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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Citi economist who coined 'Grexit' no longer sees Greece exit next year


Business Insider Australia

Citi economist who coined 'Grexit' no longer sees Greece exit next year
MarketWatch (blog)
Citi chief economist Willem Buiter, the man credited with helping to coin the term “Grexit,” no longer expects Greece to leave the euro zone in 2014, but isn't giving up on the idea the forecast will be fulfilled at some point. In a note published ...
CITI: Good News, We No Longer Think Greece Will Exit The EurozoneBusiness Insider Australia

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Greek yogurt's half a supertanker per year toxic waste problem

APNew York's Chobani Greek Yogurt has been a boon to the state's economy, but the company has yet to find a good way to dispose of the toxic by-product of its product's production: acid whey. Little Miss Muffet sat on her tuffit eating her curds and the...

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Greece's National Bank shares to trade ex-rights from May 24


Greece's National Bank shares to trade ex-rights from May 24
Reuters
ATHENS May 22 (Reuters) - Shares in Greece's largest lender National Bank (NBG) will trade without rights to buy into its 9.75 billion euro share issue from May 24, the Athens stock exchange said on Wednesday after the securities regulator cleared NBG ...
More Detail About National Bank of Greece's Capital Raise24/7 Wall St.
Hot Movers: National Bank of Greece (ADR)(NYSE:NBG), Cleantech Solutions ...Openglobe
National Bank of Greece (NBG -4.6%) will raise €1.17B of a necessary €9.75B ...Seeking Alpha

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CITI: Good News, We No Longer Think Greece Will Exit The Eurozone

citi willem buiter

Last summer, Citi's chief economist, Willem Buiter, introduced a bold call: he assigned a 90% probability that Greece would exit the euro on January 1, 2013.

This assertion was made before European Central Bank President Mario Draghi introduced a new ECB bond-buying program, dubbed "OMT" (outright monetary transactions), which has more or less completely quelled the turmoil that the European sovereign debt crisis has inflicted upon markets over the past few years.

Needless to say, Buiter's dramatic call didn't work out. By October, Buiter and his team revised the odds of a Greek exit to 60%, and even then, only by the end of 2013.

However, they maintained that a Greek exit was still their base case, saying it would likely happen in 2014, after the German elections.

In a note out today, the Citi economics team is once again walking back their views toward the likelihood of a Greek exit from the euro.

Here's the key section:

Grexit Postponed, Euro Area Economy Still Weak

The euro area economy remains weak, and GDP has now fallen for six consecutive quarters. Growth prospects remain poor, and we expect that the euro area will continue to underperform versus official forecasts and the consensus in 2014 and 2015. Nevertheless, we have become a bit less gloomy on euro area growth for next year, and we are raising our 2014 growth forecast from minus 0.3% last month to 0.0% this month (while pulling our 2013 forecast down from minus 0.6% to minus 0.7%).

This upgrade reflects two main factors. First, with the drift to accepting deficit slippage amidst economic weakness and low government bond spreads, fiscal headwinds in the weak periphery economies should be less severe than seemed likely a few months ago. The IMF has scaled back its forecast for the average (unweighted) structural fiscal tightening in Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece and Ireland in 2013 to 1.2% of GDP from 1.8% of GDP in its late-2012 forecast. Second, we are no longer including Grexit at the start of 2014 in our base case. We still believe that there is a fairly high risk of Grexit in coming years, but no longer put it in our base case at any particular date. This partly reflects a lower risk of Grexit, but also a sense that, with creditor nations taking a more relaxed line on fiscal targets and Greece’s coalition government holding together, triggers for Grexit as early as 2014 have receded markedly. The chosen date was always somewhat arbitrary, but to construct a consistent forecast we pencilled in sizeable Grexit-related uncertainties and financial strains around that date, hitting the 2014 growth outlook. That intensified headwind is now absent in our forecast.

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600000 Greek children living below poverty line: UNICEF


Press TV

600000 Greek children living below poverty line: UNICEF
Press TV
Many Greek workers are currently unemployed, banks are in a shaky position, and pensions and salaries have been slashed. Greek youths have also been badly affected, and more than half of them are unemployed. EKA/KA. Comments. Add Comment Click ...
Unicef raises funds for children's vaccination campaignEnetEnglish

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WOU has its first Greek fraternity


Polkio.com

WOU has its first Greek fraternity
Polkio.com
McFadden, a junior, and 52 of his brothers were initiated Saturday as part of the first traditional Greek fraternity at Western Oregon University. The Sigma Tau chapter of Kappa Sigma Fraternity Inc. is the first such organization in Western's 157-year ...
No More Animal House? Iowa Fraternities and Sororities Seek Exception to ...Patch.com

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The bitter truth about Greek yogurt: it's producing millions of pounds of ...


Pacific Standard

The bitter truth about Greek yogurt: it's producing millions of pounds of ...
The Verge
The production of Greek yogurt operates somewhat differently than that of conventional varieties. Namely, it yields huge quantities of acid whey, a byproduct that kills aquatic life during decomposition. And because the Greek yogurt boom occurred so ...
Greek Yogurt May Destroy the Environment, Still Worth It.Gawker
Make your own Greek yogurtBuffalo News
The downside of Greek yogurt: Seas of fish-killing toxic byproductGrist
Pacific Standard -9NEWS.com
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Italian machines reject euro

Fresh money troubles for Italy as outdated vending machines spit out 90% of new 'anti-forgery' €5 notes

In the grip of its longest recession and battling problems from soaring youth unemployment to bank credit stagnation, the eurozone has more than enough to worry about as it is.

But now there are reports of a fresh and rather more basic challenge to the single currency: in Italy, people are having trouble using its newest note to make some payments.

Brought into circulation on 2 May, the new €5 note was praised for its enhanced security features, which the European Central Bank (ECB) said would help combat forgery. The other denominations in the Europa series of notes will be introduced over the next few years.

However, in Italy, the new note is reportedly being rejected by many vending machines whose software is not up-to-date enough to recognise it. An experiment carried out in 10 cities by the daily newspaper La Repubblica found that, in 90% of cases, the notes were returned to the customer. The goods affected included tickets for local transport and car parks, cigarettes and petrol.

Similar problems have also been reported in Germany, Belgium and Portugal.

The ECB said it was aware that there were some problems with the transition period, but said the figures quoted in La Repubblica should be taken "with great care". The change had been announced in November, it added, and it had worked since then with banknote equipment manufacturers to prepare the ground.

Introducing the second-generation note earlier this year, the ECB explained that it bore the portrait of Europa, a figure from Greek mythology, and was more durable due to a different coating. The old €5 note will continue for a while to circulate alongside its successor before eventually being withdrawn.


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French Say Lagarde List Tax Collector

Disputing former Greek finance minister George Papaconstantinou’s assertion that a list of 2,062 Greeks with $1.95 billion in secret Swiss bank accounts he received in 2010 from then French finance chief Christine Lagarde was ';unofficial and confidential,'; French authorities said it was designed to be used to help find tax cheats. Papaconstantinou is now being probed by a ...

READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.greekherald.com

Golden Dawn Models Itself On Hezbollah

Ilias Panagiotaros, a Member of the Greek Parliament from the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party that is rising in popularity with its opposition to government austerity measures and immigrants, and for free food giveaways and vigilante patrols. ATHENS - Under fire in Greece for its anti-immigrant and anti-Semitic stance, the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party is looking to the terrorist group Hezbollah as an ...

READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.greekherald.com

Vice-Rector Cleared of iPhone Gift

Giannis Pantis, vice-rector of the Aristotle University in Thessaloniki, northern Greece, has been accused of allegedly using university funds to buy an iPhone device to offer as a gift to actress Natalia Dragoumi. A Thessaloniki court acquitted him over charges of breath of faith, as reported in Kathimerini newspaper. While in court, Pantis blamed Giorgos Dimitriadis, the former commercial ...

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Crisis Affects Greeks? Sexual Life

The Hellenic Society for the Study of Human Sexuality (EMAS) and the Andrology Institute of Athens conducted a research, according to which the financial crisis has affected Greeks' personal and sexual life and has increased incidences of violence against women. The research was based on 600 men and 400 women who were interviewed via telephone. Men between 35 to 45 years old comprise the ...

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The Dark Side Of Greek Yogurt

Acid whey created during the production of Greek yogurt risks creating a new 'Dead Sea'.

READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT modernfarmer.com

Europe closes in on tax havens; Austria agrees to swap bank data

Greece's PM Samaras talks to his Italian counterpart Letta next to Cyprus' President Anastasiades during a European Union leaders summit in BrusselsBy John O'Donnell BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Europe moved closer to ending banking secrecy on Wednesday after Austria dropped objections to sharing data on foreign depositors and the EU focused on negotiating a similar agreement with Switzerland. "It's a bad day for tax cheats," Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann told reporters at a meeting of EU leaders to discuss fighting tax fraud. "We will act jointly and I believe we will manage the exchange of data by the end of the year. ...



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Soccer-Greek championship champions league play-off results and standings

May 22 (Infostrada Sports) - Results and standings from the Greek championship play-offs matches on Wednesday Wednesday, May 22PAS Giannena 1 Atromitos Athinon 1 Standings P W D L F A Pts 1 PAS Giannena 3 2 1 0 4 2 7 -------------------------2 Asteras Tripolis 2 1 0 1 3 3 5 3 Atromitos Athinon 3 1 1 1 4 4 4 4 PAOK Salonika 2 0 0 2 1 3 4 1: Champions League preliminary round 2-4: Europa League ...

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Germans, French eye plan to create jobs for young

Germany and France are preparing to launch a drive to combat the problem of high European youth unemployment, which officials in Berlin say will center on trying to get business involved and make better use of already-pledged public money.

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Ancient Greek Warrior X-Rayed on Long Island


Long Island Press

Ancient Greek Warrior X-Rayed on Long Island
Long Island Press
Anagnostis Agelarakis, a professor and chair of Anthropology at Adelphi University, brought the remains, which are on loan from the Greek Archaeological Service, to North Shore Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park the week before ...
2500-Year-Old Bone Fragment from Forearm of Greek Warrior X-rayed at North ...PR Web (press release)

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Neanderthal Greek Paradise Found


Neanderthal Greek Paradise Found
Discovery News
To put a human face on our ancestors, scientists from the Senckenberg Research Institute used sophisticated methods to form 27 model heads based on tiny bone fragments, teeth and skulls collected from across the globe. The heads are on display for the ...


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Research and Markets: ICT Market Report 2012/13 Greece

Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "ICT Market Report 2012/13 Greece" report to their offe

READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT finance.yahoo.com

Luring Tourists Back to Greece


Luring Tourists Back to Greece
New York Times
A year ago, amid a political and economic crisis that fueled protests in central Athens and pushed Greece toward the brink of exiting the euro zone, the surrounding streets were hauntingly empty. But on a recent Saturday afternoon, Kostas, who only ...


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Derivatives trader: 'Trading can take over your life ? but only if you let it'

A migrant derivatives trader working in London talks of how he trades on volatility to buy himself financial security

• This monologue is part of a series in which people across the financial sector speak to Joris Luyendijk about their working lives

He describes himself as "a third-world migrant in his early 20s from near the equator". He worked as a derivatives trader in a small European country and now trades for a big institution in London after completing a quantitative degree in continental Europe.

"It's funny. I am the current public bogeyman – not only am I a migrant, but I am a "banker" (deliberate use of inverted commas) too! Ironically, I can buy financial security by undertaking a job dealing with understanding insecurity and uncertainty. That's a trade I am prepared to make.

"Fifteen years ago this job was completely different. Earlier practitioners would be standing up for ten hours in the "pit", estimating option prices by plugging numbers into a basic calculator (big fat finger error risk!), shouting and waving hand signals. These days you sit in front of many computer screens, clicking and updating code. Lunch would occasionally be my left hand drinking soup and my right hand on the mouse. Trading options is ideal for someone who likes being in front of a screen.

"When I was working as a derivatives trader in a small European country my routine went like this: I'd come into the office just before 8am and switch on my seven screens. There are many programs to log into. I sort each data feed to update me preferentially on news in the underlying names I trade and on macro developments. I ensure my connections to all relevant exchanges are functioning. I calculate hedge limits and input them into the order book. I make sure all this is done before 8.45am, as the market opens at 9am. At 9.01am there can be some juicy trades – you want to be fast. I would leave around 6.30pm. Weekends were free.

"It doesn't matter how much of a mathematical genius you are – when you first come in the challenge is learning how all the systems work. It's more about systems now than ever before.

"I could trade options without knowing the exact proofs of their pricing. The model does that for you. It's like trading cars. You don't need to know every last detail of how, say, the piston works. What the firm wants is someone quick, assertive, mathematically competent, prepared to optimise reward/risk ratios.

"Some derivatives traders take nearly three hours every day to calculate the value of their positions and their P&L – I saw it in inflation instruments, but I don't know exactly how all of them work. There may be "options on options", "path-dependent options", "correlation products" and much more.

"You're asking how a risk manager would oversee a dozen traders like that, each in his own field. Well, as an options trader you are your own risk manager – particularly at a smaller firm. I wasn't at a company with a big retail division attached to it. If we screw up then we take the hit (as we should!), as do the (wealthy) investors in the firm. No bailouts for us. In general the more complex and opaque the product, the more a trader needs to act as a risk manager. He may be one of the few people who fully understand the risks, though I think larger institutions have been bulking up with sharp risk managers of late, who don't just hold their tongues.

"You don't see people doing this work their whole lives. Trading can take over your life – but only if you let it! It can be surprisingly tiring staring at a screen intently for hours, clicking every few seconds. But being a fisherman in Comoros, a paramedic in Eritrea or a lumberjack in Zaire must be way more tiring, surely?

"Some people in finance can exaggerate a lot. I want to emphasise that to the readers. It's not that stressful! I had my evenings free. I could relax. I could play sport. Sure – I work hard, but so do many billions of people and for far less pay too. I could basically manage my housework myself too, so it couldn't have been that draining. Most important to me as a migrant worker was that I could save over 50% of my net salary – this is really lucky coming from a continent where 25% of people in my age group are unemployed and even more have no savings. I am very fortunate.

"Things seem very different in London, where finance is more of a lifestyle and a mentality. In northern Europe (possibly excluding Frankfurt) working in finance did not set you apart from society.

"In London if you don't join your mates for a drink after work, it can be seen as a signal of disinterest. There's a big culture of spending and splashing out. And job security is probably worse. Where I worked in northern Europe, people conceal their wealth. Ostentatious behaviour is socially unacceptable. There isn't any discrimination towards the back office. Seniors don't make juniors get food orders. No need for pinstripes. "It was completely natural for the secretary to join us for a drink. And it wasn't like London where sometimes you can't take your full annual leave without worrying what signal that may send out.

"From a lifestyle perspective I believe you have to be flexible. As migrants we are ideally placed to do that. Big institutions are still prepared to offer us work visa sponsorship. If I stayed in northern Europe for too long I might be pigeonholed. You can live a comfortable life. But at some point in your career you tend to gravitate to one of the "hubs" (London, New York, Hong Kong, Singapore).

"I just can't plan my career more than two years ahead. The industry can change quickly anyway – for example, suppose you were trading in Sweden before the financial transactions tax came in. After it was extended in 1989 to cover a wider range of instruments, 98% of volumes in bond derivatives in Stockholm went elsewhere. Imagine you had been trading such products, but had married a local woman who insisted on staying put. What do you do? Will you get another similar job in a niche market if you aren't prepared to migrate? Will you even be the first choice to be hired when volumes come back? Now imagine you are a migrant – probably a single man – no wife, no kids, no house, just savings. It's easier for us, isn't it?

"If you're mid-level and you get laid off, it can be very difficult to get back in. Some financiers in London over-leverage themselves and save virtually nothing, despite their high salaries.

"I don't understand how they can't apply the same rules of risk management to their personal lives as they do in their professional lives. How could they be so over-confident?

I don't think the state steps in to help that much in the Anglo-Saxon world compared to continental Europe (I'm talking about stepping in to help individuals here rather than banks!) Many migrants are from nations where there is no welfare state, so we plan for redundancy. We price it in.

"Let's dig a little deeper into my job. There is very little information asymmetry anymore. Everyone has the same Bloomberg terminal, same market feed and (nearly) the same variant of the "Black-Scholes" model for pricing options. Making small margins on each trade is critical.

"The "algos" or high frequency computers will always trade faster than a human can. Most of your systems are executing the quick, "scalp" trades for you – your human input is how you programme it to hedge your exposure, and at what level you choose to take on a block trade.

"If you are a market-maker you are obliged to continually make live quotes in a pre-specified range of options, over a range of strikes and expirations. In return for providing this liquidity we can receive a rebate from the exchange.

"Trading options is a reductionist activity: you condense the underlying instrument's price, the strike (exercise level), contract duration, prevailing market interest rates, stock borrowing rates, dividend expectations and volatility into two numbers – your bid price (where you are prepared to buy at) and your offer price (where you are prepared to sell at). The first three inputs I mentioned are all known – it's only really the volatility you're that unsure of.

"That's essentially what we're trading – volatility, hence our name – "vol" traders. You want to get as big a spread as possible on each trade – but if you quote too wide your prices won't be competitive and nobody will trade with you. You need to find a balance between getting execution and minimising your adverse selection probability (that's your chance of being "picked off" when the market moves uni-directionally).

"There are lots of parameters you need to monitor, and thus lots of ways you can make (and lose) money. Firstly I look at option "greeks" (first-order derivatives such as "delta", "vega", "theta" and "rho" and then second-order derivatives like "gamma", "vanna" and "charm"). When you're trading "vol" (the annualised standard deviation of returns of the underlying instrument) you're hypothesising how much an instrument is going to move. You want to optimise your various ratios (gamma/theta) at different strikes to ensure that you have bought and sold optionality at good levels.

"Secondly, I want to make relative value trades between components in the same index or in the same business sector: eg how is volatility priced at the 25% delta put option in this French oil company versus the 25% downside in that Spanish oil company? Does it seem fair? Where has the spread been historically? How divergent are the skews in the volatility smile? How quickly have I noticed this? Can I trade? Have I been fast enough in identifying an anomaly and monetising it? If and when I do, it is back to dynamic hedging, responding to broker requests from our sales traders, coding and repricing in line with new market developments. Depending on how fast your systems are you can implement volatility arbitrage strategies too. It's like playing Gran Turismo but your gear changes on the controls are manual. Not automatic.

"Vanilla" options are contracts giving you the right (but not obligation) to buy (call) or sell (put) an underlying stock, index future, commodity future or bond future at a particular level and at a particular (series of) moment(s). When the duration of an option contract runs out, it "expires". When that particular 'expiration' moment arrives, it's incredibly tense. One evening every month I'd be like: "Don't bother me because I'll just ignore you." Imagine having to analyse between seven and ten names between 5.30pm and 5.35pm and ensure that you hedge your "delta" exposure on each one.

Those five minutes are the auction, where market participants determine the closing price. That affects if an option is "in the money" or "out of the money" – ie whether it will be exercised or not.

"Probably the most turbulent time was over the summer of 2011 when it was believed that Greece might default. For three days I just reserved one of my screens to show televised footage of Greek parliamentary votes – that was the market barometer at the time.

"You only saw buyers on the screens – people were too afraid to sell. But I am required to quote prices. I have to react fast enough to keep an offer price at a safe enough level. At times like that it's not about stocks anymore – what moves markets is macro news. All it takes is for the likes of Ben Bernanke (US Federal Reserve chairman) or Mario Draghi (ECB president) to be a little bit hesitant.

"Sometimes there's a deep sense of powerlessness. Suppose I have a short gamma position (ie I've sold volatility) in an airline company. That company issues a profit warning at 8.58am and the options market only opens at 9.01am. I know that a profit warning means the price will dive (in general, the smaller the market capitaliaation, the bigger the drop), but there's nothing I can do in those three minutes but re-price my options, my term structure and put in some respectable bids so I can buy back option premium. Oh – and I need to sell some stocks fast to minimise the size of my "long delta" position I get from being short on options."

• To comment on this interview, please visit the accompanying blogpost


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