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

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Merkel Needs Opposition Party Votes to Pass Cyprus Bailout

Germany approved the Cyprus bailout on Thursday as expected. However, Merkel required votes from the SPD and Green Party, to do so.


One might not understand the implications when reading the Wall Street Journal report Germany Approves Cyprus Bailout.

Germany’s parliament on Thursday voted in favor of aid for troubled Cyprus by a large majority, giving Chancellor Angela Merkel’s euro-crisis policies broad backing in the face of opposition criticism ahead of fall elections.

Despite a federal election in Germany just five months away, the ruling coalition led by Ms. Merkel succeeded in convincing coalition lawmakers and the main opposition parties—the Social Democrats and Greens—that the negotiated deal serves German interests, and a rejection would rattle the euro zone and lead to a Cypriot bankruptcy.


“Germany got what it wanted from the bailout,” said Christian Schulz, senior economist at Berenberg Bank.



What vs. How


Merkel may have gotten “what” she wanted. I rather doubt she got it “how” she wanted. Reader Bernd from Germany explains …


“The falling apart of CDU/ CSU and FDP coalition is beginning to show in all seriousness now. If Bundestag needs to vote one more time before the federal elections (i.e. on Slovenia, Spain, France), the Government might not make it.”


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



Merkel Needs Opposition Party Votes to Pass Cyprus Bailout

Monday, April 1, 2013

Cyprus Collapse Triggers Unintended Consequences





Some people believe that by imposing losses on investors and reducing the Cyprus banking system liabilities, the European powers have addressed the problems in Cyprus (if harshly). Others think that it was just an unjust tax on depositors. I have written about the sequence of events. Cyprus banks borrowed money and bought Greek government bonds. Greece defaulted, imposing big losses on bondholders.  Cyprus banks postponed marking down their losses. Now, they have to mark those losses and admit that they are insolvent. This triggered a run on the banks. Now, finally, shareholders, bondholders, and depositors are taking their losses. The government of Cyprus and the “Troika” did not provide enough money to pay everyone.


Within Cyprus, there is now uncertainty about remaining deposits, capital controls, and the solvency of the Cyprus government itself. Elsewhere, the focus turns to other countries (e.g. Slovenia) where markets are becoming jittery that the same thing could happen.


The first question is, can one still buy gold in Cyprus? I predict that if it’s still possible to buy gold right now, it may not be for long. I corresponded with Panos Kostopoulos of AMP Gold Bullion Merchants Ltd. in Nicosia. First, he said:








“Immediately after the Cyprus presidential elections [Feb 24], I strongly recommended to Cypriots to buy gold, in order to protect their hard-earned money (taking in consideration wide spreading rumors for the deposits “haircut”, already at the time). Unfortunately, not a single person was convinced to do so. It is obviously needless to mention that I received orders for over 15kg within one day after the haircut was officially announced.”



It is interesting that Cypriots were not proactive, either in buying gold or in transferring Euros to banks outside Cyprus. It’s hard to believe that people will continue to be so naive in the next flare-up of the ongoing crisis.


Regarding whether they sell gold in Cyprus, Mr. Kostopoulos said:








“Our bullion is always kept OUT of Cyprus. We can either import it to Cyprus and sell it, or we can sell to our potential clients Gold warehouse receipts, with which they can go and collect their gold from our collaborators-dealers in Germany, Holland or Belgium. So, the answer to your question if we can sell gold in Cyprus at the moment is YES. However, nowadays, who will pay us in cash (daily withdrawal limit is 300 Euros per person)? Should we receive payment in our Bank account, we would need to apply to the Central Bank for permission to transfer funds out of the country, in order to pay for our scrap suppliers in Greece, so that we would replace our stock and keep our cycle of business going. The approval would take some bureaucracy hassle and at least 48hours, so, since our normal cycle of business is delayed, we are concluding transactions only with selected existing clients, for amounts not exceeding 20,000 Euros, and at a substantially higher premium than before, or than in the rest of the world [3.5% vs. 0.5%].”



Mr. Kostopoulos confirms that gold is not typically being brought into Cyprus. It is also important to note that Cypriots must pay using Euros outside the country, or cash. If they don’t have either, then most cannot get gold (those few who can will only get a limited quantity, and are subject to permission and delays at the central bank, and higher costs).


He was not optimistic that capital controls will be lifted soon.


Shareholders in the banks have taken total losses, though stock market losses do not generally cause a systemic crisis. Bondholders were also wiped out, and this is more serious because bonds are held in the portfolios of insurers, pension funds, and annuities. The Cyprus bond default could also bring down banks in other countries, if they used leverage to buy Cypriot bonds. The most serious impact is that depositors lost deposits over €100,000.


In sharing my thoughts, I take the risk of being wrong. It is not possible to predict the market reaction even in calm times, much less a sea change in volatile and dangerous times such as now. Below is my analysis, logic, and educated guesses about how events may play out over the short to intermediate term.


Cypriots who were formerly wealthy are now impoverished. Businesses may be unable to pay their landlords, suppliers, and payroll. Consumers, who now feel less wealthy, will cut back their spending. Unemployment is likely to spike (it was 14.7% in January).


It is questionable if Cyprus can fund its existing welfare state, much less grow the rolls—especially with a declining tax base. The Cyprus government bond itself currently has a Caa3 rating by Moodys (i.e. speculative, high risk). Can the Cyprus government now sell more bonds to pay maturing bonds plus fund its operations? If not, then many people, including the newly jobless, could be forced to leave the island.


A mass exodus would put downward pressure on real estate prices and on rents. This will impact much of the remaining banking system asset base, leading to further losses for depositors. The system based on borrow-to-consume has probably reached its terminus in Cyprus.


Cypriots face a dilemma. Without capital controls, people would quickly drain the banks of whatever remaining liquid assets they have, and then the banks would collapse utterly. With capital controls, they cause a whole new set of problems (if they can even successfully keep the capital in the country).


Will they offer a special exception to businesses that import products? Cyprus imports food, fuel, raw materials, and machinery1. If they don’t allow importers to send money offshore, it is hard to imagine how these businesses could continue to buy the products that Cypriots need, leading to immediate and desperate shortages. If they do, then it would seem to be a great hole through which massive capital outflows could pour, circumventing the capital controls.


Let’s assume that Cyprus somehow manages to enact rules that differentiate between permissible importing and illicit attempts to send Euros out of the country. There is still their trade deficit, which means capital is leaving unless it is offset by either foreign investment in Cyprus or additional bond selling by the government. Is either of these likely? Can the Cyprus government sustain borrowing at the current market rate, even if the market would bid on its bonds at all?


Capital controls are “necessary” if one accepts that any part of the coercive regime of irredeemable paper money with a government bond as “risk free” asset. But there is a profound and subtle (for now) unintended consequence. Euros in Cyprus are not the same as Euros out of Cyprus. A spread is forced open between what I shall dub “Cypros” and Euros.


To see this, imagine that you had a bank account at a bank in Germany. Someone in Cyprus says he would like to trade Cypros for Euros. He invites you to open an account in Bank of Cyprus and he has opened an account in Germany. He will transfer 10,000 Cypros to your account in Cyprus and in return you will transfer Euros to him in Germany. How many Euros would you bid to buy his 10,000 Cypros?


Less than €10,000.


Why? Unless you planned to go to Cyprus on holiday, holding a balance at Bank of Cyprus does you no good. This is the least of your problems. There are two other risks to your Cypro deposit.


One is that the Bank of Cyprus could collapse. Especially if Cypriots find ways to bypass capital controls, and probably even if not, the bank could default on its deposits. The Cyprus government does not appear to be in a position to provide bailouts—not even the “deposit insurance” promised up to 100,000 Cypros. The European Central Bank and the IMF may have made their best and final offer and could very well leave the depositors of Bank of Cyprus to their fate. There is no way to know today.


The second risk is that Cyprus could formally abandon the Euro. It would be the logical next step, after implicitly switching to Cypros. There is little question that the value of the Cypro would plummet following such an announcement.


Now consider the Cypriot with the 10,000 Cypros. Does he have any reason not to want to trade them for Euros in a German bank? When one side has many good reasons to be reluctant to buy, and the other side has a clear and compelling reason to sell, the price is bound to fall. I would bet an ounce of fine gold against a soggy dollar bill that this spread has already opened up, even if it is not yet reported in the news. Once this genie is out of the bottle, it will be impossible to put it back in, short of a blank check from the European powers.


Let’s look at something else, another unintended consequence, that is probably not well understood. Each cash note circulating in Europe was created by one or another national central bank. I understand from my German friends that paper Euros have a series designation imprinted on them. For instance, “X” means Germany and “G” means Cyprus. It would seem to be the basic operation of Gresham’s Law that people would prefer to hold “X” notes and spend or trade “G” notes away. This is because a bank note is the liability of the issuing bank. With the risk that a Euro note, even if it is currently circulating in France, could be defaulted by the Cyprus central bank or officially redenominated in Cypros, why should people prefer to keep it? Just as the silver coins in widespread circulation in the U.S. in 1965 were pulled for private hoards and only base metal coins were in circulation thereafter, the same phenomenon could occur in reverse with “G” euro bills.


This is a very dangerous development.  Let’s go back to my first question. Is gold still bidding on the Cypro? Aside from some possible inertia, desire to satisfy loyal customers, and remaining inventory, the big picture is that there is an irreparable fissure in the Euro. Due to national and banking system insolvency, the Cypro has split off. While the Euro is irredeemable, the debtors supporting it are still paying the interest.


Will anyone be willing to exchange gold for a Cypro bank deposit locked under capital controls, with risk of default, and no near-term prospect to get it off the island? There is no rational reason why they should. Only so long as the central bank allows bullion dealers to export Cypros at par can gold be imported for sale in Cyprus.


The government may not have realized it yet, but once Cypriots have gold, then they have escaped the prison of the Cypro. They can find ways to get the gold off the island, perhaps by boarding a boat and carrying it in their pockets. The flows out of their banks will, sooner or later, lead them to prohibit buying gold as a way around capital controls.


However, once gold is no longer available, then the final coup de grâce will come quickly. There is an interesting asymmetry. While gold owners no longer desire to get Cypros, holders of Cypros will still desire to get gold. When they cannot buy gold in a direct exchange, what will they do?


They will buy anything that can be readily exchanged for gold. Will Cyprus ban the export of commodities? If not, then holders of Cypros will buy oil, petrol, wheat, and other liquid commodities. They will sell it to those who can pay gold. This constant buying pressure on commodities and other goods will drive up their prices in terms of Cypros. It will send the goods offshore, depriving Cypriots of the ability to consume them.


Mechanically this is simpler than it sounds. Off the island, there is a Euro price for gold and a Euro price for crude oil, say €1244 per ounce and €82 per barrel. If one could exchange an ounce of gold for 16 barrels of crude, it would be a good deal (not including costs such as shipping, and taxes). While this window remains open, it will provide a way for foresighted Cypriots to exchange their Cypros for good gold. Under these market conditions, any Cypriot who can exchange Cypros for 16 barrels of crude can get an ounce of gold.


The window will not remain open for long. This is because the Cypro prices of commodities will rise relentlessly and exponentially. As they are becoming scarcer, and thus Cypriots will be watching the purchasing power of their Cypros falling, the Cypro-to-commodity-to-gold trade will be fueled even more, driving up the prices of commodities further. In the end, the Cypro will be repudiated.


People will call this “hyperinflation”. It will have nothing to do with the quantity of money. Cyprus may or may not be printing Cypros. We would guess they will not, as this is not allowed. While they still pretend that they are still using the Euro, and still deny that they have transitioned to the Cypro, they will have to obey the European rules.


In this scenario, I do not see how Cyprus can fix the problem simply by declaring a new currency. The root of the problem is that the assets backing the bank deposits, and ultimately the Cypro, were proven to be worthless. Bank deposits are the liability of the banks; if the banks’ assets are worthless, then so are their liabilities—i.e. the deposits. As the Cyprus central bank is also insolvent, its liabilities such as the Cyprus “G” Euros are worthless.


Cyprus could try to move to a new currency, and start from scratch. The bad liabilities would be written off, and thus there would be few assets. I assume that this would not be acceptable to the voters who would be rendered penniless. Voters today seem to prefer to have something from nothing, like a cargo cult. They want new paper currency and new bank deposits that “work”. Cyprus can issue such new liabilities. What they cannot do is declare by fiat that the banks’ worthless assets (such as Greek government bonds) shall have market value again.


Cyprus is caught between a rock and a hard place. Cypriot voters would not agree to be 100% wiped out in the name of moving to a better currency. The reality is that the Cypriot banks are nearly 100% wiped out.


Meanwhile, outside Cyprus, pressures are building on other marginal countries and their insolvent banking systems.


The best way to understand what’s happening in the dollar and euro credit markets is to watch the gold basis. Monetary Metals publishes The Last Contango: Gold Basis Report weekly (free registration required).










Zero Hedge



Cyprus Collapse Triggers Unintended Consequences

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Cyprus President’s Family Transferred Millions to London Days Before Bank Confiscations






Before the people of Cyprus knew that their savings were going to be confiscated, the president’s family transferred millions of dollars out of the country through one of their companies.


Nicos_Anastasiades_Cyprus_President

President Nicos Anastasiades in Cyprus Parliament



By JG Vibes
Intellihub.com
April 1, 2013


Over the weekend it was reported that people in Cyprus may lose as much as 60 percent of the money in their savings accounts.


The president of Cyprus, acting on behalf of the people, rolled over to the EU and agreed to go along with their plan and continue to mandate the EU currency under his jurisdiction.


Just days before the confiscations were announced to the public, a company closely connected to the president of Cyprus transferred millions of dollars to London.


RT reported that:


During two days, 12 and 13 of March, the company A.Loutsios & Sons Ltd., co-owned by Loutsios John, the husband of Nikos Anastasiadis’ daughter, Elsa, took five promissory notes worth €21 million from Laiki Bank. The money was then transferred to London, reported Cypriot newspaper Haravgi, affiliated to the communist-rooted AKEL party.  The withdrawal was fulfilled just three days before the Eurogroup meeting when euro finance ministers agreed a 10 billion euro ($ 13 billion) bailout for Cyprus. The newspaper recalls that Cyprus Finance Minister, Michalis Sarris, publicly admitted that the government was aware in advance about the Eurogroup’s intentions to impose a “haircut” on bank deposits of more than 100,000 euros.


Responding to the allegations, Anastasiades said: “The attempt to defame companies or people linked to my family… is nothing but an attempt to distract people from the liability of those who led the country to a state of bankruptcy.”


Yet as president of a country involved in central banking, Anastasiades is absolutely complicit in the countries state of bankruptcy.  In addition,  a list of companies and politicians that had loans written off by banks at the heart of Cyprus’ bailout crisis was published in Greece and was subsequently handed to the Cypriot parliament’s ethics committee.


This situation has caught the attention of people worldwide, who are now wondering if their savings accounts are at risk, considering that Cyprus is not much different from any other central banking government.  These measures are not just possible in other places, they have actually already been planned, Cyprus just happens to be the first place in the EU to get robbed.



Earlier last week Anastasiades admitted that the measures in Cyprus were simply an “experiment” concocted by the European Union in an attempt to deal with their current debt crisis.


It was also revealed in plans dating back to last year that


“Confiscation of the customer deposits in Cyprus banks, it seems, was not a one-off, desperate idea of a few Eurozone “troika” officials scrambling to salvage their balance sheets. A joint paper by the US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Bank of England dated December 10, 2012, shows that these plans have been long in the making; that they originated with the G20 Financial Stability Board in Basel, Switzerland; and that the result will be to deliver clear title to the banks of depositor funds.”


It was also reported last week that a Cyprus style “bail in” was proposed in the new 2013 Canadian budget.


There has been a rush towards precious metals and Bitcoin because people are attempting to retain as much of their wealth as possible, but for many who have had their funds seized it was too late.


To help the people of Cyprus get their assets off the grid, Jeff Berwick has announced that he will be opening a Bitcoin ATM in Cyprus in the coming weeks.


******


Read more articles by this author HERE.


J.G. Vibes is the author of an 87 chapter counter-culture textbook called Alchemy of the Modern Renaissance, a staff writer, reporter for Intellihub.com and Executive Producer of the Bob Tuskin Radio Show. You can keep up with his work, which includes free podcasts, free e-books & free audiobooks at his website www.aotmr.com





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Cyprus President’s Family Transferred Millions to London Days Before Bank Confiscations

The Seven Broken Taboos Of The Cyprus Deal


Via Barclays,


From a European perspective, the list of broken taboos and assumptions continues to grow. It includes:








1. EU sovereign debt cannot be restructured: broken by the Greek PSI.


 


2. Senior bank debt-holders cannot be bailed in: broken several times with respect to banks in Denmark, Ireland and now two Cypriot banks.


 


3. Depositors are sacrosanct: broken by Cyprus – deposits greater than the formal guarantee (EUR100k) in the two biggest banks, with EUR4.2bn of uninsured deposits in Laiki Bank set for a large haircut of unknown size, and Bank of Cyprus deposits set for a haircut of around 35% according to several news reports (eg, Economist, Reuters).


 


4. Depositors should not be punitively taxed: broken by the Cypriot government and implicitly endorsed by the EU, but vetoed by the Cypriot parliament.


 


5. If capital controls are applied in the euro area, it is ‘game over’: broken by Cyprus – banks were shut for nearly two weeks; draconian controls of uncertain duration have been imposed.


 


6. Discussion of a euro exit is ‘off limits’: already it is apparent that euro exit was discussed with respect to Greece during H1 12; this topic again re-emerged last weekend with respect to Cyprus.


 


7. The EU can rely on the IMF to be sympathetic in providing financing without haircuts, even for countries with high public debt: from the Greek and now the Cypriot experience, the Fund is evidently evaluating new programmes more critically, particularly when debt/GDP ratios rise above 100%.



Cyprus can also be considered “the exception that proves the rule”. The euro’s core founding principles, based on the Maastricht Treaty’s “irrevocable” fixing of currency rates, and of the free movement of capital, have been violated. The euro will never be the same again; its preservation now depends urgently upon economic recovery. Without the delivery of economic growth, unemployment will rise to yet higher post-war record levels, and the widespread and growing disillusionment felt by EU citizens towards their economic regime will threaten to spill over into more explicit questioning of the euro’s suitability.







Zero Hedge



The Seven Broken Taboos Of The Cyprus Deal

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Guest Post: Hayek vs Krugman – Cyprus’ Capital Controls


Submitted by Steve Hanke, Professor of Applied Economics, The Johns Hopkins University


Hayek v. Krugman – Cyprus’ Capital Controls






Nobelist Paul Krugman has a propensity to spin and conceal. This allows for deception – the type of thing that hoodwinks some readers of his New York Times column. While deception doesn’t qualify as lying, it also fails to qualify as truth-telling.


Prof. Krugman’s New York Times column, “Hot Money Blues” (25 March 2013) is a case in point. Prof. Krugman sprinkles holy water on the capital controls that will be imposed in Cyprus. He further praises to the sky the post-1980 capital controls that were introduced in a number of other countries.


Prof. Krugman then takes a characteristic whack at all those “idealogues” who might dare to question the desirability of capital controls:


But the truth, hard as it may be for ideologues to accept, is that unrestricted movement of capital is looking more and more like a failed experiment.



Fine. But, not once did Prof. Krugman mention that there just might be a significant cost associated with the imposition of capital controls – a cost with which Prof. Krugman is surely familiar.


Before more politicians fall under the spell of capital controls, they should take note of what another Nobelist, Friedrich Hayek, had to say in his 1944 classic, The Road to Serfdom:


The extent of the control over all life that economic control confers is nowhere better illustrated than in the field of foreign exchanges. Nothing would at first seem to affect private life less than a state control of the dealings in foreign exchange, and most people will regard its introduction with complete indifference. Yet the experience of most Continental countries has taught thoughtful people to regard this step as the decisive advance on the path to totalitarianism and the suppression of individual liberty. It is, in fact, the complete delivery of the individual to the tyranny of the state, the final suppression of all means of escape—not merely for the rich but for everybody.



When it comes to capital controls, I think the Cypriots – even the non-ideologues – might be inclined to agree with Hayek over Krugman.











Zero Hedge



Guest Post: Hayek vs Krugman – Cyprus’ Capital Controls

Monday, March 25, 2013

Guest Post: Hayek vs Krugman – Cyprus’ Capital Controls


Submitted by Steve Hanke, Professor of Applied Economics, The Johns Hopkins University


Hayek v. Krugman – Cyprus’ Capital Controls






Nobelist Paul Krugman has a propensity to spin and conceal. This allows for deception – the type of thing that hoodwinks some readers of his New York Times column. While deception doesn’t qualify as lying, it also fails to qualify as truth-telling.


Prof. Krugman’s New York Times column, “Hot Money Blues” (25 March 2013) is a case in point. Prof. Krugman sprinkles holy water on the capital controls that will be imposed in Cyprus. He further praises to the sky the post-1980 capital controls that were introduced in a number of other countries.


Prof. Krugman then takes a characteristic whack at all those “idealogues” who might dare to question the desirability of capital controls:


But the truth, hard as it may be for ideologues to accept, is that unrestricted movement of capital is looking more and more like a failed experiment.



Fine. But, not once did Prof. Krugman mention that there just might be a significant cost associated with the imposition of capital controls – a cost with which Prof. Krugman is surely familiar.


Before more politicians fall under the spell of capital controls, they should take note of what another Nobelist, Friedrich Hayek, had to say in his 1944 classic, The Road to Serfdom:


The extent of the control over all life that economic control confers is nowhere better illustrated than in the field of foreign exchanges. Nothing would at first seem to affect private life less than a state control of the dealings in foreign exchange, and most people will regard its introduction with complete indifference. Yet the experience of most Continental countries has taught thoughtful people to regard this step as the decisive advance on the path to totalitarianism and the suppression of individual liberty. It is, in fact, the complete delivery of the individual to the tyranny of the state, the final suppression of all means of escape—not merely for the rich but for everybody.



When it comes to capital controls, I think the Cypriots – even the non-ideologues – might be inclined to agree with Hayek over Krugman.











Zero Hedge



Guest Post: Hayek vs Krugman – Cyprus’ Capital Controls

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Cyprus Debate Cancelled, "Not Within Touching Distance" Of A Deal


The situation in Europe remains fluid. ‘Rumors’ circulate from ‘anonymous’ sources but seemingly confirming what ‘news’ we do have from Olli Rehn that there is no deal; Xinhua reports that the Cypriot Parliament has cancelled the debate over the deposit levy for today (following daylong negotiations with the Troika). Further to the ‘no deal’ meme, ekathimerini is reporting, via another senior Cypriot official,


  • *CYPRUS, TROIKA NOT CLOSE TO DEAL, CYPRUS NEWS AGENCY REPORTS

“We are not in touching distance of an agreement,” the official, who preferred to remain anonymous, commented adding that the impasse was a result of the “inflexible” stance of the IMF“Every half hour, new demands are made.” Further comments indicate the ‘low levy’ on the rest of Cyprus-based bank deposits has been abandonedimplying a potential 25% haircut for Bank of Cyprus deposits.


 


Via Xinhua (from Bloomberg),








The same sources said Saturday’s negotiations centered on a levy to be imposed on deposits in the Bank of Cyprus, the island’s largest lender.


 


An alternative option to impose a low levy on deposits in about 26 foreign banks operating in Cyprus was abandoned as potentially wrought with problems, including legal ones.


 


The state broadcaster said that abandoning the option to tax all deposits would possibly mean increasing the levy to up to 25 percent on Bank of Cyprus deposits over 100,000 euros (about 129,000 U.S. dollars), so as to generate about 2.8 billion euros.








Zero Hedge



Cyprus Debate Cancelled, "Not Within Touching Distance" Of A Deal

Hard Deadline to Hit Cyprus Monday as region Faces Economic Collapse







Cyprus faces a hard deadline of Monday imposed by the European Central Bank to avoid a total banking collapse that could echo throughout the region.


CyprusBy Shepard Ambellas
Intellihub.com

March 23, 2013


NICOSIA — Cypriots finance minister (Michalis Sarris) stated Saturday that they have made “significant progress toward reaching an agreement” as thing in the presidential sector heated up.


The region now teeters on the brink of economic turmoil as over 1000 bankers marched from the Cyprus Union Bank headquarters to the Presidential Sector in fear of loosing their jobs. The protestors were stopped by police at the presidential compound for sometime but were eventually let by.


The Raw Story reported today that;


The Cypriot authorities are scrambling to raise 5.8 billion euros ($ 7.5 billion) before a Monday deadline set by the European Central Bank or it will cut off emergency financial aid to the island.


Finance Minister Michalis Sarris said “significant progress” has been made in talks with the EU, ECB and IMF aimed at clinching a 10 billion-euro ($ 13 billion) bailout to save the eurozone member from looming bankruptcy.


Some now argue that this bailout is not the solution but rather a mere temporary lifeline. The New York Times reported, “European Union leaders “may conclude that it is best to let Cyprus default, impose capital controls and leave the euro zone,” Nicolas Véron, a senior fellow at Bruegel in Brussels and a visiting fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said in a recent assessment. “But such a move would violate the promise of European leaders to ensure the integrity of the euro zone no matter what and potentially set off a chain reaction, including possible bank runs in other euro zone member states, starting with the most fragile ones, such as Slovenia and, of course, Greece.”


 


Sources:


^http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/03/23/1000-bank-workers-march-on-cyprus-presidential-palace-to-protest-bank-restructuring/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheRawStory+%28The+Raw+Story%29


^http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/24/business/global/cyprus-makes-fitful-progress-on-bank-bailout-deal.html?_r=0


^http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/03/23/us-cyprus-parliament-idUSBRE92G03I20130323


*****


Read more articles by this author HERE.



Shepard Ambellas is the founder & director of Intellihub.com (a popular alternative news website), researcher, investigative journalist, radio talk show host, and filmmaker.


For media inquires, interview inquires, questions or suggestions for this author email: shepard@intellihub.com





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Hard Deadline to Hit Cyprus Monday as region Faces Economic Collapse

Regrets Pour In; Cyprus Parliament Passes Bailout Plan; Will Her Highness Approve?


The Cypriot parliament passed bailout measures today, but they are not quite the measures that Her Highness, Angela Merkel approves. They are not measures Cypriot citizens will approve of either.


Let’s take a look at the present state of blackmail, as passed by Cyprus and reported by the BBC.

MPs in Cyprus have voted to restructure the island’s banks – one of several measures to ease the crisis, which has hit confidence in the eurozone. They have also approved a “national solidarity fund” and capital controls to prevent a bank run. MPs did not vote on a key measure – a levy on large bank deposits. They rejected similar moves on Tuesday.

The “solidarity fund” would allow the pooling of state assets for an emergency bond issue, reports the Reuters news agency. These include future gas revenues and some pension funds – an idea that German Chancellor Angela Merkel has strongly condemned.


Ms Merkel had warned Cyprus not to “exhaust the patience of its eurozone partners”, reports say.


Businesses in Cyprus have been insisting on payment in cash, rejecting card and cheque transactions. “We have pressure from our suppliers who want only cash,” Demos Strouthos, manager of a restaurant in central Nicosia, told AFP news agency.


Our correspondent says he has never seen this much pressure being applied to a member state by the rest of the eurozone community in recent years.


Regrets Pour In


The Financial Times reports Cyprus laments end of way of life

When he was finance minister a decade ago, Takis Klerides helped steer Cyprus into the EU and the single currency, a defining achievement for a once-impoverished island nation that is far closer to Beirut than Brussels.

But on Friday, with Cypriots contemplating the steep price of an EU bailout, Mr Klerides sounded like a man with regrets.


“We found out the hard way that it’s not a family,” he said of the EU, arguing that the bloc’s biggest members “dictate the terms and everyone else falls in line. It’s becoming a dictatorship.”


“The European project is crashing to earth,” Athanasios Orphanides, who until recently served as central bank governor, said in a separate interview in which he dubbed Cyprus’ treatment by European leaders “the bullying of a people”.


Nicos Michaelas, the general manager of an investment company, Demetra Investment, put it even more bluntly: “We expected our European friends to help and they put a gun to our heads.”


Hello Cyprus, Please Meet Reality


Merkel does not give a damn about you, all she cares about is her September reelection prospects and hardball with you helps those chances. But please, don’t take it personal.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



Regrets Pour In; Cyprus Parliament Passes Bailout Plan; Will Her Highness Approve?

Regrets Pour In; Cyprus Parliament Passes Bailout Plan; Will Her Highness Approve?


The Cypriot parliament passed bailout measures today, but they are not quite the measures that Her Highness, Angela Merkel approves. They are not measures Cypriot citizens will approve of either.


Let’s take a look at the present state of blackmail, as passed by Cyprus and reported by the BBC.

MPs in Cyprus have voted to restructure the island’s banks – one of several measures to ease the crisis, which has hit confidence in the eurozone. They have also approved a “national solidarity fund” and capital controls to prevent a bank run. MPs did not vote on a key measure – a levy on large bank deposits. They rejected similar moves on Tuesday.

The “solidarity fund” would allow the pooling of state assets for an emergency bond issue, reports the Reuters news agency. These include future gas revenues and some pension funds – an idea that German Chancellor Angela Merkel has strongly condemned.


Ms Merkel had warned Cyprus not to “exhaust the patience of its eurozone partners”, reports say.


Businesses in Cyprus have been insisting on payment in cash, rejecting card and cheque transactions. “We have pressure from our suppliers who want only cash,” Demos Strouthos, manager of a restaurant in central Nicosia, told AFP news agency.


Our correspondent says he has never seen this much pressure being applied to a member state by the rest of the eurozone community in recent years.


Regrets Pour In


The Financial Times reports Cyprus laments end of way of life

When he was finance minister a decade ago, Takis Klerides helped steer Cyprus into the EU and the single currency, a defining achievement for a once-impoverished island nation that is far closer to Beirut than Brussels.

But on Friday, with Cypriots contemplating the steep price of an EU bailout, Mr Klerides sounded like a man with regrets.


“We found out the hard way that it’s not a family,” he said of the EU, arguing that the bloc’s biggest members “dictate the terms and everyone else falls in line. It’s becoming a dictatorship.”


“The European project is crashing to earth,” Athanasios Orphanides, who until recently served as central bank governor, said in a separate interview in which he dubbed Cyprus’ treatment by European leaders “the bullying of a people”.


Nicos Michaelas, the general manager of an investment company, Demetra Investment, put it even more bluntly: “We expected our European friends to help and they put a gun to our heads.”


Hello Cyprus, Please Meet Reality


Merkel does not give a damn about you, all she cares about is her September reelection prospects and hardball with you helps those chances. But please, don’t take it personal.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



Regrets Pour In; Cyprus Parliament Passes Bailout Plan; Will Her Highness Approve?

Regrets Pour In; Cyprus Parliament Passes Bailout Plan; Will Her Highness Approve?


The Cypriot parliament passed bailout measures today, but they are not quite the measures that Her Highness, Angela Merkel approves. They are not measures Cypriot citizens will approve of either.


Let’s take a look at the present state of blackmail, as passed by Cyprus and reported by the BBC.

MPs in Cyprus have voted to restructure the island’s banks – one of several measures to ease the crisis, which has hit confidence in the eurozone. They have also approved a “national solidarity fund” and capital controls to prevent a bank run. MPs did not vote on a key measure – a levy on large bank deposits. They rejected similar moves on Tuesday.

The “solidarity fund” would allow the pooling of state assets for an emergency bond issue, reports the Reuters news agency. These include future gas revenues and some pension funds – an idea that German Chancellor Angela Merkel has strongly condemned.


Ms Merkel had warned Cyprus not to “exhaust the patience of its eurozone partners”, reports say.


Businesses in Cyprus have been insisting on payment in cash, rejecting card and cheque transactions. “We have pressure from our suppliers who want only cash,” Demos Strouthos, manager of a restaurant in central Nicosia, told AFP news agency.


Our correspondent says he has never seen this much pressure being applied to a member state by the rest of the eurozone community in recent years.


Regrets Pour In


The Financial Times reports Cyprus laments end of way of life

When he was finance minister a decade ago, Takis Klerides helped steer Cyprus into the EU and the single currency, a defining achievement for a once-impoverished island nation that is far closer to Beirut than Brussels.

But on Friday, with Cypriots contemplating the steep price of an EU bailout, Mr Klerides sounded like a man with regrets.


“We found out the hard way that it’s not a family,” he said of the EU, arguing that the bloc’s biggest members “dictate the terms and everyone else falls in line. It’s becoming a dictatorship.”


“The European project is crashing to earth,” Athanasios Orphanides, who until recently served as central bank governor, said in a separate interview in which he dubbed Cyprus’ treatment by European leaders “the bullying of a people”.


Nicos Michaelas, the general manager of an investment company, Demetra Investment, put it even more bluntly: “We expected our European friends to help and they put a gun to our heads.”


Hello Cyprus, Please Meet Reality


Merkel does not give a damn about you, all she cares about is her September reelection prospects and hardball with you helps those chances. But please, don’t take it personal.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



Regrets Pour In; Cyprus Parliament Passes Bailout Plan; Will Her Highness Approve?

Friday, March 22, 2013

Regrets Pour In; Cyprus Parliament Passes Bailout Plan; Will Her Highness Approve?


The Cypriot parliament passed bailout measures today, but they are not quite the measures that Her Highness, Angela Merkel approves. They are not measures Cypriot citizens will approve of either.


Let’s take a look at the present state of blackmail, as passed by Cyprus and reported by the BBC.

MPs in Cyprus have voted to restructure the island’s banks – one of several measures to ease the crisis, which has hit confidence in the eurozone. They have also approved a “national solidarity fund” and capital controls to prevent a bank run. MPs did not vote on a key measure – a levy on large bank deposits. They rejected similar moves on Tuesday.

The “solidarity fund” would allow the pooling of state assets for an emergency bond issue, reports the Reuters news agency. These include future gas revenues and some pension funds – an idea that German Chancellor Angela Merkel has strongly condemned.


Ms Merkel had warned Cyprus not to “exhaust the patience of its eurozone partners”, reports say.


Businesses in Cyprus have been insisting on payment in cash, rejecting card and cheque transactions. “We have pressure from our suppliers who want only cash,” Demos Strouthos, manager of a restaurant in central Nicosia, told AFP news agency.


Our correspondent says he has never seen this much pressure being applied to a member state by the rest of the eurozone community in recent years.


Regrets Pour In


The Financial Times reports Cyprus laments end of way of life

When he was finance minister a decade ago, Takis Klerides helped steer Cyprus into the EU and the single currency, a defining achievement for a once-impoverished island nation that is far closer to Beirut than Brussels.

But on Friday, with Cypriots contemplating the steep price of an EU bailout, Mr Klerides sounded like a man with regrets.


“We found out the hard way that it’s not a family,” he said of the EU, arguing that the bloc’s biggest members “dictate the terms and everyone else falls in line. It’s becoming a dictatorship.”


“The European project is crashing to earth,” Athanasios Orphanides, who until recently served as central bank governor, said in a separate interview in which he dubbed Cyprus’ treatment by European leaders “the bullying of a people”.


Nicos Michaelas, the general manager of an investment company, Demetra Investment, put it even more bluntly: “We expected our European friends to help and they put a gun to our heads.”


Hello Cyprus, Please Meet Reality


Merkel does not give a damn about you, all she cares about is her September reelection prospects and hardball with you helps those chances. But please, don’t take it personal.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



Regrets Pour In; Cyprus Parliament Passes Bailout Plan; Will Her Highness Approve?