December 22, 2024

Seeking Revenue, Greece Approves New Mines, But Environmentalists Balk

For some residents, all this activity, which promises perhaps 1,500 jobs by 2015, is a blessing that could pump some life into the dismal economy of the surrounding villages in this rural northeast region of Greece.

But for hundreds of others, who have mounted repeated protests, the new mining operation is nothing more than a symbol of Greece’s willingness these days to accept any development, no matter the environmental cost. Only 10 years ago, they like to point out, Greece’s highest court ruled that the amount of environmental damage that mining would do here was not worth the economic gain.

“This will be a business for 10, maybe 15 years, and then this company will just disappear, leaving all the pollution behind like all the others did,” said Christos Adamidis, a hotel owner here who fears that the new mining operations will end up destroying other local businesses, including tourism. “If the price of gold drops, it might not even last that long. And in the meantime, the dust this will create will be killing off the leaves. There will be no goats or olives or bees here.”

Tensions over new development schemes are being felt elsewhere in Greece, too, as the country stumbles into its sixth year of recession, eager to bring in moneymaking operations and forced by its creditors to streamline approval processes. Environmentalists are objecting to plans that would sell off thousands of acres for solar fields and allow oil exploration near delicate ecosystems.

“We see laws changing, policies changing,” said Theodota Nantsou, the policy coordinator in Athens for the World Wide Fund for Nature. “We see things getting rolled back under the guise of eliminating impediments to investment. But over the long run, all these things will have a heavy cost.”

The fund says standards are widely being ignored or lowered, affecting air, water and land use, from the reduction of mandatory environmental impact reviews to plans for increasing coal use and the likelihood that 95 percent of Greece’s environmental fund — more than $1 billion collected for projects like improving energy efficiency and sustaining nature conservancies — will be absorbed into the general government budget.

In June, the fund issued a report saying it was witnessing an “avalanche of serious environmental losses.” It said some rollbacks were an attempt to fulfill the demands of the trio of creditors, the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank and the European Commission, that have been sustaining Greece in recent years. But it said that, to an equal extent, the losses were because of initiatives put forward by various ministries.

No project, however, appears to have elicited more of a public outcry than the resumption of mining operations in the mineral-rich hills here, where legend has it that Alexander the Great also mined for gold. Past mining operations here have been boom-and-bust enterprises, their fortunes swinging with the price of metals, leaving behind ugly piles of sandy gray tailings. Virtually everybody in the area has stories about the runoff from old mining operations, which turned the sea yellow at times.

But perhaps as much as anything, the anger over the mines is a reflection of the fundamental distrust many Greeks feel toward their government: a firm belief that most officials are busy enriching themselves, their friends and their families at the country’s expense. Nick Malkoutzis, a columnist for the conservative daily newspaper Kathimerini, wrote that it was hard to blame villagers for their distrust, when so often companies had been allowed to ignore regulations. “Perhaps in another country, locals would feel more comfortable with the project because the process for awarding public contracts or environmental certificates is transparent and trustworthy,” he wrote, adding that in Greece, that was not the case.

Dimitris Bounias contributed reporting.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/14/world/europe/seeking-revenue-greece-approves-new-mines-but-environmentalists-balk.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

High & Low Finance: Questioning the Evil of Short Sales

Back in what now seem to be the long-ago days of 2003 through 2007, when the economy seemed to be healthy and stocks were expected to rise as a matter of course, so-called naked short-selling was a subject of great interest to more than a few companies and politicians. The Securities and Exchange Commission responded with a new rule that was supposed to curb the practice.

This week the S.E.C. settled a case against a former options market maker for violating those rules in 2006 and 2007. The trader, Gary S. Bell, will pay $2.1 million to settle the allegations. Most of that is in the form of disgorging illegal profits, which shows, if nothing else, that finding a way around the rule was profitable.

To economists, restrictions on short-selling often seem to be foolish and costly impediments to efficient markets. To companies, and their executives, any short-selling — whether legal or not — can seem pernicious. That is particularly true when market stresses are at their greatest. It can become an article of faith that short-sellers are spreading false rumors aimed at destroying a company.

A short-seller sells shares in a company that he does not own, hoping to repurchase them later at a lower price. Normally, a short-seller borrows the shares from someone who does own them, but when a stock seems especially overvalued such borrowing can become very expensive, if not impossible. Selling a stock that has not been borrowed is called naked shorting. Of course, the shares will not be delivered when the trade settles — that is called a failure to deliver — but the seller still stands to profit if the shares fall in price, and to lose money if they rise.

These days, it is not only the naked shorts that arouse ire. Governments in Europe have imposed bans on selling financial stocks short since the August market turmoil. Those bans have not kept financial stocks from being the worst-performing stocks on the Continent, but of course there is no way to know what would have happened without the ban.

It may or may not be relevant to note that financial shares in the United States, where the S.E.C. has resisted pressures to impose a comparable ban, have done better than their European brethren. But returns have been volatile here too, raising questions about whether shorts deserve blame for manipulating markets.

Historically, short-sellers have tended to be right a surprising amount of the time, at least in cases where the company grew upset enough to publicly complain. In 2004, a Yale professor, Owen Lamont, published a study of 266 companies that had publicly complained about short-selling during the quarter-century ending in 2002. Because some companies grew angry more than once, he studied a total of 327 share-price movements. On average, stocks underperformed the market by about 25 percentage points over the following year after they began to campaign against short-sellers.

Mr. Lamont conceded that such data did not prove the companies had been overvalued. An alternative explanation, favored by company managements, he wrote, “is that short-sellers are actually manipulating prices, driving prices down over long periods of time.”

But he noted that a significant number of the companies turned out to be frauds. “The evidence suggests that short-sellers play an important role in detecting not just overpricing, but fraud,” he wrote. “Policy makers might want to consider making the institutional and legal environment less hostile to short-sellers.”

The data Mr. Lamont used is now, of course, rather old. The S.E.C.’s rule to prevent naked short-selling dates from 2004, and was strengthened in 2008. Is there any evidence that those who violated the rule had similarly identified overpriced stocks?

The Bell case is at least the fourth one filed by the S.E.C. that claims violations of Regulation SHO by options market makers, but only the second one I could find that named actual stocks that were illegally shorted, the other being a 2009 case against traders who operated firms with the delightful names of Rhino Trading and Fat Squirrel Trading. All the cases concerned trading that took place before the rule was strengthened.

Perhaps significantly, many of the stocks that the S.E.C. said were illegally shorted appear never to have shown up on the Regulation SHO lists of stocks that are published by markets. Those lists show stocks in which there have been a large number of failures to deliver shares. Such fails can indicate naked shorting, although they also can result from back-office problems. The fact that there were violations in other stocks could mean violations were more widespread than those lists seemed to indicate.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=b7c43929d5bd82d2e3b891b5eafe0183