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Goldman Helped Greece Disguise Deficit

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  • Goldman Helped Greece Disguise Deficit

    Goldman Helped Greece Disguise Deficit
    Readers may know that one point of contention in the worries about Greece’s deficits is that it had hidden the fact that it violated Maastricht rule that fine eurozone countries whose fiscal deficits exceed 3% of GDP.

    How was this subterfuge achieved? While the Greek government engaged in some bogus accounting on its own, it also got some help from Goldman. Der Spiegel explains how:

    Goldman Sachs helped the Greek government to mask the true extent of its deficit with the help of a derivatives deal that legally circumvented the EU Maastricht deficit rules. At some point the so-called cross currency swaps will mature, and swell the country’s already bloated deficit.

    Greeks aren’t very welcome in the Rue Alphones Weicker in Luxembourg. It’s home to Eurostat, the European Union’s statistical office. The number crunchers there are deeply annoyed with Athens. Investigative reports state that important data “cannot be confirmed” or has been requested but “not received.”

    Creative accounting took priority when it came to totting up government debt.Since 1999, the Maastricht rules threaten to slap hefty fines on euro member countries that exceed the budget deficit limit of three percent of gross domestic product. Total government debt mustn’t exceed 60 percent.
    The Greeks have never managed to stick to the 60 percent debt limit, and they only adhered to the three percent deficit ceiling with the help of blatant balance sheet cosmetics. One time, gigantic military expenditures were left out, and another time billions in hospital debt. After recalculating the figures, the experts at Eurostat consistently came up with the same results: In truth, the deficit each year has been far greater than the three percent limit. In 2009, it exploded to over 12 percent.

    Now, though, it looks like the Greek figure jugglers have been even more brazen than was previously thought. “Around 2002 in particular, various investment banks offered complex financial products with which governments could push part of their liabilities into the future,” one insider recalled, adding that Mediterranean countries had snapped up such products.

    Greece’s debt managers agreed a huge deal with the savvy bankers of US investment bank Goldman Sachs at the start of 2002. The deal involved so-called cross-currency swaps in which government debt issued in dollars and yen was swapped for euro debt for a certain period — to be exchanged back into the original currencies at a later date.

    Such transactions are part of normal government refinancing. Europe’s governments obtain funds from investors around the world by issuing bonds in yen, dollar or Swiss francs. But they need euros to pay their daily bills. Years later the bonds are repaid in the original foreign denominations.

    But in the Greek case the US bankers devised a special kind of swap with fictional exchange rates. That enabled Greece to receive a far higher sum than the actual euro market value of 10 billion dollars or yen. In that way Goldman Sachs secretly arranged additional credit of up to $1 billion for the Greeks.

    This credit disguised as a swap didn’t show up in the Greek debt statistics. Eurostat’s reporting rules don’t comprehensively record transactions involving financial derivatives. “The Maastricht rules can be circumvented quite legally through swaps,” says a German derivatives dealer.

    In previous years, Italy used a similar trick to mask its true debt with the help of a different US bank. In 2002 the Greek deficit amounted to 1.2 percent of GDP. After Eurostat reviewed the data in September 2004, the ratio had to be revised up to 3.7 percent. According to today’s records, it stands at 5.2 percent.

    At some point Greece will have to pay up for its swap transactions, and that will impact its deficit. The bond maturities range between 10 and 15 years. Goldman Sachs charged a hefty commission for the deal and sold the swaps on to a Greek bank in 2005.

    Yves here. This is why I am dubious of customized OTC derivatives (as opposed to plain vanilla products, like most interest rate and currency swaps). Their main uses are regulatory arbitrage, per above (generally with very rich fees attached) or to shift risk onto chumps.

    Goldman Helped Greece Disguise Deficit naked capitalism

    Go capitalism

  • #2
    IMO, lawmakers will NEVER be able to keep up with accountants, lawyers, etc who will find every legal loophole imaginable to "bend not break" any law. Similiar to performance enhancing drugs being way ahead of the testing.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Jamaicanman View Post
      IMO, lawmakers will NEVER be able to keep up with accountants, lawyers, etc who will find every legal loophole imaginable to "bend not break" any law. Similiar to performance enhancing drugs being way ahead of the testing.
      You don't obviously even get what took place here, because it has everything to do with the government. And how goldman sachs got a hell of a deal.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by BettorsChat View Post
        You don't obviously even get what took place here, because it has everything to do with the government. And how goldman sachs got a hell of a deal.
        What I meant by it is that it sucks that rules and regs can't and won't keep up with well-paid lawyers and accountants finding every loophole to either hide money or avoid taxes or fraud. With the SLOW pace of laws and regs getting passed, they are just ahead of the curve. Didn't say it was right, just the way it is.

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        • #5
          US Bank Bombed Amid Greek Budget Furor

          (Feb. 16) -- A small time bomb exploded at an Athens office of JPMorgan Chase on Tuesday evening amid widespread anger at foreign bankers and their role in the financial crisis that's forcing Greece to make painful budget cuts.

          Police told Reuters the bomb caused only minor damage to the building's exterior. Emergency vehicles were reportedly blocking off the street where the bank's offices are located in the capital's ritzy district of Kolonaki.

          A warning was called in to an Athens newspaper ahead of the explosion, The Associated Press reported. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

          Banks, foreign companies and American institutions have frequently been targeted by bomb attacks in Greece's recent past, especially during times of economic unrest. The Greek government is struggling to balance the European Union's impatience with Greece's runaway budget deficits against staunch popular resistance to job and spending cuts in the country's sprawling public service.

          Moreover, several big U.S. banks, including JPMorgan Chase, have been excoriated in the European media for helping a previous Greek government hide mountains of debt through derivatives that essentially traded billions of dollars for even higher sums of future government revenue.

          Earlier on Tuesday, EU finance ministers chastised Greece for ignoring past warnings about its fiscal wastefulness and violations of European debt and deficit limits so extravagant they shook European and global financial markets once they were revealed.

          Olli Rehn, the EU's commissioner for economic and monetary affairs, gave the Greek government until Friday to tell the EU how it used currency swaps and other financial products to manipulate its debt and deficit figures. The finance ministers of the union's member states also demanded a strict and detailed austerity plan by March 16.

          Before receiving financial aid from fellow EU member states, Greece must "design and implement as soon as possible" a comprehensive restructuring of its economy that includes "specific measures, covering wages, pension reform, health care reforms, public administrations, the product market, the business environment, productivity and employment growth," the finance ministers said.

          Without it, they added, Greece risks "jeopardizing the proper functioning of" the entire euro zone.

          The EU demands are meant to provide donor governments with the political cover they need to justify a potential bailout to wary voters at home. But they are also likely to fan the flames of Greek nationalism and could have a profound impact on the livelihoods of Greek citizens.

          Also on Tuesday, a swath of government employees in Greece began a four-day strike against government austerity measures. They included customs officials, Finance Ministry workers and employees of the government statistics office -- the very agency accused of covering up years of red ink.

          Marxist and other leftist groups in Greece, including the notorious November 17 band broken up in 2002, have periodically launched small assaults like Tuesday's bombing against symbolic targets. In the 1970s and '80s, before Greece ostensibly cleaned up its economic act to qualify for the European Monetary Union, such groups enjoyed some popular support as Robin Hood-like opponents of globalization.

          The bombing of JPMorgan Chase's office could be a sign such violence is coming back.


          JPMorgan Chase Bank Bombed Amid Greek Budget Furor - AOL News

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