Ποτέ δεν έσβησαν από τα συστήματα τους την δραχμή οι τράπεζες, ακόμα και
όταν η Ελλάδα μπήκε στην ευρωζώνη το 2001, υποστηρίζει σε σημερινό
δημοσίευμα του το πρακτορείο Reuters.
Ωστόσο, από το ξέσπασμα της κρίσης
στην Ελλάδα το 2009, οι τράπεζες παγκοσμίως παρασκηνιακά
προετοιμάζονται ενταντικά για την επανεισαγωγή της .....
δραχμής στο τραπεζικό σύστημα.
“Πολλές εταιρείες, και ειδικά στην Ευρώπη, εξετάζουν αυτήν την
πιθανότητα πολύ σοβαρά εδώ και καιρό” λέει στο Reuters, o Χάρτμουτ
Γκρόσμαν που συνεργάζεται με πολλές τράπεζες της Wall Street.
Όπως επισημαίνει το Reuters, μια ελληνική αποχώρηση από το ευρώ θα
δημιουργούσε νομικά και πρακτικά προβλήματα για τις τράπεζες που θα
επισκιάσουν την σχετικά απλή τεχνική εργασία για την αντιμετώπιση ενός
νέου νομίσματος.
(Reuters) - Banks
are quietly readying themselves to start trading a new Greek currency.
Some banks never erased the drachma from their systems after Greece
adopted the euro more than a decade ago and would be ready at the flick
of a switch if its debt problems forced it to bring back national
banknotes and coins.
From the end of the Soviet Union - which spawned currencies
such as the Estonian Kroon and the Kazakh Tenge - to the introduction
of the euro, they have had plenty of practice in preparing their systems
to cope with change.
Planning
behind the scenes has been underway since Europe's debt crisis erupted
in Greece in 2009, said U.S.-based Hartmut Grossman of ICS Risk Advisors
who works with Wall Street banks.
"A
lot of the firms, particularly in Europe and also here, have been
looking at that for a long time," said Grossman, who added that the
latest Greek political crisis had brought matters "to a little bit of a
head".
"But there really has been contingency planning at all of the financial institutions for that to happen ... Greece leaving the euro zone is not a new idea," he said.
The
EU says it wants Greece to stay in the common currency, and opinion
polls show Greeks want to keep it. But they also voted last Sunday for
parties opposed to a bailout with the EU and IMF, throwing Greece's
future in the bloc back into doubt.
The
elections threw into doubt the EU/IMF aid package that came at the
price of harsh austerity measures, and was reached only after much
haggling between banks and politicians over a 100 billion euro debt
reduction.
While the deal averted
financial market catastrophe by allowing Greece to continue repaying its
reduced debts, any future problems could be yet more troublesome, even
if Athens managed the process in a more or less orderly fashion.
A
Greek departure from the euro would create legal and practical problems
for the banks which would dwarf the relatively straightforward
technical job of dealing in a new currency.
SCENARIOS
Greece
would almost certainly impose foreign exchange controls if it were to
drop out of the euro, bankers said, but dealing in any new currency
would still be possible.
"Forex
desks can get ready relatively quickly. It depends on exactly how the
exit from the euro happens," said Lewis O'Donald, the London-based Chief
Risk Officer at Japanese investment bank Nomura (9716.T).
Currencies
that are not freely tradable, such as the Chinese yuan, are widely
mirrored in off-shore foreign exchange markets through the use of
derivative instruments, such as non-deliverable forwards, or NDFs.
The
problem may be bigger for euro zone banks which need cash for
individuals or companies doing business in Greece. They face the problem
of what exchange rate to use, depending on the laws Athens might draw
up for trade it its currency.
If
Greece forced an exchange rate of, say, one euro to one new drachma,
this could impose huge losses on foreign banks because such a rate would
not hold on the markets.
Controls
on the movement of capital could be a nightmare for banks with loans in
Greece, potentially making it illegal for companies to repay debt in
euros.
Even if it were not illegal,
companies might no longer be able to repay foreign creditors because
their cash had been converted overnight into drachmas - a currency that
would rapidly lose its value due to the dire state of the Greek economy.
That would, in turn, make it tough for any lender to get its money
back, whatever contract it might have.
"Our
assumption is that an exit route somehow has capital controls in place,
or an inability for a creditor to enforce (legal rulings) under English
law into Greece," O'Donald said.
SHOUTING 'FIRE!'
Banks
have studied several options to protect themselves as best they can,
including switching to U.S. law for new derivative transactions or
loans. So far few have taken such steps due to doubts about how
effective they would be, and also because they are afraid to add to
market concerns.
"Banks are very,
very reluctant to start shouting 'fire!'. They know what happens and
what panic looks like," said one London-based lawyer advising financial
firms.
Instead, most are simply
checking the governing law of their contracts, hedging against defaults
and running through every legal argument a Greek euro exit could throw
up.
"There are still areas which
will be grey in some respect and which will lead to conflicts of law
that may have to be resolved in court," Nomura's O'Donald said.
Many
banks have been simulating a rupture of the euro in "war games". But
little is known about how an exit would work, and legal departments are
poring over financial contracts, raising questions about the very nature
of a currency.
"If transactions
are denominated in the euro, what is the status of those transactions in
the event that there is a change of the make-up of that currency?" said
Miles Kennedy, a partner at accountancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers.
With such questions unanswered, stuffing cash machines with enough drachma banknotes is almost an afterthought.
For
Greece itself, it certainly won't pose a problem. The country's
national bank has its own banknote printing press and mint and has
continued to print euro banknotes ever since joining the single currency
in 2001.
(Additional reporting by Jessica Mortimer in London and Lauren Tara LaCapra in New York; editing by David Stamp and Janet McBride)
http://www.reuters.com
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