Archive - Feb 2014 - Story
Argentina Scrambles To Raise $10 Billion, Avoid Reserve Collapse; BONARs Bidless
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/01/2014 17:18 -0500
Argentina has now burned through $2 billion in less than two weeks, the fastest outflow since 2006, and a trend which if sustained (and we see no reason why it would change), means it has just over half a year left of reserves projecting a linear decline. However, since the lower the amount of reserves, the faster the withdrawals will come, it is safe to predict that the endgame for Argentina will come far sooner, just as its suddenly crashing bonds seem to have realized. Which is perhaps why, as Argentina's La Nacion reports, the country is suddenly, and long overdue, scrambling to raise $10 billion to "counter the flight of capital" from the country.
A Forecast Of Our Energy Future; Why Common Solutions Don't Work
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/01/2014 16:16 -0500
In order to understand what solutions to our energy predicament will or won’t work, it is necessary to understand the true nature of our energy predicament. Most solutions fail because analysts assume that the nature of our energy problem is quite different from what it really is. Analysts assume that our problem is a slowly developing long-term problem, when in fact, it is a problem that is at our door step right now.
Two Months After We Said It Would, Goldman Cuts Its GDP Forecast (With Much More To Come)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/01/2014 15:17 -0500Back in December 2013, as we do after every periodic bout of irrational exuberance by Goldman's chief economist Jan Hatzius et al (who can forget our post from December 2010 "Goldman Jumps Shark, Goes Bullish, Hikes Outlook" in which Hatzius hiked his 2011 GDP forecast from 1.9% to 2.7% only to end the year at 1.8%, and we won't even comment on the longer-term forecasts) designed merely to provide a context for Goldman's equity flow and prop-trading axes, we said it was only a matter of time before Goldman (and the rest of the Goldman-following sellside econo-penguins) is forced to once again trim its economic forecasts. Overnight, two months after our prediction, the FDIC-backed hedge fund did just that, after Goldman's Hatzius announced that "we have taken down our GDP estimates to 2½% in Q1 and 3% in Q2, from 2.7% [ZH: actually 3.0% as of Thursday] and 3½% previously."
Nearly Half Of America Lives Paycheck-To-Paycheck
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/01/2014 14:45 -0500
While stocks are still near record highs and the inventory-stuffed picture of economic growth for the US ticks up to its fastest pace in 2 years, Time reports that a study (below) by the Corporation for Enterprise Development (CFED) shows nearly half of Americans are living in a state of “persistent economic insecurity,” that makes it "difficult to look beyond immediate needs and plan for a more secure future." In other words, too many Americans are living paycheck to paycheck... but their findings get worse.
Why This Harvard Economist Is Pulling All His Money From Bank Of America
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/01/2014 13:25 -0500- AIG
- Alan Greenspan
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bear Stearns
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- China
- default
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Gallup
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Janet Yellen
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- Salient
- TARP
- TARP.Bailout
- Turkey
A classicial economist... and Harvard professor... preaching to the world that one's money is not safe in the US banking system due to Ben Bernanke's actions? And putting his withdrawal slip where his mouth is and pulling $1 million out of Bank America? Say it isn't so...
Martin Armstrong Warns Ukraine Is Doomed After The Elections
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/01/2014 13:13 -0500
Further protests and a plethora of headlines this morning from both sides in the troubled European (for now) nation. The Ukrainian foreign minister begins by noting that "its impossible to take Ukraine away from Russia," that Ukraine was "right to take attractive Russia offer," and that protests aren't peaceful. Opposition leader Klitschko responded that "Ukrainians dream of a stable, modern country," and that a majority of Ukrainians want "European values," and asks for "international help." Romania's Basescu is concerned and urges the Ukrainian army to stay out of the conflict. But, as Martin Armstrong notes below, according to a former adviser to Vladimir Putin, the economist Andrei Illarionov, the Kremlin will take one of three possible scenarios with respect to the Ukraine problem to "assert a lot of pressure on Kiev."
Europe Is Set To Mandate "Remote Stopping Device" In All Cars For Police Use
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/01/2014 12:15 -0500
Europe has been full of great ideas recently. Solving youth unemployment through slavery; bailing out insolvent banks via implicit fraudulent conveyance with the Central Bank; but this, as they say over there, takes the biscuit. While we have reported previously on regulatory efforts to put all sorts of invasive mandatory devices in U.S. automobiles (from October of last year Big Brother is Coming to Your Car), this idea from the EU take things to a whole other level of insanity...
A device that would enable police to stop vehicles remotely is being considered by an EU-wide official working group, it has emerged.
Italy Unveils Most Bizarre Bank Bailout Yet
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/01/2014 11:18 -0500
On Wednesday, Italy's government voted final approval to a decree hiking the value of Bank of Italy's share capital from €156K to €7.5 billion - something that had not been done since the 1930s. Of course, politicians determining the fictitious value of a central bank is one thing, as idiotic as it may be. However, what is truly preposterous is the covert bailout that accompanies the decree: a key part of the decision was setting a 3% ceiling on the stake that the bank's shareholders can own in the central bank. This means, as Reuters reports, that Intessa and UniCredit, currently the central bank's largest shareholders with stakes of 42 percent and 22 percent respectively - not to mention two of Italy's most NPL-heavy banks - will have to sell the bulk of their central bank "equity" stakes. And who will they sell them to? Why the central bank itself, and in return they will pocket up to €3.5 billion ($4.7 billion) from the sale of their central bank holdings. Said otherwise, Italy took not only bizarro accounting, but also monetary financing of insolvent banks by the monetary authority, and thus Italy's taxpayers, to the truly next level.
Explosions And Heavy Gunfire In Bangkok Ahead Of Elections
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/01/2014 09:41 -0500
17 years ago, the first major Emerging Market crisis started in Thailand, leading to the Russian default and the collapse of LTCM ushering in the era of Too Big To Fail. This time, all the world needed for the second major EM crisis, was for Ben Bernanke to announce he is giving global central planning a break (because one can be certain the Untaper will be right back on the agenda as soon as the S&P enters a bear market). Ironically, Thailand has largely been insulated from the EM decimation, even through it is now in as bad a political shape as it ever was, and one day ahead of the February 2 general elections things are getting from bad to worse. AFP reports that explosions and heavy gunfire rattled Bangkok Saturday as pro- and anti-government protesters clashed on the eve of controversial Thai elections seen as unlikely to end a cycle of violence in the kingdom after months of opposition rallies.



