Spain's economy wobbles amid bailout
Concerns about Spain's
crippling financial problems flared again Friday as even news that the country
had been given the final go-ahead for a bank bailout loan of up to $122.9
billion failed to take the sting out of a further round of bad
economic news.Earlier Friday, finance ministers from the 17 countries that
use the euro unanimously approved the terms for a bailout loan for Spain's
banks, which have been struggling under the weight of toxic loans and assets
from the collapse of the country's property market. Investors have been shying
away from Spain for months, worried that the country could not keep control of its
deficit during a recession while supporting its stricken financial sector.Spain
is the 17-country eurozone's fourth-biggest economy, and many market watchers
fear that if it asked for a bailout, the rest of the region could not afford to
foot the bill. The country and its banks were also locked in a vicious debt
spiral, where the shaky banking system has been propped up by the indebted
government so that the banks could buy more government debt. The loan facility
agreed to on Friday was designed to break that spiral.The bank agreement
came as Spain cut its growth forecast and the heavily indebted Valencia region asked for financial help. The news sent the country's borrowing
costs soaring and its stock prices plummeting. In afternoon trading, Spain's main IBEX index was
down almost 6 percent, while the interest rate on the country's 10-year bond -
an indicator of investor confidence in a country's ability to manage its debt -
was at 7.2 percent. This is a rate that many market watchers consider too high
a price for a country to pay in the long term.Treasury Minister Cristobal Montoro on Friday forecast
Spain's recession will drag on into 2013.Unemployment, now at 24.4
percent, will remain about the same next year, Montoro said.Meanwhile, the
economy will shrink 1.5 percent this year, a slight improvement from the 1.7
percent drop previously predicted, he added.The government this week
passed painful austerity measures - tax increases and cuts to benefits,
salaries and pensions - to reduce state debt and strengthen confidence in
its finances.Spaniards staged huge anti-austerity protests in 80 cities
and towns across the country Thursday.
After PFGBest, 'Crisis' In Commodities Trading Could Impact Everyday Consumers
Experts warn of a
crisis in the commodities trade that could impact everyday consumers. First,
there was a banking crisis. Now, after the collapse of Peregrine Financial
Group, commodities markets may be on the brink of their own emergency, which
could reach consumers at the gas pump or the grocery store.The high-profile
failure of two commodities brokerage firms in less than a year led to a crisis
of confidence among traders of commodity futures agreements to buy and sell
basic goods like corn, wheat and oil. If this market stops functioning
properly, experts warn, consumer prices could fluctuate wildly.“The futures
industry had long been considered a very strong place to put your money,” said
John Lothian, a registered futures adviser who runs an industry news and
analysis service. The collapse of Peregrine, which does business as PFGBest,
has “absolutely caused a crisis,” he said. “It’s going to take a while for the
industry to restore its own confidence.”The crisis took root last October with
the well-publicized collapse of commodities brokerage MF Global, which lost $1.6 billion in
customer funds. That was followed, earlier this month,
with the failure of Peregrine, which imploded just before the firm’s founder,
Russell Wasendorf, admitted to taking more than $100 million in customer cash over two decades.The failures
have caused some traders to lose faith in both of the industry’s regulatory
bodies -- the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the National Futures
Association -- and the brokerage firms themselves. “I don’t know where to put
my money to trade,” George Papagiannis, a lawyer and futures trader who lost
money with Peregrine and MF Global, told The Huffington Post shortly after the
PFG collapse. “I love to trade, but I don’t trust any broker now. So I’m not
going to until I’m sure there’s good oversight."This sentiment could be
bad news for regular consumers of basic commodities like oil and corn.
Brokerages like Peregrine provide a platform for trading futures contracts,
agreements to buy or sell a commodity like oil or corn at a set price in the
future. Often farmers will trade futures to protect crop prices from
unforeseeable fluctuations for example, a glut of commodities that causes
prices to fall.“A collapse of a firm means that those commercial market
participants who have to intelligently hedge their purchases have less and less
faith in [the firms] with whom they’re investing,” said Gene Guilford,
president of the Independent Connecticut Petroleum
Association, a nonprofit association of gas and fuel oil dealers. “What ends up
happening with a lack of faith is retailers end up hedging less of their purchases
and leaving them open to the vicissitudes of the marketplace.”If farmers or oil
dealers pull out of the markets, then there’s nothing to buffer commodity
prices against unexpected fluctuations, meaning the everyday price of oil or
corn could dip or spike wildly for average consumers, according to Guilford. Futures-trading
volume in the first half of 2012 was down nearly 10 percent from the same
period last year, according to data from the Futures Industry Association, the
industry’s main lobbying group. In June trading volume was down more than 15
percent from June 2011. “We’re not on the cusp of a problem, we’re in a
problem,” said Michael Greenberger, former director of trading and markets at
the CFTC and current professor at the University of Maryland School of Law.
“Nobody wants to trade.”Since the Peregrine collapse, blame also also fallen on
regulators for failing to spot that fraud, despite years of audits and the
collapse of MF Global only months before. On Wednesday, CFTC chair Gary Gensler
told the Senate Agriculture
Committee that "the system failed to
protect the customers of Peregrine," only days after the CFTC rushed approval of new rules designed to protect brokerage customers. Those rules
include a requirement that brokers file daily reports on the state of
segregated customer accounts.But the reforms might
not address the root of the problem. According to Greenberger, federal
regulators simply don’t have the resources to keep up with the brokerage firms,
leaving the door wide open to fraud. “The system is weak because it’s not
adequately supervised by the CFTC,” he said, adding that the CFTC is being
“starved” for cash. In June, congressional Republicans voted to slash the CFTC budget by
about 12 percent, or $25 million. Experts warn that without proper regulatory
oversight, there’s little chance that confidence will return to the commodities
markets. “It would be one thing if it were just one firm, MF Global," said
Lynn Turner, former chief accountant at the Securities and Exchange Commission,
now managing director at consulting firm LitiNomics. “Now we've had a couple
[of brokerage failures], and I can't help but feel there are others out there.
But for the grace of God, this could happen again.”
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