Soros warns Europe risks ‘25 years of stagnation’

Politicians must change policies that have discouraged banks from lending, billionaire investor says

George Soros, billionaire and founder of Soros Fund Management LLC, left, speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview in London. Photograph: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg
George Soros, billionaire and founder of Soros Fund Management LLC, left, speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview in London. Photograph: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

Billionaire investor George Soros said Europe faces 25 years of Japanese-style stagnation unless politicians pursue further integration of the currency area and change policies that have discouraged banks from lending.

While the immediate financial crisis that has plagued Europe since 2010 “is over”, it still faces a political crisis that has divided the region between creditor and debtor nations, Mr Soros (83) said in a Bloomberg Television interview today. At the same time, banks have been encouraged to pass stress tests, rather than boost the economy by providing capital to businesses, he said.

Europe “may not survive 25 years of stagnation” Mr Soros said. “You have to go further with the integration. You have to solve the banking problem, because Europe is lagging behind the rest of the world in sorting out its banks.”

Mr Soros, whose hedge-fund firm gained about 20 per cent a year on average from 1969 to 2011, has been a constant critic of how the euro area was designed and of budget cuts imposed on indebted nations such as Greece and Spain at the height of the crisis. He said more “radical” policies are required to avoid a “long period” of stagnation.

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Investors have concluded that the debt crisis has waned, with the average yield-to-maturity on bonds from Ireland, Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain falling to 2.4 per cent yesterday, the lowest in the history of the euro area, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes. That’s down from more than 9.5 per cent in 2011, when the region was rocked by concern that nations would struggle to service their debt, risking a breakup of the currency region.

European bank shares are "very depressed", making it an attractive time to invest, Mr Soros said. Still, he said it is going to be a very tough year for lenders as they try to shrink balance sheets and boost their capital to pass the European The ECB will analyse lenders this year to determine whether they could survive an economic crisis. ECB chairman Mario Draghi has said he's determined to convince investors that the health check is thorough and credible.

Mr Soros also said Ukraine should serve as a "wake-up call" for Europe, because the political turmoil the country now faces stems in part from the same problems that triggered the region's financial crisis. The European Union required too much of Ukraine and offered too little as the country attempted to join the political bloc, he said. That enabled Russian president Vladimir Putin to fill the void and gain power in Ukraine, he said.

“Europe needs to rediscover its own European identity - instead of each country just pursuing its own national interests and getting further into conflict with the others,” Mr Soros said, adding that he hoped Europe passed the texst in Ukraine.

Mr Soros, who made $1 billion betting against the UK pound in 1992, added that a British referendum on leaving the EU would be “disastrous”, because it would cost the country jobs. UK growth has been fueled by multinational companies selling goods and services to Europe, so it would be “suicidal” if the country left, he said. (Bloomberg)