Reporting From Europe: Impact of Likely Greek Default, Exit From Euro Zone

This is the first in a series of blog postings from Europe at a critical time by peregrinating Ben Warwick, regular blogger for AdvisorOne and contributor to Investment Advisor. Ben is an investment advisor and author of the Searching for Alpha monthly newsletter.

LONDON—There is an old saying here that Americans don't know where another country is located until the two go to war. Greece may become the exception to this rule.

Folks here and on the Continent are becoming increasingly convinced that Greece will eventually leave the euro. Austerity measures seem all but off the table at this juncture, as the fractured government that is forming in Greece seems to be leaning toward growth strategies as a more economically tenable solution.

This latter outcome would include Greek defaulting on its debts.

JPMorgan estimates the immediate costs to the eurozone at around 400 billion euros, or $510 billion, with the bulk of that loss coming from international bailout funds. Write-offs of commercial bank loans would be about 25 billion euros of the total.

This loss is being referred to as the "first order" effect of the Greek exit. The "second order" effects, which could be much larger in scope, would come from the perception that other indebted countries may become much more willing to follow in Greece's footsteps.

I see this trade coming in two tranches. During the period of greatest uncertainty, sovereign debt will be the place to be. After the dust settles, traders will most likely prefer equities and corporate credit to lower-yielding government paper. At this point, we may witness lows in U.S. interest rates.

The outcome of the crisis in the E.U. is hardly set in stone, but a Cinderella ending seems far off in the horizon.

About the Author
Ben Warwick, Quantitative Equity Strategies

Ben Warwick, Quantitative Equity Strategies

Veteran investment strategist Ben Warwick brings 20 years of investment management expertise to AdvisorOne.com in his blog, Searching for Alpha. His market and economic insights provide readers with an insider’s view on generating alpha through asset allocation, the use of strategic portfolio “tilts” and alternative investments.

Ben Warwick founded Quantitative Equity Strategies (QES) in 2002 as a platform for implementing his quantitative investment strategies. The firm manages assets with traditional long-only equity and fixed income, private equity, managed futures and alternative investment mandates. QES has developed an industry leading expertise in building investment programs that can replicate alternative returns, while offering daily liquidity and transparency. These products include the HFRq, a hedge fund replication strategy developed in concert with Hedge Fund Research in Chicago; the Managed Futures Beta Index, with Aspen Partners; and the Nomura QES Modeled Private Equity Returns Index (PERI), which was developed with Nomura Bank and Preqin, the leading source of information in the private equity industry.    

He is the author of several books, including "Searching for Alpha: The Quest for Exceptional Investment Performance," (Wiley, 2000) and "The Handbook of Managed Futures," with Carl Peters, (McGraw-Hill, 1996).  He can be reached at ben@qesinvest.com.

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