During the last year in the Eurozone, one of the most headline-capturing issues was the threat that Greece would be forced out of the common currency. Although a third bailout package has dampened this crisis for the time being, the danger has not been eliminated. This is primarily because institutional resistance to enacting reforms demanded by international creditors, coupled with a sclerotic Greek economy, could mean that it is only a matter of time before Greece faces another potential exit—with all of the euro-weakening instability that will result.
In addition, other countries—most recently Portugal, whose ruling party was ousted by an anti-austerity coalition, thereby calling into question its commitment to economic reforms—have the potential to face similar challenges as Greece. Even Spain and Italy are at risk. Although Spain has undergone a period of reform and deflation within the Eurozone, which is making it internationally competitive again, continued high unemployment may undermine the political legitimacy of the government and lead either this government, or a new one, to abandon reforms. Italy, on the other hand, seems to have stabilized, but a stagnant economy coupled with a large public debt could cause the nation to fall back into a crisis.
Perspective on US Dollar
"With the European central bank basically paying commercial banks to take euros and the U.S. Federal Reserve ready to hike U.S. interest rates, the dollar will become even stronger. With competitors now importing from China, India, Brazil and Europe, the strong dollar is a curse, and price competition is fierce. The only way that we can be competitive is to offer better deliveries, service and technical assistance. That makes us even more expensive and as a result, the MRO market becomes harder to serve. The truth is, we exist within a global economic malaise. As long as our trading partners are weak, we cannot be strong. Any crisis is now a global crisis, and the lowest price is now the global price. A strong dollar is good for the financial markets, but it kills manufacturing. None of us can work in a bubble anymore. We must all source from off-shore and domestically. Trying to reach the correct equilibrium between price and demand, cost and service, deliveries and holding costs is always in flux. Efficient communication makes for efficient markets. Trying to create a system that can consider all the variables takes a lot of talent and tools that are as sophisticated as we see in the financial markets. The challenge to survive is more difficult than ever before. Dedication is the key. But that commodity, too, is in scarce supply."
—Michael Dillon, President, SEEPEX