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Why Greek Government Bonds Are Not Crashing (Spoiler Alert: There's NO Trading)

Tyler Durden's picture




 

A glance at a chart of 5Y Greek Govvies shows the last trade at a 16% yield, well below the worst 20% yields - suggesting yet another storm in a teacup as "markets know best." However, this is entirely wrong! Greek government bond trading has stopped... 5Y bonds have not traded since April 24th. In fact given current equity levels, 5Y yields would be closer to 22% - as bad they have been ever. The entire fixed income market in Greece has died with CDS liquidity having collapsed and only sporadic longer-dated bonds trading.

 

As ekathimerini reports,

Investors have not traded Greek government bonds on the HDAT electronic platform for almost a month as the country struggles to reach a vital cash-for-reform deal with its creditors, data from Greece's central bank showed on Friday.

 

The data shows not a single bond has been traded since May 20, in a sign investors have moved to the sidelines, lacking the appetite to buy what is currently considered one of the riskiest assets in the world.

 

In what is widely billed as another last-ditch attempt to break the deadlock, euro zone leaders will hold an emergency summit on Monday evening on Greece, where bank withdrawals have accelerated and government revenues slumped.

 

In May and April only 4 million euros worth of bonds have been traded, compared with 63 million euros in March, 241 million in February and 560 million in January.

 

About 10.4 billion euros were traded in 2014.

 

Greek government bonds trade mostly over the counter, but the data from HDAT is a proxy for total volumes, traders say.

 

The last barren period of this length on HDAT was just before Greece's debt restructuring in March 2012. From September 2011 to February 2012 only 7 million euros of Greek bonds changed hands.

Given the relationship with stocks, it is probably a good thing that bonds stopped trading and therefore do not FIX the losses mark-to-market on bank balance sheets

 

And as Bloomberg reports, it got worse this week

None of the government’s bonds traded publicly last week nor derivatives insuring them, according to data from the Bank of Greece and the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp.

Greek bank bonds are trading sporadically... indicating significant weakness

 

And CDS imply an 80%-plus probability of default (given standard recovery assumptions)...

Even as liquidity has entirely disappeared...

 

Charts: Bloomberg

 

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Fri, 06/19/2015 - 11:48 | 6214108 _ConanTheLibert...
_ConanTheLibertarian_'s picture

Even comments on ZH have stopped...

Fri, 06/19/2015 - 11:57 | 6214135 kliguy38
kliguy38's picture

comments are at exhaustion levels due to suppression/manipulation and is indicative of "complacency" which  occurs before a "turning" which is code for sheep getting sheared by the big boyz.........its coming....and its near

Fri, 06/19/2015 - 12:40 | 6214278 DullKnife
DullKnife's picture

So...the folks who do our unemployment stats are moonlighting?

Fri, 06/19/2015 - 11:50 | 6214114 JustObserving
JustObserving's picture

Why have bad news when you can have no news at all?

Truth must be protected by a phalanx of lies in an empire of deceit and debt

Fri, 06/19/2015 - 11:51 | 6214117 ebworthen
ebworthen's picture

Bond holiday?  Kind of like a Bank holiday?

Up next:  Stock holiday if any index is -5% or more.

Fri, 06/19/2015 - 11:51 | 6214118 Groundhog Day
Groundhog Day's picture

So your saying now is a great time to load up on greek bonds for the inevitable can kicking?  great ROI

Fri, 06/19/2015 - 12:01 | 6214151 Bill of Rights
Bill of Rights's picture

In a manipulated world is anything really traded?

Fri, 06/19/2015 - 12:05 | 6214164 The Steaksmith
The Steaksmith's picture

You trade your soul to the Devil for confetti

Fri, 06/19/2015 - 12:28 | 6214240 SilverMoneyBags
SilverMoneyBags's picture

The problem never has been and never will be liquidity. The problem is so much junk paper has been printed, there is no DEMAND and we have run out of greater fools. Its all about DEMAND DEMAND DEMAND DEMAND DEMAND.

Fri, 06/19/2015 - 12:31 | 6214248 taketheredpill
taketheredpill's picture
"lacking the appetite to buy" I'm sure there are lots of willing buyers, just no willing sellers at prices near $0.00.
Fri, 06/19/2015 - 13:35 | 6214466 Bunga Bunga
Bunga Bunga's picture

Great, the ECB can buy them without driving the price up, while the sellers are scared like crazy and happy to find a magic buyer.

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