The response to the downgrade of the Eurozone bailout funds from Aaa has yielded a fascinating political response from the head of the fund.
Moody's, the ratings agency, says the €700bn European Stability Mechanism (and the the EFSF it replaces) is now a riskier proposition since France lost its Aaa rating earlier this month. It considers that, if the full fund were needed, France would have to stump up 20%. The whole purpose of the fund is to invest in the debt of weaker Eurozone member states whose creditworthiness is highly correlated. So, if one runs into economic trouble, they all do. That also makes for a "highly concentrated credit portfolio." And if push came to shove, Moody's doesn't think France would prioritise it's ESM contributions above its own debt payments. Similarly, in that event it would be unlikely that other member states would make up France's shortfall.
Both the chairman and managing director of the ESM were keen to claim political support for the fund. The ESM's chairman said:
"The 17 euro area Member States are fully committed to ESM [and EFSF] in political and financial terms and stand firmly behind both institutions."
“Moody's rating decision is difficult to understand. We disagree with the rating agency's approach which does not sufficiently acknowledge ESM's exceptionally strong institutional framework, political commitment and capital structure."
Of course, the political reality is actually the flaw in the single market and Euro fantasy: there's no credible plan to discipline profligate states, as the continuing Greek tragedy demonstrates. Those who
negotiated the Maastricht Treaty foolishly believed such states would ultimately
behave in the interests of the Zerozone, just as Alan Greenspan thought
the boards of Lehman Brothers and others would refrain from
driving their firms into a wall out of concern for the interests of shareholders and
taxpayers... snake oil.
The only real disciplinary option is for creditor states to 'send the boys around' to the debtor states. In that event all political solutions will have been exhausted, and the 'European Union' long gone.
So Moody's is right to discount the politics - and the ESM's credit rating.
If the politics is not to further undermine the ESM, politicians have to demonstrate that the disintegration of the Euro zone is survivable.
Simon - any thoughts on the fact that, until 2008, the very ratings agencies now downgrading the fund were rating as AAA the CDOs that caused the financial crisis (and thus necessitated the fund)? Adrian
ReplyDeleteYes, I should've added that the original rating was also a fantasy, and should be much lower ;-)
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