Euro-zone deal bounces oil prices

Nov. 7, 2011
Oil and stock prices soared Oct. 27 in what one analyst described as "a monster market bounce" after Euro-zone members agreed to reduce Greece's sovereign debt, support European banks facing additional losses on Greek bonds, and increase the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) to €1 trillion.

Oil and stock prices soared Oct. 27 in what one analyst described as "a monster market bounce" after Euro-zone members agreed to reduce Greece's sovereign debt, support European banks facing additional losses on Greek bonds, and increase the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) to €1 trillion.

The front-month crude futures contract shot up 3% on the New York Mercantile Exchange when the deal was announced. But prices retreated slightly during the next two trading sessions due to lack of details in the agreement and a growing fear that something yet could go wrong.

Those fears were realized Nov. 1 when the Greek government unexpectedly called for a referendum on its austerity program, which is likely to wreck the agreement. The news shook the markets.

Even among the initial euphoria, Olivier Jakob at Petromatrix in Zug, Switzerland, warned, "One of the key problems with the latest European rescue plan is that it is not a 'European Union deal' but a 'Chinese deal.' It will come at a great political cost. We are not sure that it will do much for European consumer confidence and is for us a sign of total failure of Europe. Athens has its fate in the hands of Brussels [EU headquarters], and now Brussels has its fate in the hands of Beijing."

Despite talk of non-European countries like China riding to the rescue, Chinese and European officials played down expectations for near-term investment by China in the Euro-zone.

China's vice-finance minister said his country wouldn't act until late November or December when details of the EU agreement are assessed.

Other problems

Benn Steil, director of international economics at the Council of Foreign Relations, said on the day of the agreement: "This [was] the 14th Euro-zone leader summit in the last 21 months, and there are going to be many, many more over the next 21 months. So this is not the end game by any stretch of the imagination."

Sebastian Mallaby, director of the CFR Greenberg Center for Geoeconomic Studies, said European banks might not write down Greek debt without putting additional conditions "into the fine print—which actually happened after the July deal—that will mean that the real write-down is quite a lot less than 50%."

Euro-zone members are talking about European banks raising €106 billion in extra equity capital by June. "But of course, they haven't provided any details about how the banks are supposed to raise such capital. It'll be exceptionally difficult for them to raise such capital cost-effectively in the foreseeable future." Steil said.

If Euro-zone members impose such a write-down on Greek bonds, "wouldn't they do it for Portuguese bonds too?" Mallaby wondered. "I think banks are going to be worried about that."

Moreover, EU leaders' stated intent to leverage the EFSF "to get more fire power" is "effectively admitting…the bailout fund they have is too small to be effective."

Mallaby said, "They're not saying how this leverage is going to work or what the unintended consequences might be, so how can a stretched government [such as] France, which is already facing the danger of a credit rating downgrade…leverage its commitment to the fund without further imperiling its credit rating?"

If EU members guarantee some of the new bonds being issued, there would be "negative consequences" for "the other bonds, the outstanding stock, which will not be insured, and that, again, will hurt the banks who own all this dead stock," Mallaby said, because the insurance likely will apply only to the new bonds that get issued.

"Euro-zone inflation is so high that in theory it does not call for the European Central Bank to announce a rate cut in the near future," said Jakob. But he doesn't exclude the possibility of a rate cut "in an environment where rules are happily broken."

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About the Author

Sam Fletcher | Senior Writer

I'm third-generation blue-collar oil field worker, born in the great East Texas Field and completed high school in the Permian Basin of West Texas where I spent a couple of summers hustling jugs and loading shot holes on seismic crews. My family was oil field trash back when it was an insult instead of a brag on a bumper sticker. I enlisted in the US Army in 1961-1964 looking for a way out of a life of stoop-labor in the oil patch. I didn't succeed then, but a few years later when they passed a new GI Bill for Vietnam veterans, they backdated it to cover my period of enlistment and finally gave me the means to attend college. I'd wanted a career in journalism since my junior year in high school when I was editor of the school newspaper. I financed my college education with the GI bill, parttime work, and a few scholarships and earned a bachelor's degree and later a master's degree in mass communication at Texas Tech University. I worked some years on Texas daily newspapers and even taught journalism a couple of semesters at a junior college in San Antonio before joining the metropolitan Houston Post in 1973. In 1977 I became the energy reporter for the paper, primarily because I was the only writer who'd ever broke a sweat in sight of an oil rig. I covered the oil patch through its biggest boom in the 1970s, its worst depression in the 1980s, and its subsequent rise from the ashes as the industry reinvented itself yet again. When the Post folded in 1995, I made the switch to oil industry publications. At the start of the new century, I joined the Oil & Gas Journal, long the "Bible" of the oil industry. I've been writing about the oil and gas industry's successes and setbacks for a long time, and I've loved every minute of it.