| 
			
 
 
  by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
 February 24, 
			2017
 
			from
			
			Ocnus Website 
			
			
			
			Partial Spanish version 
			
 
 
			  
			
			 
			
			Central banks can go bust in a currency union.  
			
			The Bank of Italy is flirting with danger,  
			
			racking up €364bn in ECB liabilities that 
			
			the Italian state cannot easily cover 
			  
			
 Vast liabilities are being switched quietly from private banks and 
			investment funds onto the shoulders of taxpayers across southern 
			Europe.
 
			  
			It is a variant of the 
			tragic episode in Greece, but this time on a far larger scale, and 
			with systemic global implications. There has been no democratic 
			decision by any parliament to take on these fiscal debts, rapidly 
			approaching €1 trillion.  
			  
			They are the unintended 
			side-effect of quantitative easing by the European Central Bank, 
			which has degenerated into a conduit for capital flight from the 
			Club Med bloc to, 
				
					
					
					Germany
					
					Luxembourg
					
					The Netherlands 
			This 'socialization of 
			risk' is happening by stealth, a mechanical effect of the
			
			ECB's Target 2 payments system.
			 
			  
			If a political upset in 
			France or Italy triggers an existential euro crisis over coming 
			months, citizens from both the Eurozone's debtor and creditor 
			countries will discover to their horror what has been done to them. 
				
				"t is a variant of 
				the tragic episode in Greece, but this time on a far larger 
				scale, and with systemic global implications". 
			Such a tail-risk is real.
			 
			  
			As I write this piece, 
			four out of five stories running on the news thread of France's 
			financial daily Les Echos are about euro break-up scenarios. 
			I cannot recall such open debate of this character in the 
			Continental press at any time in the history of the euro project.
 As always, the debt markets are the barometer of stress.
 
			  
			Yields on two-year German 
			debt fell to an all-time low of minus 0.92pc on Wednesday, a sign 
			that something very strange is happening.  
				
				"Alarm bells are 
				starting to ring again.    
				Our flow data is 
				picking up serious capital flight into German safe-haven assets. 
				It feels like the build-up to the Eurozone crisis in 2011," said 
				Simon Derrick from BNY Mellon. 
			The Target2 system is 
			designed to adjust accounts automatically between the branches of 
			the ECB's family of central banks, self-correcting with each ebbs 
			and flow. In reality it has become a cloak for chronic one-way 
			capital outflows.
 Private investors sell their holdings of Italian or Portuguese 
			sovereign debt to the ECB at a profit, and rotate the proceeds into 
			mutual funds Germany or Luxembourg.
 
				
				"What it basically 
				shows is that monetary union is slowly disintegrating despite 
				the best efforts of Mario Draghi," said a former ECB governor. 
			The Banca d'Italia alone 
			now owes a record €364bn to the ECB, and the figure keeps rising. 
			Mediobanca estimates that €220bn has left Italy since the ECB first 
			launched QE.  
			  
			The outflows match the 
			pace of ECB bond purchases almost euro for euro.
 Professor Marcello Minenna from Milan's Bocconi University 
			said the implicit shift in private risk to the public sector - 
			largely unreported in the Italian media - exposes the Italian 
			central bank to insolvency if the euro breaks up or if Italy is 
			forced out of monetary union.
 
				
				"Frankly, these sums 
				are becoming unpayable," he said. 
			The ECB argued for years 
			that these Target2 imbalances were an accounting fiction that did 
			not matter in a monetary union.  
			  
			Not any longer. Mario 
			Draghi wrote a letter to Italian Euro-MPs in January warning 
			them that the debts would have to be "settled in full" if Italy left 
			the euro and restored the lira.
 This is a potent statement. Mr Draghi has written in black and white 
			confirming that Target2 liabilities are deadly serious - as critics 
			said all along - and revealed that Italy's public debt is 22pc of 
			GDP higher than officially declared.
 
			  
			It is now 153pc of GDP 
			and rising, past the point of no return for a country with no 
			sovereign central bank. Spain's Target2 liabilities are €328bn, 
			almost 30pc of GDP. Portugal and Greece are both at €72bn.  
			  
			All are either insolvent 
			or dangerously close if these debts are crystallized. 
				
				"This 'socialisation 
				of risk' is happening by stealth, a mechanical effect of the 
				ECB's Target 2 payments system.   
				If a political upset 
				in France or Italy triggers an existential euro crisis over 
				coming months, citizens from both the eurozone's debtor and 
				creditor countries will discover to their horror what has been 
				done to them". 
			Willem Buiter from 
			Citigroup says central banks within the unfinished structure of the 
			eurozone are not really central banks at all.  
			  
			They are more like 
			currency boards. They can go bust, and several are likely to do so. 
			In short, they are "not a credible counterparty" for the rest of the 
			euro-system.
 It is astonishing that the rating agencies still refuse to treat the 
			contingent liabilities of Target2 as real debts even after the 
			Draghi letter, and given the self-evident political risk.
 
			  
			Perhaps they cannot do so 
			since they are regulated by the EU authorities and are from time to 
			time subjected to judicial harassment in countries that do not like 
			their verdicts.  
			  
			Whatever the cause of 
			such forbearance, it may come back to haunt them.
 On the other side of the ledger, the German Bundesbank has built up 
			Target2 credits of €796bn. Luxembourg has credits of €187bn, 
			reflecting its role as a financial hub. This is roughly 350pc of the 
			tiny Duchy's GDP, and fourteen times the annual budget.
 
			Luxembourg is a huge 'creditor' through the Target2 system but it 
			too could get into trouble if the France breaks up the euro
 
 So what happens if the euro fractures?
 
			  
			We can assume that there 
			would be a tidal wave of capital flows long before that moment 
			arrived, pushing the Target2 imbalances towards €1.5 trillion.
			 
			  
			Mr Buiter says the ECB 
			would have to cut off funding lines to "irreparably insolvent" 
			central banks in order to protect itself.
 The chain-reaction would begin with a southern default to the ECB, 
			which in turn would struggle to meet its Target2 obligations to the 
			northern bloc, if it was still a functioning institution at that 
			point.
 
			  
			The ECB has no sovereign 
			entity standing behind it. It is an orphan.
 The central banks of Germany, Holland, and Luxembourg would lose 
			some of their Target2 credits, yet they would have offsetting 
			liabilities under enforceable legal contracts to banks operating in 
			their financial centers. These liabilities occur because that is how 
			the creditor central banks sterilize Target2 inflows.
 
 In other words, the central bank of Luxembourg would suddenly owe 
			350pc of GDP to private counter-parties, entailing debt issued under 
			various legal terms and mostly denominated in Euros.
 
			  
			They could try printing 
			Luxembourgish francs and see how that works.
 Moody's, Standard & Poor's, and Fitch all rate Luxembourg a 
			rock-solid AAA sovereign credit, of course, but that only 
			demonstrates the pitfalls of intellectual and ideological capture.
 
 It did not matter that the EMU edifice is built on sand as long as 
			the project retained its aura of inevitability. It matters now. 
			Bookmakers are offering three-to-one odds that a candidate vowing to 
			restore the French franc will become president in May.
 
 What is striking is not that the Front National's Marine Le Pen 
			has jumped to 28pc in one poll, it is that she has closed the gap to 
			44:56 in a run-off against former premier François Fillon.
 
 The Elabe polling group say they have never before seen such numbers 
			for Ms Le Pen. Some 44pc of French 'workers' say they will vote for 
			her, showing how deeply she has invaded the industrial bastions of 
			the Socialist Party.
 
			  
			The glass ceiling is 
			cracking...
 The wild card is that France's divided Left could suppress their 
			bitter differences and team up behind the Socialist candidate Benoît 
			Hamon on an ultra-radical ticket, securing him a runoff fight 
			against Ms Le Pen. The French would then face a choice between the 
			hard-Left and the hard-Right, both committed to a destruction of the 
			current order.
 
			  
			That contest would be too 
			close to call.
 Anything could happen over coming months in France, just as it could 
			in Italy where the ruling Democratic Party is tearing itself apart. 
			Party leader Matteo Renzi calls the mutiny a "gift to Beppe 
			Grillo", whose euro-sceptic Five Star movement leads Italy's polls 
			at 31pc.
 
 As matters now stand, four Italian parties with half the seats in 
			parliament are flirting with a return to the lira, and they are 
			edging towards a loose alliance.
 
 This is happening just as the markets start to fret about bond 
			tapering by the ECB. The stronger the Eurozone economic data, the 
			worse this becomes, for pressure is mounting in Germany for an end 
			to emergency stimulus.
 
 Whether Italy can survive the loss of the ECB shield is an open 
			question. Mediobanca says the Italian treasury must raise or roll 
			over €200bn a year, and Frankfurt is essentially the only buyer.
 
 Greece could be cowed into submission when it faced crisis. The 
			country is small and psychologically vulnerable on the Balkan 
			fringes, cheek by jowl with Turkey.
 
			  
			The sums of money were 
			too small to matter much in any case.
 It is France and Italy that threaten to subject the euro experiment 
			to its ordeal by fire. If the system breaks, the Target2 liabilities 
			will become all too real and it will not stop there. Trillions of 
			debt contracts will be called into question.
 
 This is a greater threat to the City of London and the banking nexus 
			of the Square Mile than the secondary matter of euro clearing, or 
			any of the largely manageable headaches stemming
			
			from Brexit.
 
			  
			Would anybody even be 
			talking about Brexit in such circumstances?
 
			    |