Germany has
most to lose from euro exit, not Greece, BofA claims
Italy and Ireland have more incentive to quit the euro than Greece, while
Germany may have limited room to prevent departures from the currency union,
according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
Using cost-benefit analysis and game theory, BofA Merrill Lynch foreign
exchange strategists David Woo and Athanasios Vamvakidis concluded in a July 10
report that investors “may be underpricing the voluntary exit of one or more
countries” from the bloc.
“Our analysis produces a few surprising results that even readers who may
disagree with our conclusion are likely to find interesting,” the strategists
wrote.
Italy, the euro area’s third-largest economy, would enjoy a higher chance of
achieving an orderly exit than others and would stand to benefit from
improvements in competitiveness, economic growth and balance sheets, they
said.
While Germany is the nation deemed able to leave the euro zone most easily,
it has the least incentive of any country to quit because it would face weaker
growth, possibly higher borrowing costs and a negative hit to its balance
sheets, the strategists said. Austria, Finland and Belgium also have little
reason to quit, they said, while Spain has the weakest case for leaving among
economies most directly affected by the crisis.
The analysis is based on a framework which ranks eleven of the 17 euro-area
nations on criteria such as how orderly their exit from the bloc would be and
how it would affect economic growth, interest rates and balance sheets. Ireland
and Italy received an average ranking of 3.5, while Greece was at 5.3 and
Germany had the highest score at 8.5. The lower the number, the more there would
be to gain from leaving.
Woo and Vamvakidis employ game theory to suggest that while Germany could
“bribe” Italy to remain in the bloc and avoid the fallout from an exit, its
ability to do so is limited. That’s because Italy has more reasons than Greece
to leave so any compensation could become too expensive for Germany and Italians
may be even more reluctant than the Greeks to accept the conditions for
staying.
“If our inference turns out to be correct, this could have negative
implications for markets in the months ahead,” they said.
[Bloomberg] |
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