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Standard and Poors, one of the big three rating agencies, fired a shot straight at the Euro-zone debacle over the weekend by downgrading the debt ratings of several countries, most notable of which was France and Austria losing their respective triple A ratings. Market reaction was somewhat mooted, probably because it is already reflected in the price, but the main message of the announcement was that things are really starting to go from bad to worse. Markets have become accustomed to the fact that the European "powers" (the "usual suspects" that call the shots) are very adept at organizing hollow summits but keep on falling short of what is needed to stop the situation from getting out of control.
Greek bonds are trading as if they have defaulted already (which they technically have) and there is still no agreement on what the so called "haircut" should be, but, maybe more worryingly, countries in the "too big to fail" camp such as Italy have been flirting with a whopping 7% yield on 10 years making it very costly to refinance at a time of austerity.
What the "authorities" don't seem to be paying much attention to is that even if what needs to be done to put an end to this mess is clear and will be deployed as a last resort, the delay itself will make it far more costly to intervene and there is a growing chance that it doesn't work at all.
It is clear that the treaty and the whole setup is not designed to function in this type of environment, it is a major flaw that the original architects didn't think through but, if they play their cards right, the Euro-zone that possibly emerges from this crisis situation will be far more robust in construction.