Archive - Oct 11, 2011 - Story

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Charting A Perfectly Healthy European Liquidity Freeze





An artist's rendering of what a Merkozy statement on the chart below would be like: "Here you have a chart depicting a perfectly healthy liquidity freeze and a far better than expected interbank bank run. While the amount of money desperately dumped with the ECB is the highest in over 16 months at €269 billion, a very modest increase of €230 billion from the summer lows, we promise promptly, or by December 31, 2099, whichever comes last, to conceive of a plan which will address the subject of how to plan for the public's interpretation of this chart, and in the meantime promise to bend the laws of mathematics, thermodynamics, rhetoric, and money printing, and plug the inverse hole with nothing but even more promises. Please vote for us." Or something like that. To everyone else who likes it non-sugarcoated, there is now open panic in the Eurobank system, where not a single euro left outside the clutches of the ECB is deemed safe. In other news, all is well.

 

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Troika Releases Statement On Greece: Commentary Attached





Summarizing the Troika'a statement, with some gratuitous commentary

  • Sixth tranche depends on Eurogroup, IMF approval: the use of Greece as a passthru vehicle for Eurobank funding will continue until morale and bank CDS improve
  • Troika says Greek recession to be deeper than anticipated, 2011 fiscal target no longer within reach: the 50% negative revision in deficit to GDP in the past month has been duly noted
  • Recovery only expected from 2013 onward: when it will be Bundesrepublik Griechenland
  • Privatization revenue below expectations: must sell more islands to the Chinese, more gold to Qatar
  • Additional Greek measures likely needed; essential more emphasis placed on structural reform - back in the day "freefall bankruptcy preparation" was not called "structural reform"
  • Greece needs additional measures for 2012, 2014 - must be certain future penetration can proceed absent lubrication
  • Greece overall made important progress - riotcam viewership is now PeyPerView and is used to pay for G-Pap's 3rd winter vacation
 

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Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: October 11





  • Market participants keep a close eye on the outcome of the EFSF ratification by the Slovak parliament. In the latest news, Slovak lawmakers have adjourned the EFSF session until 2pm local time
  • The Troika Commission said Greece will miss its 2011 target, however it will get the new aid tranche when the Eurogroup and IMF approve results of their review, most likely in early November
  • According to sources, haircuts of 40%-60% on Greek bonds are under consideration, however the debate is over whether the haircut should involve the ECB and EU governments
  • ECB's Nowotny and Trichet said that the EFSF will not be leveraged with ECB funds
  • Strength in the USD-Index weighed upon EUR/USD, GBP/USD and commodity-linked currencies
 

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Frontrunning: October 11





  • New bankruptcy ripples may emerge in tough economy (Reuters)
  • Europe’s banks may get €200bn bailout (Independent)
  • US to unveil criteria for picking “systemic” firms (Reuters)
  • China Props Up Bank Shares (WSJ) as reported yesterday
  • Europe warned of systemic crisis over debt (Reuters)
  • US Voters Will Weigh Ballots Focused on Budgets, Higher Taxes (Bloomberg)
  • Regulators stand up for new capital rules (FT)
  • Jobs Panel Pushes Help for Start-Ups (WSJ)
  • Dutch favour tough stance for Eurozone (FT)
  • BIS Report Aims to Debunk Banks’ Criticisms on Capital Rules (WSJ)
 

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Update: EFSF Vote Delayed.... Liveblogging The Slovakian Parliamentary/EFSF-Vote Session





Update: Slovakia’s Lawmakers Delay European Bailout Fund Vote, WSJ Says. WSJ reports that Repeat vote on EFSF may be held later this week; unlikely to take place Wed. as more time for political talks needed, WSJ reports, without citing anyone. Govt expected to lose confidence vote, paper says. However, the confidence vote is expected to still pass, or rather, fail. Which would lead to a government reshuffle into a configuration that will pass the EFSF vote. All speculation.

In terms of binary events on today's docket, the most important for the euro and eurozone by a wide margin is the Slovakian EFSF-ratification vote which is set to begin shortly, and where hopes have faded that a favorable resolution can be reached, at least in the immediate horizon. Those who want to follow developments in real time can do so courtesy of the following live blog at sme.sk updated every several minutes.

 

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Greek Deficit Miss To Be Re-Re-Revised Again, 1 Year Greek Bond Hits Record 159%





A week ago our post announcing that the Greek deficit target was going to be revised higher once again, from 7.6% to 8.5%, started with the following sentence: "As the Greek parliament meets to finalize huge public sector job cuts, Reuters is reporting that Greece will miss the deficit targets set in its EU/IMF bailout this year and next... We would say "again" but at this point "as usual" makes far more sense." Guess what: it is time to "as usual" re-re-revise it once again.

 

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Gold Support at 144 Day Moving Average at $1,603; Chinese Gold Demand “Extremely Strong”





Physical demand for gold in Shanghai has been “extremely strong” this week following the week-long Chinese holiday, Mitusi note in their morning report. UBS are more circumspect but note that physical demand in China appeared to be “quite decent” in the first trading day after the Golden Week holiday. They note that combined volumes for the SGE Au9999 and Au9995 contracts surged to the highest since February 14th. Year-to-date volumes are now 11% higher than 2010 levels. UBS “expect demand to remain strong until the Chinese New Year holidays in late January 2012.” A further sign of the significant scale of demand from Asia and from China in particular is seen in the news today that China has installed its first gold vending machine. More importantly, China and Chinese banks are planning to roll out another 2,000 gold ATMs nationwide. Each ATM can hold up to 200 kilograms of gold bullion in varying denominations at once.

 

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