
© Gwydion M. Williams
The implosion of Greece is now being compared to Lehman Brothers. Whether it is or nor remains to be seen. Still, it's likely to have the same devastating impact on the global economy.
Dr. Robert Shapiro, chairman of Sonceon, an economic advisory firm in Washington who served as Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs in President Bill Clinton's administration, says that the real problem is that no one knows how much exposure the banks have. Which is similar to what happened in 2008 with Lehman Brothers. Once Lehman collapsed, it set off a chain of events that few saw coming because the credit default swap market is so murky, opaque and no one can read it. "There are lot of people who could be caught by surprise and faced with large losses. We still don't know how many credit default swaps there are against European sovereign debt and the banks that hold them," he says. In other words, a Greek exit from the Eurozone, a Grexit, will have a Lehman like domino effect on Europe.
Still, Michael Cohrs, an advisor to the Bank of England has told The Guardian it 's unlikely to be another Lehman for one reason. "This is not as complex as Lehman Brothers in the sense that Lehman happened quite quickly. Greece has been unfolding before us for a long time and all of the bright minds have been thinking about this."
That said, the worry is no one knows the exposure and that is like what happened in 2008 to Lehman. And there is no way anyone knows what will happen next month because the polls change every few days. The Greek economy might be in much worse shape by June 17 when they hold an election. The government is running out of money to pay its day-to-day bills. And the big worry is those banks which are three times the size of the American banks and which fund most of the world's trade. As with Lehman Brothers, no one knows what their exposure is.
History, as Mark Twain said, doesn't repeat itself but it sure rhymes.


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