Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Portugal hitting political crisis wall ! Foreign Affairs Minister joins Finance Minister in resigning , the Government's junior partner has withdrawn from the Government - things are on a knife's edge in Portugal as Nigeria's deb faring better as apparently viewed as less likely to default than Portugal !









http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-07-02/portugal-nigeria


Portugal Is Nigeria

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While Portuguese Prime Minister Coelho exclaims "You can count on me," in tonight's TV address, it seems the market is not so sure. In fact things are so bad that Nigeria, that bastion of western capitalism and stability, has just issued 5Y and 10Y bonds at yields in line with Portugal's. With news breaking that the opposition party is calling for new elections in Portugalwe suspect Nigeria will be out soon with a dismissal noting that "Nigeria is not Portugal".




http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-07-02/portugese-spreads-soar-cabinet-unravels


Portuguese Spreads Soar As Cabinet Unravels, "There Are Reasons To Be Concerned" JPM Warns

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Following finance minister Vitor Gaspar's resignation, the foreign affairs minister Paulo Portas has just added to Prime Minister Coelho's problems and quit in light of who the PM chose as replacement for Gaspar. Gaspar was one of the key Portuguese policy makers to oversee the country’s bailout program, and in his letter of resignation, noted that he had lost the public's support to continue with the deeper-than-expected recession and above-target public deficit developments. Mr. Gaspar's replacement will be the current treasury secretary, Maria Luís Albuquerque, and that is what sparked the Portas to exclaim, "the Prime Minister decided to follow the path of mere continuity at the Finance Ministry. I respect that but disagree." Coelho is due to make a statement at 1900GMT but in the meantime, Portugal's bond market has spiked its most in 10 months relative to its risky neighbor Spain back above 200bps.

And here is JPM warning that the situation in Portugal may turn from bad to worse:
There are increasing reasons to be concerned about developments in Portugal, which has been the ‘forgotten country’ for much of the crisis. The announcement this afternoon that Paulo Portas, the foreign minister, has resigned significantly escalates our near-term concerns. Portas is leader of the CDS-PP, the junior partner in the two-party governing coalition. He has made a statement indicating that his resignation is one of personal conscience, and refusing to comment on the prospects for the Government. However, given his position, his departure will clearly have a significant impact.

The context is important here. We have flagged previously that there were dangers in the division between the two governing parties. CDS-PP has taken a strategy of disassociating itself from some measures which the Government has sought to implement, attempting to deflect blame onto the Prime Minister, Passos-Coelho, and the outgoing Finance Minister, Gaspar. There has always been a risk that the party would find remaining in Government too politically uncomfortable and seek to withdraw support when it sensed that the balance of its interests was shifting. What was needed was a proximate cause. We were worried that the Constitutional Court ruling on the Budget earlier this year may provide the spark, and have remained concerned about local elections in September. It is possible that Finance Minister Gaspar’s departure yesterday, and the reshuffle this week will prove to be the trigger instead. Portas has claimed that Gaspar’s departure opened an opportunity to explore a new path in terms of economic and fiscal policy, and that the Prime Minister has closed this opportunity by immediately appointing Gaspar’s deputy to the post.

At this stage it is still too early to tell how things will play out. These moves may prove to be about no more than tactical positioning, designed to highlight concerns about Alberquerque, the new Finance Minister, and to provide more leverage in a new Cabinet. In this scenario, we would expect the CDS-PP to use its moment of leverage to argue that Portugal should take a different approach ahead of the next Troika review on July 15th. There is some chance that the situation could be more serious however, and Portugal will be worth watching very closely in the next few days. The opposition Socialists have requested a meeting with the President for early afternoon tomorrow, and we may get more details from CDS-PP or the Prime Minister in the mean-time. If for whatever reason the CDS-PP were to withdraw its support, the Government would control only 108 seats in the 230 seat parliament. It would then need to either seek some broader coalition arrangement, or call new elections.At the moment risks appear elevated.


http://openeuropeblog.blogspot.com/2013/07/governo-em-risco-portuguese-government.html

Tuesday, July 02, 2013

Governo em risco: Portuguese government at risk of collapsing after Foreign Minister resigns

UPDATE (18:15) - We thought it would be useful to explain quickly how things work in Portugal when a government crisis occurs. If the Prime Minister resigns, the Portuguese President is the one who decides when and if parliament has to be dissolved.

Under Portugal's electoral law, new elections must be held at least 55 days after parliament is dissolved. This would mean almost two months with a caretaker government at a rather unfortunate time for Portugal. 

ORIGINAL BLOG POST (17:45)

One day after the resignation of Finance Minister Vítor Gaspar, the Portuguese government has just lost another one of its key players. But the impact could be a lot bigger this time.

Paulo Portas, the country's Foreign Minister (see picture), has resigned because hedisagreed with the appointment of Maria Luís Albuquerque as new Finance Minister.

Portas is also the leader of the People's Party (CDS-PP), the junior coalition partner of Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho. If the party pulls out of the coalition (which looks likely in light of Portas's resignation) Passos Coelho will lose his majority in parliament. So this is critical as it can potentially trigger new elections. 

Passos Coelho will make a TV statement tonight. We'll keep you posted. In the meantime, it's worth keeping in mind the economic and social challenges Portugal faces - which we outlined here.

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