Greece debt crisis: Athens stock market ends 16% lower as manufacturing plunges - as it happened
- Greek factory output falls to record low in July
- Market falls more than 20% as bourse reopens after five-week shutdown
- Bank and finance shares collapse by as much as 30%
- Lenders meet Greek labour minister
- China woes deepen on manufacturing slowdown
6.01pm BST
The Greek stock market ended 16.23% lower, its worst daily performance since 1985 when modern records began, with banking shares inevitably the main fallers. There were only nine gainers, including furniture maker Dromeas which gained around 29% after announcing - somewhat ironically given Greece's problems with the EU - that it had wond a a30m deal to supply European Commission offices.
Elsewhere though, European shares held up remarkably well despite the slump in Athens. For a start, the decline had been expected after a five week suspension of the Greek market. There were also some reasonable eurozone PMI manufacturing figures (ignoring a shocking decline in Greece). And even though Greek banks dropped up to 30%, elsewhere the sector was buoyed by positive results from HSBC and Commerzbank.
5.52pm BST
And a bank on short-selling which came into effect when capital controls were introduced at the end of June and due to end today looks like it will be extended:
ESMA confirms 4-week renewal fo Greek short selling ban: BBG
5.49pm BST
More meetings due between Greek officials and its creditors:
Greek FinMin @tsakalotos & Economy Min @g_stathakis to meet creditor reps Tue @ 1.30pm for talks on bank recap, privatization, & again Wed
5.30pm BST
Meanwhile Brent crude has dropped below $50 a barrel for the first time since January:
#BREAKING **** Brent #oil drops below $50 a barrel for the first time since January pic.twitter.com/k8h5y37rzr
5.16pm BST
As the Athen market fell sharply on its first day of trading for five weeks, index provider MSCI has said it may reclassify its Greek market index from emerging to standalone status.
It said it may launch a consultation on such a move if capital controls continued. It said:
If there are continuing significant restrictive measures impacting the accessibility of the Greek equity market by international institutional investors, MSCI may potentially launch a consultation on a proposal regarding the reclassification of the MSCI Greece index to standalone market status from emerging markets status.
4.59pm BST
Here's our full story on the UK government's plan to begin selling its stake in Royal Bank of Scotland:
Related: UK government starts Royal Bank of Scotland sell-off
4.48pm BST
BREAKING NEWS
The UK government plans to sell part of its stake in Royal Bank of Scotland. It will dispose of 5.2% of the bank via a placing to institutional investors.
4.42pm BST
Here's Markit's summary of the global manufacturing PMIs for July, and it makes grim reading for Greece and its government:
4.06pm BST
The damage to the Greek economy is so severe that even if a third bailout plan is agreed, it is not likely to last very long and the country is still on course to leave the eurozone.
That is the view of Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics, who writes:
The scale of the damage done to the Greek economy by the country's renewed crisis and imposition of capital controls looks set to be far worse than the provisional plans for a third bailout envisaged and suggests that Greece is still likely to leave the currency union at some point.
Even before the Greek capital controls were implemented at the end of last month, the economy was being hit by the generally adverse effects of the renewed crisis. Although Greek GDP contracted by only 0.2% in the first quarter, the available hard data suggest that it did so much more sharply in the second quarter.
3.59pm BST
On the Athens market fall, market analyst Jasper Lawler at CMC Markets UK said:
The Athens Stock Exchange plummeted on Monday; its first day of trading in five months but an improving manufacturing outlook meant other European stock markets gained as a destination for funds coming out of Greece.
Greek bank stocks went immediately limit down 30% with the rest of the market not faring much better, down as much as 23% on the open. It makes sense to see these kinds of declines given the Greece's flirtation with an exit from the Eurozone since the stock exchange was closed five weeks ago.
3.53pm BST
The Athens stock market has closed sharply lower on its first day of trading for five weeks, but it has ended off its worst levels.
It finished 16.23% lower at 668.06 have initially dropped by around 23%.
Market value is being destroyed on very light volumes as buyers stay away from bank shares. It will take some days for the market to balance out.
3.29pm BST
As we reported earlier, representatives of Greece's lenders met labour minister Giorgos Katrougalos today.
Now Reuters is reporting labour ministry officials saying that Greece and its lenders have agreed that new pension reforms will not have any effect on anyone who was eligible to retire by the end of June.
3.13pm BST
The ISM report has been confirmed, and ahead of Friday's non-farm payrolls number, analysts have been looking at the implications of today's data:
Today's Manufacturing PMI report correlates to a 119k reading in headline NFP (data since '01, r^2 =.594) ^MW
2.56pm BST
Here's our full report on the Tom Hayes Libor verdict:
Related: Former City trader Tom Hayes convicted of Libor rigging
2.53pm BST
Back with the US data and James Knightly at ING says the US Federal Reserve is likely to raise rates in September despite the weaker than expected ISM data:
ISM manufacturing index appears to have been leaked a little early with the headline index coming in at 52.7 for July versus 53.5 in June. It is also weaker than the 53.8 consensus estimate.
The report in general is mixed to slightly positive. On the positive side the output and new orders components have both risen (output up 2 at 56.0 and new orders up 0.5 at 56.5). The new orders component is at its highest this year. This suggests decent growth in manufacturing activity both for July and coming months.
2.49pm BST
BREAKING NEWS
Away from the eurozone crisis for a moment and Tom Hayes, the former UBS and Citi trader, has been found guilty of all eight charges of conspiracy to defraud in the Libor trial.
2.47pm BST
The US Markit PMI for manufacturing is out, and is steady at 53.8 in July from June, exactly as expected.
2.41pm BST
The US ISM manufacturing survey for July - due in around 20 minutes - appears to have leaked early:
July manufacturing #ISM (52.7 v 53.5) released early. Details mixed: new orders (56.5 v 56.0), prod. (56.0 v 54.0), employment (52.7 v 55.5)
2.28pm BST
Some possible good news for Greek banks.
The country is unlikely to ask for an increase in emergency funding from the European Central Bank for weeks, according to a Reuters report citing two sources, because its liquidity buffer has risen thanks to cash inflows and help from the central bank:
The bank liquidity buffer has grown to about a5bn from a1bn to a2bn at the height of Greece's debt crisis, thanks to two Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA) increases from the ECB, tax and tourism inflows, and pension payments, said one of the sources, who asked not to be named.
Greek banks, closed for much of July, rely on emergency liquidity from the ECB and limit cash withdrawals to a420 per week to prevent a run on banks.
The capital controls have stopped the exodus of cash. And the increase in the buffer indicates that money is leaving banks slower than feared and they retain at least some confidence.
"There's been relative little outflows and there was actually a week in July when there was a net inflow into the banks," one source said.
12.44pm BST
Global banks may have reduced their exposure to Greece, but not entirely:
Europe's banks aren't completely out from Greece yet. HSBC just took a $92m writedown on loans there.
12.37pm BST
Greece's lenders are continuing their meetings with officials in Athens today, including labour minister Giorgos Katrougalos.
Greek newspaper Kathimerini reports:
Declan Costello from the European Commission, Rasmus Rueffer of the European Central Bank, Nicola Giammarioli from the European Stability Mechanism and Delia Velculescu of the International Monetary Fund met Katrougalos at his office for talks that lasted just under two hours.
Ministry sources said the aim of the discussions was for the visiting officials and Katrougalos to acquaint themselves with each other. The talks were held at the minister's suggestion, sources added.
11.57am BST
Could Greece need a second bridging loan?
In July, after much tortuous negotiation, the country received a7.16bn which it immediately used to make a due payment to the European Central Bank and to pay its arrears to the International Monetary Fund.
Focus magazine reported over the weekend that the German government is increasingly pessimistic about the negotiations over the third bailout being wrapped up any time soon. The magazine cites unnamed government sources suggesting that the special session of the Bundestag slated for mid-August in order to approve the bailout may have to be moved. This is just one in an increasingly lengthy line of reports suggesting that the bailout negotiations may not be completed in time.
As a reminder.. Greece has to repay a3.2bn to the ECB on 20 August. In order for this money to be released in time approval in a number of national parliaments needs to begin on the 12/13 August according to reports. This means the negotiations have to be completed by 10/11 of August with approval from the eurozone finance ministers coming quickly afterwards. Of course, we have seen such dates fudged before (they always seem to overestimate the time needed for national approval to give some wiggle room). But in any case there is probably between a week and two weeks before the third bailout needs to be signed, sealed and delivered. This looks incredibly optimistic - it means agreeing a three year reform programme, how much and when funds will be released, when and to what extent debt relief will be discussed or even take place and whether the IMF will be involved, amongst many other incredibly thorny issues.
11.44am BST
Here's the AP take on today's slump in the Athens stock market:
Greece's main stock index plunged over 22% as it reopened Monday after a five-week closure, giving investors their first opportunity since late June to react to the country's latest economic crisis.
Greek bank stocks suffered the most, hitting or nearing the daily trading limit of a 30% loss. Markets in the rest of Europe, however, were largely unaffected.
Greece is expected to head back into recession in 2015 after briefly emerging from a six-year contraction due to the effects of capital controls and months of uncertainty over the country's future in the euro.
A monthly survey of business and consumer confidence, the Economic Sentiment Indicator, fell for a fifth consecutive month in July to its worst level since October 2012.
11.20am BST
#EU has no comment on Greek market developments. Authorities in #Athens are more than competent enough to deal with market movements.
*EU 'TAKES NOTE' OF ATHENS MARKET REOPENING, NO COMMENT ON DROP
11.14am BST
The euro is under pressure after the plunge on the Athens stock market.
Having traded as high as $1.099 earlier is it now down at $1.096, although losses were mitigated by the reasonably positive manufacturing data for the eurozone as a whole.
11.00am BST
More downbeat data from Greece.
The country's economic sentiment index fell sharply to 81.3 points in July from 90.7, according to the Institute for Economic and Industrial Research. This is the lowest reading since October 2012. The effect of capital controls could not be fully assessed since they were still in place, said the institute, but they would add a further burden to an already shrinking economy.
10.57am BST
10.52am BST
Athens market now at -17.8%. Financials still at -30% limit down but some blue chips & mid-caps find buyers at these levels. #ASE #Greece
10.31am BST
Elsewhere though, European markets are shrugging off the slump on the Athens exchange.
After all, the decline was not exactly unexpected, not least given the falls seen in the US ADRs of Greek banks.
10.24am BST
The Athens market has recovered slightly from its worst levels, but is still down 19.25% at the moment. Banks, inevitably, are the worst performers:
10.04am BST
Meanwhile in the UK, the manufacturing PMI has edged up from 51.4 in June to 51.9, slightly better than forecasts of a rise to 51.6.
But new orders grew at their slowest pace in nearly a year, according to Markit, and to put things in context, the June figure was the lowest level in more than two years. The UK recovery looks very much dependent on consumer spending, given the weak prospects for exports to the eurozone and the strong pound. Rob Dobson at Markit said:
Although a tick higher in the headline PMI breaks the decelerating trend in UK manufacturing, growth in the sector remains near stagnant and suggests that the sector is continuing to act as a drag on the economy.
Domestic demand bolsters UK manufacturers http://t.co/CZXlcgfzSL (as demand for investment goods slumps) pic.twitter.com/02WHyNAjBY
No two surveys on UK manufacturing seem to chime with each other currently with some painting a promising picture and others a bleaker one. However, what is clear is that domestic demand is still driving growth and with continuing strength in the sterling-euro exchange rate restricting the competitiveness of our exporters, the exporting surge the sector craves to boost growth and help rebalance the recovery seems further away.
Muted manufacturing activity is worrying for hopes UK growth can become more balanced & less reliant on services sector & consumer spending
9.56am BST
Elsewhere there has been a mixed picture for the monthly manufacturing indices.
But the overall eurozone performance was fairly steady despite the Greek crisis:
#Eurozone manufacturing expands solidly despite Greek slump. #PMI at 52.4 (June: 52.5) http://t.co/EFD23yn8WL http://t.co/oVzUZtbEEj
The eurozone manufacturing sector continued to expand at a solid steady pace at the start of the third quarter, as continued growth in the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Austria and Germany offset the deepest contraction of the Greek manufacturing sector in the survey history.
9.41am BST
With capital controls, banks closed and slumping demand, Greece's factory output fell to its lowest level on record in July.
The manufacturing sector - which makes up about 10% of the economy - fell to 30.2 points according to Markit's montly purchasing managers index. Anything below 50 is a sign of contraction. This is the worst performance since the company started compiling the data in 1999. Markit said:i
July saw factory production in Greece contract sharply amid an unprecedented drop in new orders and difficulties in purchasing raw materials. i
The main causes of the contraction in output were twofold: production requirements diminished as new orders plummeted while manufacturers had difficulty in sourcing materials and semi-completed goods for use in the production process.
Manufacturing output collapsed in July as the debt crisis came to a head. Factories faced a record drop in new orders and were often unable to acquire the inputs they needed, particularly from abroad, as bank closures and capital restrictions badly hampered normal business activity.
Demand was hit amid the heightened uncertainty surrounding Greece's future, leading both total new business and exports to contract sharply, and it remains to be seen how long it takes these to recover.
9.29am BST
8.40am BST
The market has opened and it's not pretty. The Athex Composite has plunged more than 20%, to 615.12. The falls are even deeper in financials, with banking shares down by as much as 30% - the maximum allowed. Market observers caution, however, that we will not know the true picture until things settle down a bit in a few hours' time.
The 22% fall on the Athens Stock Exchange is the largest % fall even it has had #Greece
8.24am BST
The latest data from China is not good, reinforcing fears about the health of its economy and the knock-on effect on the rest of the world.
China's factory activity shrank more than initially estimated in July, contracting the most in two years as new orders fell and dashing hopes that the world's second-largest economy may be steadying, a private survey showed on Monday.
The report followed a downbeat official survey on Saturday which showed growth at manufacturing firms unexpectedly stalled, reinforcing views that the struggling economy needs more stimulus even as it faces fresh risks from a stock market slump.
8.06am BST
Good morning and welcome to our rolling coverage of the corporate and business world, global markets and the eurozone crisis.
It's a big day in Athens as the stock market reopens there after its five-week suspension. Trading is scheduled to resume at 8.30am London time (10.30am Athens time) and it's likely to be a bit of a bloodbath, with falls of up to 30% predicted. Banking stocks are expected to be hardest hit. Here's Heather Stewart's story on what to expect.
"While it would be easy to suggest that today's reopening of the Greek stock market is a key step on the road to some form of normalisation, it is likely to be anything but.
Aside from the fact that we could well see some big losses, there is the small matter that not only are the internal politics in Greece likely to remain difficult it is also likely to be extremely problematic to reconcile the positions the divergent positions of the IMF and Germany on debt relief, particularly given the proximity of the next debt deadline on 20 August."
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