Quote from Specterx:
Not sure if I've mentioned this before, but I think there's an excellent secular buying opportunity in Greek stocks. The Athens General index is currently at 745 down from a year-2000 high of 6500 - down 88.5%. It's back to levels last seen in 1993.
Few weeks ago I took a small (1%) position in GREK, which covers only a subset of 20 stocks rather than the full ATG. It's so rare to see a developed-world (I mean I know it's Greece, but still) stock index beaten down so badly that I really want to boost my position to maybe 3%, as there's quite considerable potential upside - almost 1000% to recover the 2000/2007 highs. A fine return over twenty or so years, and that's not counting dividends. It could of course make only a fraction of that progress and still be a decent enough investment.
Risks that come to mind:
- Political: Nationalization/expropriation of foreign shareholders, or measures such as punitive taxes on foreign capital and capital controls. Seems possible, but Greece is still connected to Europe. As long as the EU and 'European Community' idea survive in some form with Greece as at least a peripheral member, I don't see them as too likely to go whole-hog down this path.
- Bankruptcy: 32.5% (as of Nov 25, it is likely lower now) by market cap of the FTSE 20 index on which GREK is based consists of banks and financial companies. It is entirely conceivable that these will go to zero with all shareholders wiped out.
- Hyperinflation: Greece returns to the Drachma and hyperinflation takes hold. However the real losses might actually be less in this scenario than if bank shareholders were wiped out (after all you own a share in the bank getting first access to the wheelbarrow loads of printed paper).
In short you have to be prepared to lose the whole investment and a 50% drawdown is very likely - which is one reason I haven't put any more out just yet.
I talked about and research this last year and posted here. My conclusion was that if Greece drops out of the EUR then Greek stocks are a great buy(Ala Argentina) the day after. But buying before such thing is risky because the loss of a return to the drachma will be really large and it will be all upfront(70% overnight or so)
If I knew with high confidence they would not return to drachma I would probably allocate 3-4% of my portfolio on some Greek ETFs(Traded in europe, not the US one) on the 'buy when there is blood on the streets' dogma but I don't have that confidence