Finding the Best Cheap Stocks to Buy

Article by Investment U

Finding the Best Cheap Stocks to Buy in 2012

"Testing undervalued, cheap stocks based on price-to-cash flow also turned out a stellar outcome, beating the market by 749%."

My mother believes shopping is a sport. If it were, there’s no doubt she would be a world champion. I’d say an Olympic gold medalist, but she lost her amateur status years ago.

When my mom shops, she’s not satisfied unless she’s getting top merchandise for at least 40% off.

And like a hunter who can’t wait to brag about the 12-point buck he took, my mother will tell anyone who’ll listen about the $300 sweater she got for $80. But unlike the tales of hunters and fishermen, when it comes to my mom and shopping, the big one doesn’t get away.

Everyone loves a bargain. But some people are willing to work harder to get it. Investors are like shoppers. Some will stand in line to buy the latest hot Apple product (or stock), while others will wait patiently until the product or stock they want goes on sale.

When investors look for cheap stocks, they often concentrate on the price-to-earnings ratio, or P/E. The P/E is simply the price per share divided by the past year’s earnings per share.

So in the case of Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), for example, the company earned $2.36 per share in the last 12 months. The current share price is $27.69. Divide $27.69 by $2.36 and you get a P/E of 11.7.

You can use that number to compare it to the P/E of the S&P 500 (15.3), its industry average (15.4), its historical average (17.1), or other specific stocks in its sector, to get an idea of whether the stock is cheap or pricey.

Analysts also look at forward price to earnings, which divides the price by the consensus analyst estimate for the next year. In Intel’s case, analysts project earnings of $2.49 per share in 2012, giving it a forward P/E of 11.1.

Methods Better Than P/E…

But I believe investors pay too much attention to earnings and not enough to cash flow. You can also obtain a company’s valuation based on price to cash flow and, like P/E, compare it to industry averages, the S&P 500, etc.

Other popular valuation metrics include price to sales (P/S), which is the share price divided by revenue per share. If revenue per share isn’t readily available, all you do is divide the last 12 months’ sales and divide by the number of shares.

Price to book value (P/B) is also a popular tool. Book value is the value of the assets investors would get if the company were liquidated. Book value is simply shareholders’ equity (found on the balance sheet) divided by the number of shares outstanding.

Which one is more important when it comes to price performance?

Let’s take a look at each. I ran a stock screen and a corresponding backtest to measure the performance of all stocks whose valuation in each of those four metrics (separately) was below the average of its industry.

Over the past 10 years, if you bought every company (that was profitable) trading below its industry’s average price-to-earnings ratio and held the stock for one year, you’d have outperformed the S&P 500 by 218%. In only two out of the 10 years would that formula have underperformed the market – and not by much.

A recent example is Apache Corporation (NYSE: APA), trading at 7.8 times earnings versus the average insurer at 17.8.

Price-to-Cash Flow

Testing undervalued, cheap stocks based on price-to-cash flow also turned out a stellar outcome, beating the market by 749%. It underperformed the market in three out of 10 years, but the worst year was only by 3.15%. Conversely, in six of the seven years it beat the market it did so by double digits, several times by 50% or higher.

Sprint Nextel (NYSE: S) currently trades at just 1.9 times cash flow, which is dirt cheap, even in its industry, which only trades at an average of 4.6 times cash flow, compared to the S&P 500, which is valued at 9.1 times cash flow.

Price-to-Book Value

The results were even better on stocks trading at a lower price-to-book value than their industry average. Over the 10-year period, those stocks climbed 2,193% versus the 13% of the S&P 500. These stocks beat the market every year, including by over 100% in 2009 and 2010. A current example is NVIDIA Corporation (Nasdaq: NVDA), which trades at 1.8 times its book value, versus its industry average of 2.8.

Price-to-Sales Ratio

When I ran the backtest using companies whose price-to-sales ratio was below the industry average, something incredible happened. A $1,000 investment in 2001 turned into $286,535! While the same amount invested in the S&P 500 was worth $1,130.

The screen beat the S&P 500 in every year. But what was really interesting was that in 2003 and 2009, years in which the overall market recovered from steep sell-offs, the low P/S stocks went nuts. They outperformed the S&P 500 by 232% in 2003 and 745% in 2009.

Keep in mind, this involved owning a few thousand stocks, so this isn’t easily copied in real life, but it might give you a starting point the next time we start to come out of a nasty bear market.

Symantec (Nasdaq: SYMC) is a current example, trading at just 1.8 times sales versus its peers’ average of 3.8 times sales.

You obviously don’t want to run a screen, throw a dart at the list and buy a stock. You want to dig a little deeper. But by knowing which types of stocks tend to outperform the market, you increase your chances of getting a bargain that you’ll be as happy with as my mother is with a $400 designer jacket that she got for $35 (true story).

Good Investing,

Marc Lichtenfeld

Article by Investment U

Dólar Mantém Baixa em Relação ao JPY

By TraderVox.com

O dólar se manteve abaixo do valor psicologicamente significativo de 80.00 em relação ao iene ao longo da sessão de trade de ontem, já que os investidores mantiveram a tendência de baixa da moeda, em razão dos fracos dados do relatório da Folha de Pagamento não Agrícola dos EUA da semana passada.

Após subir para 80.01 durante a noite, o USD/JPY caiu cerca de 30 pips e subsequentemente passou a maior parte do dia em torno de 79.80. A moeda-verde teve mais sorte em relação ao dólar canadense ao longo do curso do dia. O USD/CAD subiu quase 50 pips durante a sessão europeia, atingindo por fim a alta de 0.9978.

Por hoje, notícias lentas significam que qualquer movimento no dólar provavelmente será resultado de pronunciamentos feitos na zona do euro. Devido às incertezas políticas na Grécia, os investidores continuam mantendo a tendência de baixa do euro. Qualquer notícia negativa extra, proveniente da Grécia, que seja divulgada hoje, pode fazer com que os investidores mantenham a aversão ao risco, o que pode derrubar o dólar em relação ao JPY.

No decorrer da semana, os investidores deverão lembrar de prestar atenção ao discurso do presidente do Fed, Bernanke, na quinta-feira. O pronunciamento pode incluir dicas a respeito da possibilidade de uma nova rodada de flexibilização quantitativa nos EUA, o que pode gerar volatilidade no dólar.

Article provided by TraderVox.com
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News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
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Slow News Day May Lead to Further Euro Losses

Source: ForexYard

The euro remained relatively unchanged vs. its main rivals throughout the European session yesterday, as political uncertainty in the euro-zone kept the currency near its recent lows. After dropping as low as 1.3000 during early morning trading, the EUR/USD spent most of the day trading around 1.3010. Turning to today, a slow news day may lead to low liquidity in the marketplace. Traders will want to note that a low liquidity environment can often lead to unexpected price shifts for seemingly no reason. Given the euro’s recent bearish trend, the possibility for further downward movement for the common currency exists.

Economic News

USD – Dollar Remains Bearish vs. JPY

The US dollar remained below the psychologically significant 80.00 level vs. the Japanese yen throughout yesterday’s trading session, as investors remain bearish toward the currency following last week’s poor US Non-Farm Payrolls figure. After climbing as high as 80.01 during overnight trading, the USD/JPY dropped over 30 pips and subsequently spent much of the day trading around 79.80. The greenback had more luck against the Canadian dollar over the course of the day. The USD/CAD was up close to 50 pips during the European session, eventually reaching as high as 0.9978.

Turning to today, a slow news day means that any dollar movement will likely be a result of announcements out of the euro-zone. Given the current political uncertainty in Greece, investors continue to remain bearish toward the euro. Should any additional negative news out of Greece be released today, investors may remain risk averse which could bring the dollar lower against the JPY. Later in the week, traders will want to remember to pay attention to a speech from Fed Chairman Bernanke on Thursday. The speech could include clues regarding a possible new round of quantitative easing in the US, which could create dollar volatility.

EUR – Political Uncertainty Continues to Weigh Down on Euro

The inability of Greece’s biggest political parties to form a parliamentary majority raised the prospects that there will be another round of elections in the country next month. The news generated additional concerns among investors about the prospects of euro-zone economic growth, which subsequently kept the euro near its recent lows throughout trading yesterday. While the EUR/JPY advanced some 30 pips earlier in the day, it quickly gave back its gains and spent the majority of the day trading around the 103.80 level. Similarly, the EUR/USD reversed slight upward movement it saw during the morning session to spend most of the day trading around the 1.3010 level.

Turning to today, traders will want to monitor any developments out of the euro-zone, particularly with regards to the political situation in Greece. Any indications that Greece will move away from the fiscal austerity measures it promised to undertake could result in further euro losses. Additionally, investor concerns regarding France’s new government could cause the euro to extend its bearish trend. The French President is known to differ with Germany regarding the best way toward euro-zone economic growth. Any signs of a future conflict may lead to additional risk aversion in the marketplace.

AUD – Risk Aversion Leads to Additional Aussie Losses

Ongoing concerns regarding the political situation in the euro-zone caused investors to abandon riskier assets during yesterday’s trading session, resulting in losses for the Australian dollar. The AUD/USD fell over 90 pips during European trading, reaching as low as 1.0101. Against the Japanese yen, the aussie dropped over 95 pips, reaching as low as 80.59 during the afternoon session.

Turning to today, the AUD may continue to drop depending on any announcements out of the euro-zone. Should investors determine that new governments in Greece and France will conflict with other euro-zone countries regarding the best way toward euro-zone economic growth, riskier currencies like the Aussie may extend their bearish trends.

Crude Oil – US Crude Inventories May Bring Oil Down Further

Crude oil dropped over $1 a barrel during trading yesterday, as risk aversion continued to dominate market sentiment following poor US and euro-zone news. After peaking at $97.90 during the overnight session, the commodity proceeded to fall throughout the day, eventually dropping as low as $96.53 during mid-day trading.

Turning to today, traders will want to pay careful attention to the US Crude Oil Inventories figure, scheduled to be released at 14:30 GMT. A steadily increasing level of US stockpiles has been interpreted as a sign of declining demand in the US, the world’s largest oil consuming country. Should today’s news come in above 2.0M, the price of oil may fall further during the afternoon session.

Technical News

EUR/USD

The Williams Percent Range on the weekly chart has dropped into oversold territory, indicating that this pair could see upward movement in the coming days. Furthermore, the MACD/OsMA on the same chart appears to be forming a bullish cross. Traders will want to keep an eye on this pair, as it could stage an upward correction in the near future.

GBP/USD

A bearish cross has formed on the weekly chart’s Slow Stochastic, in a sign that downward movement could occur for this pair. In addition, another bearish cross on the daily chart’s MACD/OsMA is providing further evidence of an impending correction. Traders may want to go short in their positions.

USD/JPY

Most long term technical indicators place this pair in neutral territory, meaning that no definitive trend can be predicted at this time. The one exception is the weekly chart’s MACD/OsMA, which has formed a bearish cross. Traders will want to keep an eye on some of the other indicators on the weekly chart for signs of an impending downward correction.

USD/CHF

The Williams Percent Range on the weekly chart has crossed over into overbought territory, indicating that this pair could see downward movement in the near future. Furthermore, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) on the same chart is moving upward and appears poised to cross into the overbought zone as well. Traders will want to keep an eye on the RSI. If it crosses above 70, it may be a good time to open short positions.

The Wild Card

AUD/JPY

A bullish cross on the daily chart’s Slow Stochastic indicates that this pair could see upward movement in the near future. The Relative Strength Index on the same chart has dropped into oversold territory, giving further support to the theory of an impending upward correction. Forex traders may want to go long in their positions.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

 

Mid Day EUR/USD Technical Analysis

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox (Dublin) – The US Dollar index is trading at monthly highs of 79.93. The dollar opened the day in tight trading lingering around the 80 mark which served as a strong resistance. Moving into the day the dollar fell on the better than expected German trade balance data to find support at 79.87. The dollar then saw a sharp bullish correction to 79.93.The dollar likely to hold onto to the 79 level due to high risk sentiment preventing any downside movement. Any upside movement will face strong resistance at 80 levels, a level which the dollar will it difficult to break as the fears of another round of quantitative easing are looming around after last week’s weak Non Farm Pay Rolls data.

The EUR USD is currently trading in tight markets with bearish sentiments dominating. The bearish trend is not very strong and there is no sufficient volatility to cause to a major sell off in the EUR USD pair. The 10 day moving average and the 20 day moving average are showing sharp bearish divergences while the RSI is lingering at levels near to the oversold region. This oversold criterion and the presence of many long EUR/USD barrier options at around the 1.29 level is supporting the pair and helping it to hold onto to the 1.29 level.

The pair is currently trading at 1.2977 levels and any upside movements in the pair is likely to be limited by the strong resistance at 1.2994. To the downside the support first support lies at 1.2962 and a selling here would drive the pair to 1.29471, the low of January 25th.

Moving onto the longer time frame, the EUR USD bears are very strong supported by impressive volatility numbers. This will likely see the EUR/USD see a sharp drop in value to touch 1.288 levels in the coming weeks.

The economic calendar has not charted out any major market moving events for the day and this will further help the Euro to hold onto the 1.297 to 12.96 levels as the pair moves into the US session.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
Tradervox.com is a Forex News Portal that provides real-time news and analysis relating to the Currency Markets.
News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox

Market Review 9.5.12

Source: ForexYard

printprofile

Riskier currencies and commodities fell once again during Asian trading, as investors continue to react to Greek and French elections held last weekend. The EUR/USD dropped as low as 1.2964, close to a three-month low. Crude oil fell to $96.26 a barrel.

Main News for Today

US Crude Oil Inventories- 14:30 GMT
• Crude oil stockpiles have increased dramatically in recent weeks, signaling decreased demand in the world’s biggest oil consuming country
• Should today’s figure come in above the forecasted 2.0M, the price of oil could fall further during the afternoon session

Read more forex news on our forex blog

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Strong dollar inflows in global uncertainty

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox (Dublin) – Risk aversion has grappled the global financial markets sending the growth related currencies and the Euro to the bearish zone. The major indices in the Europe and the Asia are also in the red with a sharp selling seen in the Greek and the French markets. The major gainers today are the US dollar and the Japanese yen. The commodity space remains red with a sharp fall in the crude prices. The selling in the crude began early in the week with the major suppliers citing that the crude supply is going to rise on increased production and yesterdays reports of US crude inventories adding more capacity.

 The safe haven gold which saw huge demand in the past during uncertain times is continuing its bearish rally which started last month. This has raised the prospects of the dollar as a safe haven and the dollar index is at monthly highs of 79.60

The dollar has seen significant inflows from the opening trades of the week on the back of the Greek and the French election results. The Greek elections have brought anti austerity parties to power. This has led to speculation regarding the willingness of the future Greek government to implement tough austerity measures for the country to get the next tranche of aid from IMF and the EU. This has raised the probability of a Greek exit and has fuelled concerns of a major global economic crisis worse than the one in 2008 due to the collapse of the US investment bank giant Lehman Brothers.

Another concern in the Europe is the end of the Merkozy era. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the French President Nicolas Sarkozy were the key promoters of austerity measures in the Europe. The new French president François Hollande is in favor of growth initiatives rather than austerity measures. This has raised doubts over the future of the fiscal measures agreed earlier on the austerity plan.

The dollar is posting gains against major pairs except the Japanese yen. The inflows can be attributed to the safe haven flows into US treasury notes, the US dollar and the also the US growth story which is showing signs of slow recovery with declining unemployment rate and improving GDP numbers.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
Tradervox.com is a Forex News Portal that provides real-time news and analysis relating to the Currency Markets.
News and analysis are produced throughout the day by our in-house staff.
Follow us on twitter: www.twitter.com/tradervox

Why Europe Will Ditch Green Energy

By MoneyMorning.com.au

You may think Europe is the last place you should invest.

If you think that, you’re wrong.

The European economy is in a huge hole and there’s only one way to get out of it…

In fact, in the latest Australian Small-Cap Investigator, we argue that some of 2012′s biggest gains could come from Europe. And one industry in particular…

Japan’s Green Energy Lesson for Europe

But before we head back to Europe, let’s make a quick stop in Japan.

This week Japan switched off its last nuclear reactor. Before last year’s earthquake and tsunami, nuclear power accounted for about 15% of Japan’s electricity generation…

share of total electricity in Japan

Source: Forbes

Most of the rest was from coal, oil and natural gas (about 70%). Green energy (solar and wind power) made up just 1%…and that’s after a 295% increase from the year before!

The reason we mention Japan is this: it has no natural resources. It doesn’t have coal, oil or natural gas deposits. And there isn’t a uranium mine in sight.

If ever a country needed to secure a domestic energy supply, it’s Japan.

And yet, here’s Masayuki Naoshima, vice president of the Japanese parliament’s upper house telling the Sydney Morning Herald, ‘Australia is one of the most important countries for Japan in terms of natural resources supply.’

What about wind, wave and solar energy?

Not a peep.

Japan is one of the world’s most advanced countries, and it has been for more than 50 years. And yet Japanese boffins and firms still haven’t come up with a home-grown and self-sufficient green energy supply.

Japan realises – and Europe will too – that it needs to look elsewhere…

The European Energy Frontier

While Japan has all but ignored green energy, Europe has thrown billions of euros at it. But our bet is the outcome will be the same – rejection of green energy. Like Japan, Europe will turn back to fossil fuels. In particular, natural gas. Except Europe has one up over Japan.

Where Japan is barren of natural resources, Europe is rich with them. As the Economist noted last November:

‘The old continent has nearly as much technically recoverable shale gas (natural gas trapped in shale formations) as America. Europe’s reserves are 639 trillion cubic feet [tcf], compared with America’s 862 [trillion cubic feet], according to America’s Energy Information Administration…’

Shale gas has transformed US energy supply. Less than 10 years ago the US had an energy crisis. Today, oil giant BP says the US will be energy independent and a net exporter of gas by 2030.

But what about Europe? Right now, it’s going through an energy crisis. Unless it does something, things will only get worse.

A recent report by the European Union highlights the problem facing Europe:

‘The security of the EU’s primary energy supplies may be threatened if a high proportion of imports are concentrated among relatively few partners. Close to four fifths (79.1%) of the EU-27′s imports of natural gas in 2009 came from Russia, Norway or Algeria…’

How is this possible when Europeans have 639 tcf of natural gas right under their feet?

The answer is the Western fad for green energy. The belief that wind and solar power can supply energy to 300 million Europeans.

The truth is that it can’t.

That’s why we’re backing Europe to ditch green energy, and instead drill for the 639 tcf of shale gas under European soil.

Of course, this won’t happen overnight. It will take a long time. But that hasn’t stopped a bunch of entrepreneurial firms having a crack at it now.

And as we see it, even though investing in Europe may seem scary, taking a punt when all seems lost is one of the best ways to snag a high-risk and high-reward return.

This morning, clogging the international headlines are stories on Spanish bank bailouts, Greek debt woes and French elections. All seems lost in Europe.

And that’s exactly why we say that you should take a punt on it now.

Cheers.
Kris.

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Why Europe Will Ditch Green Energy

Not So Austere After All

By MoneyMorning.com.au

‘Did you see the French election results?’

‘What does this mean for Europe?’

‘The socialists are in charge. They’ll spend and spend and Europe will get into even more trouble.’

Those are just some of the comments fired at your editor over the past three days.

What was our reply? Simply this: Hollande or Sarkozy, socialist or non-socialist, it won’t make a difference.

The markets are worried a socialist president will go on a spending spree. That he’ll rack up more public debt, and blow out the budget deficit even more.

It would – they say – be the end of French and European austerity.

Well, let’s get something straight.

First, here’s the Macquarie Dictionary definition of austere:

‘Austere, adj. 1. Harsh in manner; stern in appearance; forbidding. 2. Severe in disciplining or restraining oneself; morally strict. 3. Grave; sober; serious. 4. Severely simple; without ornament…’

Now, think about this. The 2012 Index of Economic Freedom says that last year French government spending was 56.2% of French gross domestic product (GDP).

Put another way, for every euro spent in France, the government spends 56.2 cents.

So it’s not true to say the new socialist president will throw out austerity. The truth is that France was never austere under Sarkozy.

It was spend, spend and more spend.

And France isn’t alone. The Economist published this chart in 2010 using forecast figures for future years…

government spending chart

Source: Economist

We’ve placed dots where each government’s spending is in 2012 as a percent of GDP.

As you can see, in each case government spending is at least the same today as it was in 2009. (Remember, the shaded area shows forecasts made in 2009 and 2010.)

The fact is Governments only pretend to implement austerity. In reality, they’re spending more tax money and going further into debt.

Yesterday the Age headlined, ‘Swan’s song to be in the key of austerity.’

The story went on, ‘Wayne Swan will be hoping his austerity budget gets a better reception than the Greek budget did.’

Good old austere Australia.

Trouble is, as Alan Kohler points out over at Business Spectator, ‘According to Budget Paper No.2 – Budget Measures, ‘expense measures’ in this budget actually increase spending by $201.2 million.’

And based on the budget estimates printed in today’s Australian Financial Review (AFR), the 2012-13 budget expenditure will be $376.3 billion. That’s $2.6 billion more than the estimate for this year.

And $30.2bn more than the government spent in 2010-2011.

Not so austere after all.

Cheers.
Kris.

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Not So Austere After All

What the European Elections Mean for the Euro

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Politics holds the key to the euro’s future.

The euro is a political construct, not an economic one. As it stands, the euro cannot function in the long term, from an economic point of view. The various countries involved are too different.

So the main thing holding the euro together so far is that European voters, by and large, still want it. Voters might be angry at Germany, or angry at their own leaders, or angry at eurocrats in general.

But they don’t yet blame the currency for their woes.

This could be the year that all that changes…

Forget Growth Versus Austerity

Forget all the stuff about austerity versus growth. It’s good column fodder for economists, but it doesn’t get us any closer to understanding what will happen on the ground.

The austerity mob argues that countries need to do what it takes to pay back their debts. Instinctively, this feels like the ‘right’ decision. Most of the time, if you’ve spent too much money, then yes, cutting back for a while and rebuilding your savings is the smart thing to do.

But there comes a point where the hole you’ve dug is simply too big. That’s when your creditors need to share the pain. People seem to forget that when a lender writes a cheque, they’re taking a risk. If they haven’t assessed that person’s credit risk correctly, then the rules of capitalism dictate that they should lose some or all of that money.

So austerity without explicit default cannot work.

The growth mob, on the other hand, seem to think that you can borrow and spend with impunity. This is wrong, and they know it. What the growth guys are really arguing is that Germany should take the leash off the European Central Bank (ECB).

If the ECB is allowed to print money, then Greece and all the other countries can service their debts the easy way – the Anglo-Saxon way, in fact. Over time, these economies will recover.

It does mean that you confiscate money from savers across the eurozone in the form of inflation. It also means that you are implicitly defaulting – you are repaying your debts with devalued currency.

And it creates moral hazard – neither countries nor lenders have any incentive to change their behaviour if they believe that there is always a bail-out at the end of the road.

So these are the choices: an implicit default or an explicit default. In an implicit default, German taxpayers agree to stand behind other nations’ debts (in the form of ECB money-printing, or a common eurozone bond issue – it all boils down to the same thing). That leads to a weaker euro.

In an explicit default, Greece tells its remaining creditors (the ones it hasn’t already defaulted on) that it can’t repay them.

Trouble is, any eurozone country that unilaterally decides not to pay its debts would be stiffing other eurozone countries too. In particular, a whole lot of Greek debt is held by other European banks, as well as the ECB. That’s why it would be hard to default, and also to stay in the euro.

So an explicit default by Greece (or any other country for that matter), involves leaving the euro and going back to the drachma.

So What’s the European Endgame?

Which of these routes will be chosen all comes down to the voters. So what have they said?

The key country is Germany, of course. And they have no intention of budging. As Reuters reports, Volker Kauder, one of Angela Merkel’s ‘closest allies’, said: ‘Germany could end up paying for the Socialist victory in France with more guarantees, more money. And that is not acceptable. Germany is not here to finance French election promises.’

Merkel is only reflecting the desires of her population. So while Francois Hollande can talk about growth all he wants, the best he’s likely to get is some sort of fudged ‘growth pact’ that is all words and no action. That won’t please the French people. But they’re not at the stage where they are ready to jack in the whole euro project as yet.

The Greeks, on the other hand…

In essence, the outcome of the Greek election was a mass vote for ‘anything but this’. Greeks voted for Communists, Neo-Nazis, and all the colours of the political rainbow in between. Putting a coalition together from that lot is going to be tough. In fact, it seems likely that there’ll be another election in June. Although, chances are, that would result in an even more polarised result.

Citigroup reckons that there’s now a 75% chance of Greece leaving the euro by the end of 2013. That seems more than reasonable. The question is, how much damage could it do?

Private debt holders have already had their holdings written down substantially. So it’s hard to believe that losing the rest would deliver a knock-out blow to the global financial system.

However, it would still be incredibly messy. This is the best solution for the Greeks. But it would also get the markets watching for the next candidate to leave – probably Portugal.

The one thing that a Greek exit might do, is shock the rest of the eurozone into deciding that defaulting via money-printing is the best way to go.

John Stepek
Editor, MoneyWeek (UK)

Publisher’s Note: This is an edited version of an article that first appeared in MoneyWeek (UK).

From the Archives…

Why China’s New Consumer Economy Won’t Give You the Trade of the Decade
2012-05-04 – Kris Sayce

Why China Could Be The Next Destination For the Financial Crisis
2012-05-03 – Merryn Somerset Webb

How Did We Get It So Wrong on Australian Housing?
2012-05-02 – Kris Sayce

This Indicator Shows the Copper Price Could Be Set to Soar
2012-05-01 – Dr. Alex Cowie

How Gold Nanoparticles Will Create A New Kind of Gold Rush
2012-04-30 – Michael Robinson


What the European Elections Mean for the Euro