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                    Greeks Turn to Cash as Bank Crisis Looms

   by Reuters

   The atmosphere in the branch of Alpha Bank in central Athens is calm
   and businesslike. Below the quiet murmur of the tellers, there is
   little to suggest that Greece is facing a banking disaster that could
   force it out of the euro.

   But teller Costas Alafouzos says a steady stream of customers have been
   taking out their money as expectations have grown that Greece could be
   facing a turning point after a crisis that has lasted more than five
   years.

   "You don't see it, there are no lines, but it's happening. There has
   been a rise in withdrawals, mostly in cash this last week," he said.

   As the standoff between the government of leftist Prime Minister Alexis
   Tsipras and its creditors in the European Union and International
   Monetary Fund has deepened, there have been growing warnings of an
   "accident" that could force Greece out of the euro.

   If the pace of withdrawals continues, Greece may have to introduce
   capital controls, limiting the amount people can take out of their bank
   accounts and bringing into plain sight the prospect of an exit from the
   euro that would ravage savings.

   "It's very possible that this thing we hope to avoid will occur. Of
   course, if it happens, the next step is chaos and catastrophe," said
   economist Ioannis Simaresis, 55, as he lined up to take money out of a
   cash machine.

   For months, Greek banks have relied on emergency infusions of central
   bank funds to stay afloat, but with more than 4 billion euros taken out
   of the system this week, reserves are shrinking fast.

   If the withdrawals continue, a credit system that has been hollowed out
   during years of recession could reach the point of no return.

   The starkest warning came Thursday from ECB Executive Board member
   Benoit Coeure, who told eurozone finance ministers that he was not sure
   if the banks would be able to open Monday, according to participants at
   the meeting.

   A crisis meeting of the ECB Governing Council on Friday decided to
   increase the amount of emergency finding available to the banks -- but
   not by enough to keep the system going for long if no political
   solution to the crisis is agreed upon.

   With corporate and household deposit outflows totaling more than 30
   billion euros between October and April, balances are at their lowest
   level in more than a decade, paradoxically leaving the economy awash
   with cash.

   Bank notes in circulation, part of what economists call the M0 money
   supply indicator, rose to 43.5 billion euros in April from just over 30
   billion in November -- showing that about a quarter of what Greece's
   economy produces annually is floating around in the form of physical
   currency.

   Slowdown

   Cash levels that high underscore how far the banks' role as the heart
   of the economy, pumping finance to households and businesses, has been
   weakened during the crisis.

   For months, Greek banks have been in slowdown mode as lending has dried
   up while the government has wrangled over a new package of funding from
   its lenders that it needs to stave off default.

   The huge load of bad and doubtful loans the banks are saddled with has
   limited their ability to extend credit to an economy that has fallen
   back into recession, while a gradual return of deposits seen toward the
   end of last year has reversed and interbank access has frozen again.

   "A large part of our operational energy is devoted to containment,
   dealing with liquidity pressures and problem loans," said a banker who
   spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak
   to the press.

   Greece's retailers association says about 95 percent of businesses'
   applications for loans are being rejected by commercial banks. Many
   small and medium-sized firms have stopped even asking banks for credit.

   With interest rates at rock-bottom levels and an economy in deflation
   for more than two years, the only reason to keep money in the bank is
   security and convenience.

   "The potential upside, if the situation normalizes, is that people will
   bring this money back to the banks. This will improve deposit balances.
   They will not want to keep holding it in cash," said another banker.

   That reflects the steps that many Greeks have already taken to ensure
   their cash is not trapped in the bank, following a previous banking
   scare in 2012, when Greece came close to leaving the euro and savers
   took fright.

   As a result, there is none of the panic seen, for instance, when
   Britain's Northern Rock bank ran into trouble in 2007, with long lines
   of worried and angry depositors queueing up outside its branches.

   The richest Greeks are believed to have taken the bulk of their
   fortunes abroad long ago, but even small savers have made their
   preparations.

   "Personally, I have already taken precautionary measures," said Daphne
   Alexiou, a 66-year-old pensioner, who was withdrawing just a small
   amount of cash ahead of the weekend.

   (1 euro = $1.1313)
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References

   1. http://www.voanews.com/content/greeks-turn-to-cash-as-bank-crisis-looms/2830272.html