Besides the risky bet on further quantitative easing, another hedge fund favorite has become purchasing Greek sovereign debt. Some of the hedge funds amassed such large positions of Greek debt, that they may have quite some bargaining power in the upcoming debt restructuring. Because the EU and IMF are going to ask for voluntary write-offs, in order to avoid a formal "bankruptcy", which would trigger the massive CDS market, the idea behind this speculation is to reject any kind of haircuts on their share of debt, and therefore pocket the "defaulted amount".
Showing posts with label CDS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CDS. Show all posts
Friday, 13 January 2012
Wednesday, 16 November 2011
Who is still holding toxic Italian debt ?

Thursday, 27 October 2011
Greek gentlemen, we have a deal ! Or do we ?
Talks on the third wave of financial aid for Greece have come to an end (finally), during last night's second crisis summit held in Brussels. The conclusion? Greek bondholders will accept a 50% haircut on Greek debt, while the EU will provide guarantees and collateral through the EFSF and will work on the recapitalization of European Banks. The "hot potato" question still remains? Who is going to provide the money for all this? The US, the IMF, China ?
Labels:
CDS,
EFSF,
EU debt,
Greek bonds,
Greek debt,
Greek GDP,
Hu Jintao,
IMF,
People's Bank of China,
Sarkozy,
US Fed
Monday, 24 October 2011
When the EU tsunami clears out the US debt crisis tidal wave will emerge
Nowadays the media are painting a bleak picture of the European Union debt crisis. The EFSF has been leveraged, the proposed "hair-cut" on Greek debt has been twisted and turned on all sides, without any visible conclusion. Contagion from the perypheral countries (PIGS) may spread out to the more stable countries: Germany and France (which is already on a credit downgrade outlook from Moody's). Meanwhile the US debt crisis tidal wave is closing by without anyone noticing.
Labels:
BOA Meryl Lynch,
CDS,
EFSF,
European Union,
France,
Germany,
Greek bonds,
Moody's,
PIGS,
SPIV,
US debt
Thursday, 20 October 2011
While Greek yields skyrocket, the US continues its road to serfdom
The European Union may have done a very costly mistake by banning naked CDS shorts, because traders will now retort to outright shorting the underlying bonds. And short they will: Greek yields reached a staggering 188% for a 1yr note and they don't show any signs of cooling off. With Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy still undecided about the European Rescue Fund, things can only get worse. Meanwhile America continues its slow road to serfdom.
Labels:
CDS,
Debt/capita,
EFSF,
Eur/USD,
European Union,
France,
GDB/capita,
Germany,
Greece,
Greek bonds,
Greek yields,
IMF
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)