Grexit fears return, but eurozone problem is more than about Greece
TWO big issues have been roiling financial markets in recent days. One is oil prices, which briefly breached the US$50 per barrel mark on Monday for West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude - a 50 per cent fall from six months ago. The other is the eurozone, where market jitters have returned in anticipation of the general election in Greece on Jan 25.
Oil will likely continue to be a source of turmoil for some time yet. But Greece could be approaching a watershed moment. What appears to be scaring investors is the possibility that the far left party Syriza led by the 40-year-old maverick politician Alexis Tsipras might just win the election - as most opinion polls suggest - or at least form a major part of a coalition. Given Syriza's radical platform, the Greek economy could then enter uncharted territory and take the eurozone along with it. What a Syriza-led Greek government will actually do if in office is unclear - its leaders have made various contradictory statements. But on a couple of key points, there is clarity. It is anti-austerity - an understandable position given that Greece has endured more than six years of negative growth and has a youth unemploymen…
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Columns
‘Competition for talent’ a poor excuse to keep key executives’ pay under wraps
OCBC should put its properties into a Reit and distribute the trust’s units to shareholders
Why a stronger US dollar is dangerous
An overstimulated US economy is asking for trouble
Too many property agents? Cap commissions on home sales
Time to study broadening of private market access