Archive - Jul 13, 2015
Germany Just Killed Its Golden Goose
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 18:00 -0500It’s not just about Greece, it’s about the whole EU. The Troika thinks that by scaring the living daylights out of the periphery, its power will increase. Germany just killed its golden goose. And boy, is that ever stupid. The main thing here is that Don Corleone was not a psychopath or sociopath, and that’s more than you can say for Schäuble and Dijsselbloem and Juncker and their ilk. While brute force may look attractive and decisive and all, in the end it will be their undoing. The Italians and Spanish and French have noted every word of this, and more. Europe as it is, is already over. Everything from here on in is a mere death rattle.
Is the Dollar Signaling Another 2008-Type Autumn is Coming?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/13/2015 17:33 -0500The whole thing feels a bit like the summer of 2008 all over. Once again, the global economy is weakening, a significant crisis has erupted, and temporary solutions to said crisis are being hailed as a success.
US Automakers Worst Nightmare: Chinese Auto Inventories Explode In May
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 17:10 -0500A week ago we exposed the massive number of cars piling up in GM's parking lots in China. A few days later, we note that Chinese auto sales have collapsed at the fastest rate in 3 years and an increasing number of new orders are being cancelled as the stock market crashes. But the triple whammy for US auto manufacturers - who have incessantly pitched China as their growth engine - is news from Huaxia Times that China's import car dealers saw inventory days reach a mind-blowing 143 days in May. For context, the normal average has been 24-36 days. Once again it appears the serial extrapolators at the automakers, excited by the serial extrapolators at the big banks have excitedly mal-invested right at the turn.
Cashtration: As Goes Greece, So Goes The World
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 16:30 -0500The tedious drama that we’ve been observing in Greece in recent years is far from over. What we’re witnessing is the greatest credit bubble/debt bubble that mankind has ever seen. What we’re seeing in Greece is not merely a country of socialistically inclined people behaving very foolishly. We’re seeing a small pin pricking a very large balloon. Greek debt is tied to EU debt. EU debt is tied to world debt. The coming debacle may unfold in this manner...
The (Amended) Founding Principles Of The European Union
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 16:00 -0500
SCaRY EuRoCLoWN SCHaEuBLe...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 07/13/2015 15:27 -0500And the Treaty of Versailles 2.0
US Equities Soar On Greek "Deal"; Greek Stocks, Euro Plunge
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 15:06 -0500The One Lesson To Learn Before A Market Crash
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 14:58 -0500Greece is saved!!! I mean BANKERS are saved!!! The market will celebrate the total capitulation of Greece to the EU bankers. Nothing has been resolved. The debt won’t be repaid. The can has been kicked again. Portugal, Spain, Italy, Ireland and even France are essentially insolvent. It’s all a ponzi scheme. The bankers win and the people lose. Hope is not a strategy. Hussman’s weekly tome shows how a crisis plays out. Bad shit happens and the powers that be react with bad solutions that keep their wealth and power protected. Their bad solutions lead to a worse crisis. More bad solutions. And so on, until complete collapse.
"I'm Not Stupid" - Who Has The Last Laugh Caption Contest
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 14:25 -0500If there's something funny about all of this, someone forgot to tell Wolfgang Schaeuble...
German Production Is A Facade Built On Bad Loans...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 14:14 -0500Similar to the US banks who funded home owners that shouldn’t have received mortgages and made a fortune doing so – at least initially, the Germans funded the periphery nations in an effort to drive output growth domestically. However, financing a large portion of ones’ customer purchases is a high risk endeavour. And the Germans are in the midst of this hard lesson.
Why Did Schauble Almost Use The "Nuclear Option" - Tim Geithner Explains
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 13:57 -0500"The idea was that with Greece out, Germany would be more likely to provide the financial support the eurozone needed because the German people would no longer perceive aid to Europe as a bailout for the Greeks. At the same time, a Grexit would be traumatic enough that it would help scare the rest of Europe into giving up more sovereignty to a stronger banking and fiscal union."
To Mexico And "Beyond": Flash Boys Get Warm Welcome In Emerging Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 13:46 -0500"Exchanges around the world are avidly wooing high-frequency traders, those controversial speed demons of Wall Street. Despite the often explosive debate over this kind of trading in the U.S., bourses in Mexico, Turkey, South Africa and beyond are trying to lure HFT types to boost business," Bloomberg reports.
Ike Brannon on Taxes, Income Inequality and Thomas Piketty
Submitted by rcwhalen on 07/13/2015 13:40 -0500Peter the Great liked to confiscate successful businesses and put the owners to death...
Argentina As A Model For Greece
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 13:33 -0500"I think that if Greece were to leave the Euro things would get very complicated for them... and this would create the same very unhealthy situation as we have in Argentina. Why? If people start storing value in a foreign currency, in this case Greeks using Euros, this will create a huge lack of transparency and affect normal trade flows and transactions. And we know that the parallel economy in Greece is already quite large the way it is. So imagine an exponential version of that. It would be a very difficult period for Greece."
Even The Players Are Losing Faith In Their Own Shenanigans
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 12:54 -0500What is on display more brightly and clearly than ever, though, is the utter fakery of international banking. The players have lost faith in their own shenanigans. They simply go through the motions now awaiting the political fallout, which is to say the revolt of the people who can still do arithmetic. The old refrain, “your check is in the mail” may not be so reassuring to folks who haven’t eaten for three days. Personally, I would expect the gasoline bombs to be flying around Syntagma Square before the middle of the week.






