Archive - May 10, 2010 - Story
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 10/05/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/10/2010 04:31 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 10/05/10
The Latest US Taxpayer Bill To Save Europe, And Specifically The French Banks: $57 Billion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/10/2010 04:15 -0500The latest (and certainly not last) IMF portion of the European bail out is E220 billion, or $287 billion at today's exchange rate. As the US and its taxpayers represent roughly 20% of total IMF funding, today's 3% loss in dollar purchasing power to the middle class will cost the middle class $57 billion. Paying for the privilege of being able to purchase less sure sounds like a squid-pro-quo type of deal for us here. Politicians everywhere applaud this most recent rape of America's working class, even as communism is now the global ideology. Who needs TheOnion.com when reality is now 10 times more surreal. And the direct recipients of taxpayer generosity: SocGen, AXA, Dexia, CA and all other French and German banks, which right now are all up ~20%.
European Monetization Begins: Sources Report Central Banks Have Started Buying Government Bonds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/10/2010 03:37 -0500And so we get one step closer to the end. Look for bond yields in Europe, and especially the Bund, to roll over and accelerate to infinity as investors realize what monetary prudence capitulation is. Amusingly, the KomIntern won - comrades Lenin, Stalin, Marx, Engels, and all others who grace the dark pages of US historybooks, would have been celebrating if only they were alive today: May 9, in addition to "victory over fascism" day, is now also "victory over capitalism and free markets day." Rejoice comrades!
Summary Of The Biggest Bail Out Ever: Even Keynes Is Spinning In His Grave
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/10/2010 03:32 -0500The race to the currency devaluation bottom is now in its final lap. And gold is the only alternative to the now imminent collapse of the fiat system: the world had a chance to take writedowns on losses, punish those who took risk and failed, and refused to do so. There is now no risk left, but it only means that eventually all the risk will come back and lead all capital markets to zero. The result will be the end of Keynesian economics as we know it. Do not trade in this broken market, do not hold your money in a bank as they are all now one hour away from a terminal bank run - buy and hold real, FASB mark-to-myth independent assets.
- « first
- ‹ previous
- 1
- 2
- 3



