling wins are playing with ...their booty. They probably helped create the problem in the first place.
      It's my understanding that Goldman Sachs for example charges 100s of millions in fees to orchestrate and setup this stuff. The looters have no concern for the ultimate effect they already have their cut of the pie much like the government representatives.
      It reminds me of how management screws the shareholders damaging and altering customer relationships doing mergers and acquisitions while creating an environment of fear amongst the employees of the merger resulting in a distracting mess. They probably don't teach that in business school and leave it to the smart ones to figure out. Of course those in the right circles are made privy. What joy is to be found in wealth if one must dodge bullets and fear that the disenfranchised would come to take it from you all as a result of imbalance?
      See More
    • Princess Maya Thank you, DK
    • Douglas Ward Kelley
      When The Data Lies, Outcomes Fry & Black Swans Fly.

      As I recall, to prevent the imminent collapse of Goldman Sachs on September 21, 2008 the Federal Reserve allowed Goldman the unique privilege of becoming a bank holding company? So it cou...ld get in line for the oodles of cash being doled out from the Fed's discount window, to tide them over, as if they were an actual bank? It was a sweet trick that saved the company. But now we learn that this "bank”, If you can still call it that, was involved in many operations that, if not explicitly criminal, certainly seem highly ethically dubious, in that they willfully enabled some devious, but wobbly European governments to hide their debts from their citizens and the ECB? So, in effect the Fed, without transparency, or hint of governmental accounting, through its rescue, became Goldman's partner in these activities, that someone, either at the Fed, or at Goldman, had to know could be fundamentally destabilizing the an entire financial system?

      This seems like a crime to me, but I would't expect much help from the Federal Reserve, however doesn’t mean that the European Commission shouldn't demand a special audit of Goldman and its European clients? I'd start with the old “who, what, where, when and why?" Such as:

      What countries did Goldman Sachs work with prior to, and after the adoption of the Euro? Wasn’t Goldman aware that under the Maastricht Treaty, eurozone government debt wasn't supposed to exceed 60 percent of GDP? So why they were complicit with their clients in concealing some government debts in violation of that treaty? Besides Greece, where allegedly Goldman conspired to hide the degree of debt, what other countries seeking entry into the euro zone were involved? What exactly is the full extent of Goldman's’ knowledge of the liabilities in all the countries they helped? How did they think the European Union could manage without transparency? What abou Goldman’s knowledge other operations in all of Europe? Are the stronger countries, like the UK, Switzerland, France, or others in any trouble similar to the weaker ones? What is the total total European exposure to these creative transactions? Does Goldman itself hold any of this debt, and if so, how good is it? If not, did Goldman deceive investors about their risk? When did Goldman Sachs' American Supervisors of become aware that they were involved in activities that might undermine, not only the integrity of the European Union and the European Central Bank, by dangerously exposing them to complex derivatives products? Who specifically from Goldman explained to Greek officials the possible negative implications of their special instruments and/or techniques? And, who at Goldman, can now explain how any of this actually helped their real economies? Or conversely, can explain to the public why shouldn’t in this activity shouldn't be seen as a colossal Ponzi scheme, perhaps the biggest ever? Can Goldman please explain why this international economics scandal shouldn’t be seen as just another complicated investment scam, designed to disguise sovereign debt as tradable assets? And why didn't anybody see that this was creating a financial bubble with the potential to destabilize the European Union, destroy the Euro, topple friendly democratic governments, and possibly ultimately jeopardize all European asset classes, perhaps even threatening financial globalization itself?

      If all of this was, and/or is still legal, it stinks, and it should be criminal, because the people who are going to suffer most are the citizens of the weaker countries. Taxpayers who had been no prior knowledge of, nor participation in these activities, which now undermine their future prosperity, because they are ultimately on the hook for these debts?

      Years ago Salomon Brothers was blacklisted from working with euro zone countries. I think Goldman Sachs will be extremely lucky if they can somehow slide by the EU after this scandal? This certainly calls into question the responsibility of the Federal Reserve is an effective supervisor? It is obvious that American congressional oversight on the Fed has failed miserably, and Europe should demand some accountability from them too.

      If it were up to me, (and it’s lucky for Goldman that it isn’t,) I would determine that Goldman has not been acting in accordance with its banking license, and would pull that license, and demand a full refund of whatever they collected from the Fed, and let it fail..... And have a full Congressional investigation, with a Special Prosecutor, indictments, trials, and prison sentences for the upper echelon, who, I believe, it could be effectively shown, and proved to a jury, knew exactly what they were doing? So, in addition to their individual financial crimes, an investigation that could unequivocally establishment that they, at Goldman, knew they were potentially exposing the Euro and the European Union to possible catastrophe.

      Do you think I am being overly harsh, or is this a true criminal conspiracy on the level of an Enron? Goldman Sachs you have been a very naughty, naughty Corporation!
      See More
    • Richard Gerber Some good questions Douglas, I think we could sum it up as the financial system is a big ponzi scheme, the markets and currency exchange a casino, with artificially generated wealth created by nothing more than an accounting gimmick.
    • Douglas Ward Kelley
      Here is a C-SPAN interview with Janet Tavakoli, author of "Dear Mr. Buffett: What an Investor Learns 1,269 Miles from Wall Street." where she describes her meetings with investor Warren Buffett prior to the economic downturn. (Program from ...Sunday, April 19, 2009.) In this interview with Brian Lamb she lays out her analysis of our current economic situation in the US, which I am in agreement with. Let's just say that she is highly skeptical about how it's been handled and how it will turn out? Thank you Richard.
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WA20Am0pwtA
      See More