Migration Of Sovereign Debt From Private Hands To Public Institutions

 | Mar 21, 2012 05:23AM ET

The percentage of Greek debt held by public institutions as opposed to private investors has grown dramatically in recent years. In some ways this is similar to the US after 2008, with various Fed/Treasury programs, including Maiden Lane and the GSEs. Sadly, Greece will end up with the same or higher debt to GDP ratio than they had before the restructuring (IMF estimate is 167% for 2013 - for more information on the topic see this post from Kostas Kalevras.) In part this is due to Greece spending some €50 billion to bail out their own banks who are now bankrupt after having participated in the PSI (Greek banks held a big portion of Greek government debt and took a massive hit to their capital).

But this process of shifting an ever larger proportion of sovereign debt onto the public balance sheets is not unique to Greece. Even without the PSI, Portugal is also in that camp.

GS Research: ... As shown in chart below, Portugal is on a similar path. On the basis of the existing troika package (and again making assumptions about the SMP holdings), around 60% of Portugal’s sovereign debt will be held by the official sector by the end of next year. Should Portugal be unable to re-access the market in September 2013 (an eventuality that can certainly not be ruled out), that figure rises further – even in the absence of a Portuguese PSI.