By
WILLIAM
WATTS
According to an article in the Wall Street Jornal, published 8-03-2016, 
Lisbon’s borrowing costs appear set to rise: economist
Lisbon, we have a problem.
Portuguese government bond prices have been under pressure, 
sending yields higher, on worries the country’s sovereign debt 
could soon lose its last remaining investment-grade rating.
The rise in the government’s borrowing costs reflect fears 
that such a downgrade would render the European Central Bank 
unable to purchase Portuguese government debt as part of its asset-buying program. 
It would also mean that Portuguese banks wouldn’t be able to 
pledge Portuguese government bonds as collateral 
in return for cheap loans from the ECB.
All told, expect questions about Portugal 
at ECB President Mario Draghi’s Thursday news conference 
following the central bank’s eagerly awaited policy meeting.
Borrowing costs did fall back from their February highs 
after ECB officials indicated they would work to make sure any further cuts 
to the central bank’s deposit rate, which is already in negative territory, 
would be structured to protect banks. 
That was important because Portugal’s banking sector, 
along with Italy’s, is seen among the region’s most vulnerable. 
Negative rates can be a burden for banks, who have to pay central banks 
to hold on to a portion of their excess reserves.
But Portuguese yields are still elevated relative to their peers 
on the eurozone’s so-called periphery (see chart below). 
And if DBRS - the only major ratings firm to still rate Portugal as investment grade -
cuts its rating next month, things could get ugly, 
notes Jennifer McKeown, senior European economist 
at Capital Economics, in a Tuesday note.
Portugal’s new left-leaning government has run afoul of the ratings firms, 
who have expressed doubts over the country’s budget path.
McKeown notes that a junk rating need not necessarily render Portuguese debt 
ineligible for purchase by the ECB or for use as collateral. 
After all, the central bank has granted “waivers” before, 
allowing it to accept debt rated as junk for collateral in Greece, for example. 
And the ECB could also move to widen the range of assets it buys, 
which means it could purchase other Portuguese assets 
that would allow it to support the country’s economy.
But, as McKeown reminds, waivers can only be granted to countries 
that are participating in a bailout program and complying with its terms. 
Portugal exited its bailout program in 2014.
She also notes that the ECB suspended Greece’s waiver last February 
as the battle between Greece’s radical Syriza government 
and European authorities heated up. 
There’s little reason to expect the ECB to show Portugal greater sympathy, 
McKeown said.
In part that’s because earlier purchases of Portuguese government debt 
under the defunct Securities Markets Program 
left the ECB holding nearly a third of Portuguese bonds
 - close to the central bank’s limit. 
That in itself could offer the bank a convenient excuse 
to stop buying Portuguese bonds just before the limit is reached.
And even if the ECB does go for buying more private-sector debt, 
that might not be of much help to the Portuguese, 
who appear to have few of the very highly-rated assets 
that would likely be part of the mix, she said.
If the ECB shuts Portuguese debt out of its bond-buying mix
- something that the economist sees as likely if DBRS downgrades,
- it’s likely to cause investors to become more worried about the prospect of default. 
The result would almost certainly be a further jump in bond yields, 
possibly even toward the 8% level that forced Portugal into a bailout in 2011, 
McKeown said.
Here we go again!!
WE´VE SEEN THIS FILM BEFORE!!
Here we go again!!
WE´VE SEEN THIS FILM BEFORE!!


 
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