Quote from ralph00:
Well, we don't know what their cost basis is - suffice it say, its not par. We also don't know what they're carrying the paper at on their books.
It's possible they've already taken significant writedowns and are still standing - hence a total lie that some sort of Greek default would cause a meltdown. The stress tests, if they are real, could reveal such information.
An argument could be made (and has been) that default could cause the PV of significantly written down paper to actually increase.
To say that bankers aren't influencing policymakers and have more than a little bit of control over the shape of events is laughable. Ackermann at DB has the kind of influence in Europe that Jamie Dimon and Lloyd can only dream about in the U.S. NYT article about this recently, too lazy to look for it.