This page has been archived and commenting is disabled.

The Greek "Ultimatum": Bailout (For The Bankers) And (Loss Of) Sovereignty

Tyler Durden's picture




 

So after one year of beating around the bush, it is finally made clear that, as many were expecting all along, the ultimate goal of the Greek "bailouts" is nothing short of the state's (partial for now) annexation by Europe. According to an FT breaking news article, "European leaders are negotiating a deal that would lead to unprecedented outside intervention in the Greek economy, including international involvement in tax collection and privatisation of state assets, in exchange for new bail-out loans for Athens. People involved in the talks said the package would also include incentives for private holders of Greek debt voluntarily to extend Athens’ repayment schedule, as well as another round of austerity measures." Thus Greece is faced with the banker win-win choice, of not only abandoning sovereignty, a first in modern "democratic" history, in the pursuit of "Greek" policies that are beneficial for Europe, or not get a bailout, which would only serve to prevent senior bondholder impairments. How could Greek leaders and its population possibly not accept such an attractive option which either leaves the country as another Olli Rehn protectorate, or forces it to not bailout Europe's overleveraged banker class. In essence Europe is now convinced, just like Hank Paulson was on September 14, 2008, that the downstream effects from letting Greece implode are manageable. But the key development is that the Greek bankruptcy, which from the beginning, and as Peter Tchir's note below demonstrates, was always simply a Greek choice, was just made that much easier.

From the FT:

People involved in the talks said the package would also include incentives for private holders of Greek debt voluntarily to extend Athens’ repayment schedule, as well as another round of austerity measures.

Officials hope that as much as half of the €60bn-€70bn ($86bn-$100bn) in new financing needed by Athens until the end of 2013 could be accounted for without new loans. Under a plan advocated by some, much of that would be covered by the sale of state assets and the change in repayment terms for private debtholders.

Eurozone countries and the International Monetary Fund would then need to lend an additional €30bn-€35bn on top of the €110bn already promised as part of the bail-out programme agreed last year.

Officials warned, however, that almost every element of the new package faced significant opposition from at least one of the governments and institutions involved in the current negotiations and a deal could still unravel.

In the latest setback, the Greek government failed on Friday to win cross-party agreement on the new austerity measures, which European Union lenders have insisted is a prerequisite to another bail-out.

In addition, the European Central Bank remains opposed to any restructuring of Greek debt that could be considered a “credit event” – a change in terms that could technically be ruled a default.

One senior European official involved in the talks, however, said ECB objections could be overcome if the rescheduling was structured properly.

Despite the hurdles, pressure is building to have a deal done within three weeks because of an IMF threat to withhold its portion of June’s €12bn bail-out payment unless Athens can show it can meet all its financing requirements for the next 12 months.

And the latest set of very timely observations from TF Market's Peter Tchir.

You Can Lead A Trojan Horse To Water But You Can't Make Him Drink

Restructuring in one form or another seems imminent rather than years away

Well, it seems as though this week's news flow has spurred the mainstream media into action.  Everywhere you look there are stories about the Greek credit crisis.  It is encouraging to see that more of them now agree with my view that a restructuring would occur sooner rather than later.  Only a month ago, almost every article and every piece of official street research made it clear that a restructuring was at least a year off, if not longer. I demonstrated why I thought that opinion was wrong, and although I haven't been proven correct yet, I am no longer in a tiny minority.  Restructuring (reprofiling or default or whatever you want to call it) will not be easy, but I remain convinced that it is the best outcome for Greece and in the long run will be the best outcome for Europe even with the short term pain it will cause. 

There is growing scrutiny of the ECB's actions and motivations

It has also become painfully obvious to everyone that the actions of the ECB are making any resolution more difficult.   Someone, other than me, has now called the ECB 'pathological' in their resistance to restructuring.  The ECB, led by Trichet, made a major mistake in their purchase of Greek bonds in the secondary market.  It is unclear what they intended to gain (other than a short squeeze) as Greece was not tapping the capital markets for new bond deals.  If Trichet worked at a real bank, he would have been fired by now, or allowed 'to pursue time with his family'.  Someone who was not part of the bad decision would be brought in to oversee the positions.  The ECB needs to change personnel immediately and bring in someone fresh to be part of the negotiations who can focus on what is best going forward and not on how best to cover up previous mistakes.

It is Greece's decision to default or not, NOT the ECB's or EU's

I continue to be confused by the fact that most people talk about the issue from the lender's perspective.  "Should Greece be allowed to default?" "Does it teach Greece a bad lesson if they let them walk away? "  "Won't Greece just default again if the ECB lets them walk away?"

The reality is the IMF, or ECB, or EU can offer money to Greece, but it is Greece's decision to borrow more to pay off old debts.  Only Greece can decide to make payments and not default or demand restructuring.  Other entities or countries can make it easier for Greece to kick the can down the road, but in the end, only Greece can decide whether or not to pay its bills. 

The people of Greece seem to prefer default.  It is fairly clear that this is not a short term liquidity problem, but a longer term solvency problem for Greece.  Greece has some assets it can sell, but as I have said time and again, they will still have those assets to secure new funds after a default/restructuring.  I continue to believe it is in the best interest of Greece to default and it is their decision, no one else's.  It may be bad for the rest of Europe if Greece defaults, but that really should not be the priority of the Greek government.

If Greece defaults, the creditors can then take steps to enforce their rights.  If a person fails to pay on their mortgage, the banks can enact their rights to foreclose.  If a U.S. company fails to pay its debt, creditors will suit, and the company and debtors will typically resolve the issue in the courts under Chapter 11 or Chapter 7.  There are similar statutes for corporate defaults in other countries.  The real reason that we are hearing so much about this from the lenders perspective, rather than the borrowers, is because it is not very clear what the lenders' rights are if Greece stops paying.

If Greece stops paying, the lenders cannot 'foreclose' on it.  There is no law that dictates how to proceed like chapter 11 does.  The bonds have very few if any covenants.  The lawsuits would have to be won in Greek courts and then enforced by people employed by the Greek government.  Good luck with that.

The reason the lenders have an almost irrational need to avoid a default, is they don't know what they will get if Greece does default.  There is no good way to analyze it.  Their ultimate recovery will be based on some threats of future lending, rights of set-off, and maybe some threats of trade sanctions, but unlike a mortgage or a corporate bond, there is no good way to analyze the potential outcome.  There is a reason 'vulture' funds focus on corporate debt much more than sovereign - there is a way to analyze the outcomes, it is not just guess work.

So people can continue to comment on whether Greece should be allowed to default, but that misses the point.  Lenders can make it easy for Greece to make payments, but choosing to default or not remains solely a Greek decision and they should do what is best for them.

 

- advertisements -

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:27 | 1321492 vocational tainee
vocational tainee's picture

it is worth thinking of it ,but it implies fourthly going into doing the same.. 

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:30 | 1321493 israhole
israhole's picture

You mean these guys don't love Israel? Sure.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:31 | 1321496 vocational tainee
vocational tainee's picture

I´ll go out with you for a week end..

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:44 | 1321864 Monedas
Monedas's picture

Hello ! I'm Monedas ! I'm the unofficial, self anointed, self appointed spokesman and ombudsman and ambassador at large without portfolio for the Jewish people ! Let's do lunch ? Monedas 2011 Comedy Jihad World Tour http://trololololololololololo.com/

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:39 | 1321501 buzzsaw99
buzzsaw99's picture

The ratings agencies are not pleased with this sort of talk. kowtow to the tentacle of the bankstas bitchez!

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:41 | 1321503 Curtis LeMay
Curtis LeMay's picture

Anyone see a pattern here?

 

1. “Spain is not Greece.”

Elena Salgado, Spanish Finance minister, Feb. 2010

 

2. “Portugal is not Greece.” 

The Economist, 22nd April 2010.

 

3. “Ireland is not in ‘Greek Territory.’”

Irish Finance Minister Brian Lenihan.

 

4. “Greece is not Ireland.”

George Papaconstantinou, Greek Finance minister, 8th November, 2010.

 

5. “Spain is neither Ireland nor Portugal.”

Elena Salgado, Spanish Finance minister, 16 November 2010.

 

6. “Neither Spain nor Portugal is Ireland.”

Angel Gurria, Secretary-general OECD, 18th November, 2010.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:44 | 1321518 Lord Welligton
Lord Welligton's picture

Yes.

I see a pattern of the EU falling apart.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:44 | 1321519 alien-IQ
alien-IQ's picture

"I'm Don Francisco's sister"

Woody Allen - Love and Death

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 22:26 | 1321668 Renfield
Renfield's picture

BBBBBut...

"The euro will raise the citizens' awareness of their belonging to one Europe more than any other integration step to date." --- Gerhard Schroeder

"We must take care that globalization does not become something people become afraid of." --- the same jackass Suddenly Ireland is not Greece is not Spain is not either Italy or Germany...I thought the 'eurozone' was a happy band of brothers -- err, 'Europeans' -- all singing cumbaya as the next step up from the filthy yanqui dullar. Now I'm so confused.
Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:04 | 1321816 knukles
knukles's picture

Yeah. 

Everybody is too embarrassed to bring a friend home.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:52 | 1321869 Monedas
Monedas's picture

7. "Portugal minus Ireland is Greece !"....Monedas 2011 Potato famine ? Let them eat their babies !

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 02:35 | 1321958 StychoKiller
StychoKiller's picture

8. The US is NOT Japan!

9. "I'm Chevy Chase and you're NOT!"

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 03:16 | 1321993 M.B. Drapier
M.B. Drapier's picture

Biter.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:41 | 1321511 Catullus
Catullus's picture

Default = freedom.

You did not contract this debt, Greeks. Your government did. Do not accept the international banker occupation. Show us how it's done and give hope to millions in the west. Default!

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:20 | 1321756 SYantiss
SYantiss's picture

Deault = war (ending in freedom or slavery).

No default just skips the war straight to jail... Do not pass go...

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 07:39 | 1322127 Catullus
Catullus's picture

No it doesn't. Tune down your crazy dial to 5.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:41 | 1321513 Spondulick
Spondulick's picture

Dudes

NOBODY in Europe wants to take Greece over, it is a mess and everything about it is messy.

 

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:45 | 1321516 Lord Welligton
Lord Welligton's picture

Yes.

I see a pattern of the EU falling apart.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:49 | 1321521 Dollar Bill Hiccup
Dollar Bill Hiccup's picture

It has been rumored that the Greek leaders are now in Tripoli, and that MQ has taken up new residence in the Parthenon. While the Colonel's ways were seen to be a bit crude and tasteless for European leaders, his recent experience in crowd control and social engineering has made him a prime candidate to get those Greeks back into ship shape!

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:54 | 1321524 vocational tainee
vocational tainee's picture

It´s not seeing a pattern,just recognizing  we`ll force you the way we want to..

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:51 | 1321526 vocational tainee
vocational tainee's picture

It´s not seeing a pattern,just recognizing  we`ll force you the way we want to..

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:54 | 1321528 vocational tainee
vocational tainee's picture

It´s not seeing a pattern,just recognizing  we`ll force you the way we want to..

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:55 | 1321529 TomGa
TomGa's picture

Willkommen to the new southern Aegean shores of Germany!

 

Greece, Default !!

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:59 | 1321877 Monedas
Monedas's picture

Germany wants some Carribean shore ? Haiti is available for a song ! Monedas 2011

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:23 | 1321891 Monedas
Monedas's picture

Liquidate all males and children and 80% of the women (the old and the ugly)....with the remaining breeding pool create a new race of Germans resistant to skin cancer ! We can cure cancer with existing technology....breed it out of the gene pool ! Let's send cancer to the back of the bus ! Monedas 2011 http://trololololololololololo.com/

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:58 | 1321538 BlackholeDivestment
BlackholeDivestment's picture

NWO Greek Deep Capture, known among wrestlers as ''The Crusher''

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yW0klpEno9U&feature=related

 

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 20:58 | 1321540 Atomizer
Atomizer's picture

Even the best well thought out crimes have a degree of failure.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zykzIgMNQqo&NR=1

Hey, riddle me this? During your attempted getaway, should you drive by your rear-view mirror or look forward?

Good luck fuckers. :>)

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:04 | 1321542 gwar5
gwar5's picture

World to Greece: DEFAULT NOW! 

Do it now, take the pain, and don't ever look back. Don't let your crooked politicians sell you down the river. They call it sovereign for a reason. Have some dignity. Tell the Eurobank pukes to take a hike and to take their Euro fiat with them. The NWO is a giant loan sharking operation and we don't want it. 

You're even thinking about handing over your country, for an extension, before you default anyway?

 

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:09 | 1321551 docj
docj's picture

Play close attention, folks. This is all just the warm-ups, the undercard if you will. They're working-out the kinks in the process so that the take-down of The Big Prize - that is the complete fleecing of what is left of the US middle-class - goes-off completely without a hitch.

Heck, by the time they get to it - probably no latter than the summer of 2013 - they'll probably be so adept at the con that the majority of Idol America will be absolutely convinced it was for their own good. Patriotic, even.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:14 | 1321744 Ricky Bobby
Ricky Bobby's picture

Resistance if Futile

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:11 | 1321556 CactusLand
CactusLand's picture

Hey ZHers, I rarely post but often read, but need some help on article for my blog. What leverage can banks use on the Fed Treasury Carry Trade?  I am thinking it is around 30, from general bank leverage, but can't confirm.. 30 would mean about 90% year on year return, 3 points they make from Disount Window .25% plus 25 basis points... they pay .5% and they buy 10 year treasuries that pay around 3.5%..3% times 30 = 90%  Just wanted to get a serious banking geek to confirm before I include in my blog post.. much obliged for any help...

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:56 | 1321624 disabledvet
disabledvet's picture

i'm a fan of the term "a lot" myself.  you may without risk of plagiarism use terms such as "a phuck load" a "shit load" a "holy-shit load" and "an inspriational amount." or, you may "come with some kind of number" a make that sucker stick to the wall like a 12 year old hocking his first loogey.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:04 | 1321882 gwar5
gwar5's picture

+1

 phuckin hilarious, thanx!

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 22:29 | 1321681 contagiousNY
contagiousNY's picture

Dont hold yer breath....

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:18 | 1321561 TwoHoot
TwoHoot's picture

What would be the derivative fallout from a Greek default? Are all the Credit Default Swap counterparties solvent?

Maybe the answers are "massive" and "no".

If so, that may be why the ECB will not even talk about restructuring even though it is certainly going to happen one way or another. The consequences of a CDS "trigger event' are just too awful for them to contemplate.

Cordially,

TwoHoot

 

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 03:13 | 1321988 laughing_swordfish
laughing_swordfish's picture

2Hoot:

Could be. You know, no one has really talked about this before.

Could it be that certain other "European Institutions" (i.e Allianz and other ins. companies) could be left holding the bag in the event of a "credit event?".

Quite possible. If both the Euro banks and the Euro insurers, pension funds, etc. all go belly at the same time, same day you have INSTANT EU collapse..

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 06:15 | 1321571 N57Mike
N57Mike's picture

default

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:25 | 1321572 N57Mike
N57Mike's picture

de....fault, de.....fault, de....fault

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:57 | 1321939 edotabin
edotabin's picture

Stop trying to blame Germany :-)

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:25 | 1321576 Bansters-in-my-...
Bansters-in-my- feces's picture

Let the fucking Banksters eat shit......

Stop dishing out the debt and people will stop defaulting...

Debt.....what a fucking con job.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:56 | 1321810 nathan1234
nathan1234's picture

Let them eat shit behind bars.

First remove your money from these banks  to initiate action.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:33 | 1321582 Bansters-in-my-...
Bansters-in-my- feces's picture

Ps..... Hammy...would LOVE to smack you fucking silly....

Fuck Off and die.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:39 | 1321594 N57Mike
N57Mike's picture

Seriously, is it fair to say the banksters essentially made sub-prime loan to the Greeks, and now want to foreclose on their country? That's what it looks like.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 03:42 | 1321990 laughing_swordfish
laughing_swordfish's picture

I think banksters made subprime loans to Greece, passed it off as IG sovereign paper, bought CDS's on it, now find that CDS counterparties are insolvent in the event of "credit event"..

It's gonna get verrry interesting very quickly...

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 06:17 | 1322073 N57Mike
N57Mike's picture

I see...sort of like the sequence of the "Big Short", but without someone making good on AIG's stupid derivative bets. Thanks,

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:42 | 1321606 michigan independant
michigan independant's picture

 "international involvement in tax collection"

Tribute...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NIcnz5d-iZM&feature=related

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:50 | 1321619 Comrade de Chaos
Comrade de Chaos's picture

Wow, gunboat diplomacy is back. Who could have (I know , TD did) known...

Ironically, I ve just learned that Newfoundland was an independent dominion until it failed to pay its British loans around 1934..

http://www.conservapedia.com/Newfoundland

(hint  Comission on Government Paragraph)


 

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 22:00 | 1321630 CrashisOptimistic
CrashisOptimistic's picture

Bloomberg says this article was just debunked by an ECB official.  Said under no circumstances will there be default of any kind, and to imagine that any sort of careful restructure was possible was absurd.

He says the only answer is mass asset selling and extreme austerity.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 22:36 | 1321697 johny2
johny2's picture

ECB has no say whatever in it. The EU does not want to bail out the greeks and greeks are not willing to bail out EU banks. Next stop is the showdown. They have made a mess out of this, and chances are that they will make even bigger mess in a near future.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 22:57 | 1321724 CrashisOptimistic
CrashisOptimistic's picture

I think mostly the ECB was saying a soft default could not be negotiated.  Complete, explicit default, or severe austerity forever.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:09 | 1321741 johny2
johny2's picture

ECB would like if everybody gets together and work out a solution, but really they are just observers in this game. Looks like a default is coming soon. What happens than is the real question.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:10 | 1321890 CrashisOptimistic
CrashisOptimistic's picture

Probably as serious as the event itself and its consequences would be the precedent setting nature of it.

Meaning, if they default and are faced with horrible immediate inability to fund government benefits, a wise politician would fund pensions and let medical emergencies and food NOT be funded -- on presumption that aid agencies of the world will never let a populace starve.

And then, if no one dies, simply that, if no one dies, it becomes a powerful precedent setting event and the dominos fall.

The point may be here that the surprising priority of tax revenue allocation may be the best one.  Do not fund food or medical care.  Fund pensions.  Fund police.  If starvation and disease appear, rely on the Red Cross.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 03:55 | 1322001 i-dog
i-dog's picture

"ECB official ... Said under no circumstances will there be default of any kind"

That means a default is now locked in. Good news, at last!

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 21:59 | 1321637 disabledvet
disabledvet's picture

if this is true this would be quite the catastrophe in my view.  not just for Greece but for the banks.  "they're devouring themselves"--for what purpose i think is unfathomable.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 22:01 | 1321642 Handle with care
Handle with care's picture

 

Imperialism 2.0.  When another nation is collecting your taxes, you may as well just go ahead and put pictures of their King in all your schools

 

 

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 22:15 | 1321658 Rodent Freikorps
Rodent Freikorps's picture

What's the big deal?

Haven't all the cool people been claiming we need to do away with whole nationalism thing?

Barbaric relic.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 22:24 | 1321678 Jim in MN
Jim in MN's picture

What do you call a revolutionary woman leader of a new Greek nationalism who pulls them out of the Euroflagration and into a new era of gold-backed currency, achieving iconic Eva Peron-type status in the process?

A drachma queen.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 22:28 | 1321684 contagiousNY
contagiousNY's picture

corny with a grain of truth

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:34 | 1321777 alien-IQ
alien-IQ's picture

I'd call her the likely future victim of an unfortunate plane crash.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 22:29 | 1321685 Miles Kendig
Miles Kendig's picture

Estimates are along the lines of a 72% cut to achieve a 60% debt - GDP target.  Time to quibble over the crumbs.  I hope the rest of the PIIGS are watching.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 08:55 | 1322197 Bob
Bob's picture

Holy Shit!  Got a link by any chance?  That would absolutely make this the Waterloo of either banksters or people, no hyperbole whatsoever. 

Wed, 06/01/2011 - 12:53 | 1329297 Miles Kendig
Thu, 06/02/2011 - 09:06 | 1331932 Bob
Bob's picture

Thanks, Miles.  Hey, I didn't remember it at all! 

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:14 | 1321748 Atomizer
Atomizer's picture

It's unclear to me that they get anything seized at this moment.

 

Muir.. You win the ZH oxymoron award, 10,000 red beet ration coupon. The crowd roars will applause.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:26 | 1321765 Muir
Muir's picture

Hey listen, I remember I called you a cunt, but that's no reason to get uptighty.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:15 | 1321827 Atomizer
Atomizer's picture

Apparently, I missed your intended uptighty post. Regrettfully, I use that word quite loosely. Call me desensitized to the word cunt. Next..

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:20 | 1321838 Muir
Muir's picture

"Next.."

___

Komarovski: Who are you to refuse my sugar? Who are you to refuse me anything? 

-

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:22 | 1321842 Muir
Muir's picture

"Next" (n +1)

Gen. Yevgraf Zhivago: "Nor was it admiration for a better man than me. I did admire him, but I didn't think he was a better man. Besides, I've executed better men than me with a small pistol."

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:40 | 1321915 Atomizer
Atomizer's picture

Muir, not sure what your trying to explain to me. Being late, exit by saying Happy Memorial Day to you & all Zerohedge posters.

Tyler & Co, thanks alot for your all your efforts.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:16 | 1321752 sgorem
sgorem's picture

I see this whole cluster fuck as simple as The International Mother Fuckers(IMF), Evil Unlimited(EU), and the Eternal Credit Bastards(ECB), as extorting Greek national assets from Greek citizens by promising Euros to the top level CROOKS in the Greek government. Once this "bailout" money is paid, the CROOKS leave the the country, and in turn the Greek people to fend for themselves against the Wolves and Vultures. I say "FUCK EU!" Let the place burn before giving up your country to these fucking thieves!

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 09:00 | 1322200 Bob
Bob's picture

Agreed.  Meanwhile, that same campaign is in full motion all across these United States of America with little comment whatsoever. 

For example:

http://www.alternet.org/newsandviews/article/564373/mi_gov._rick_snyder%27s_benton_harbor_takeover_tied_to_shoreline_development_for_the_wealthy/

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:21 | 1321759 BernankeHasHemo...
BernankeHasHemorrhoids's picture

The Greeks are slaves. The Americans are slaves. They're all slaves except maybe the Icelanders who had more balls than anyone and just said, "Fuck off!". I have to laugh at the stupidity of these people - they deserve their fates if they're too afraid to get an AK-47 jam it up some banker's or congressman's ass and pull the trigger.

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:23 | 1321764 sgorem
sgorem's picture

+++

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 02:23 | 1321953 BlackholeDivestment
BlackholeDivestment's picture

 To end your misery just shoot yourself, like any idiot. Your weakness and fear is equal with the beast you eat, as you were, attempting to defend your short lives in the same mannor as the beast which seeks to devour the laborer of the harvest.  Without your labor their is nothing. Witness the black hole in your head Bitchez. Stand fast, do no harm.

Rock on. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdQFdCj_I2U&feature=related

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:23 | 1321760 Seasmoke
Seasmoke's picture

this is why its always best to pull a bandaid off fast, slow is usually much more painful

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:30 | 1321776 TomGa
TomGa's picture

ECB Official: "Orderly" Greek restructuring is a "fairy tale"

"Lorenzo Bini Smaghi, an ECB executive board member told the Financial Times in an interview that a Greek "soft" restructuring is a 'fairy tale'."

http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2011/05/ecb-official-orderly-greek-res...

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:45 | 1321793 nathan1234
nathan1234's picture

Moral of the story

When you get into bed with Goldman your get screwed.

Stay off these assholes and as well as JPM, Citibank , BOA and their ilk.

Since the Adminstration is in cahoots with Wall Street and refuses to bring these criminals to book and behind bars it's time the world took action.

Max Keiser should also advocate that the only way to fix these banks is to withdraw one's money and close all accounts.

 

Sun, 05/29/2011 - 23:55 | 1321815 PulauHantu29
PulauHantu29's picture

Soon every Greek child will be required to learn German language...the Neue Muttersprach of Grrece perhaps.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:55 | 1321871 i-dog
i-dog's picture

Greece is just an hors d'oeuvre ... the bankstas really have their sights set on the main course of Germany's gold stash ... of around 3,800 tons.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 02:24 | 1321954 JR
JR's picture

Or perhaps every Greek child will be required to learn Hebrew.  After all, many of the bankers in Germany are Jewish, such as Dr. Josef Ackermann  – Chairman of the Management Board and Group Executive Committee of Deutsche Bank AG, who also is a Steering Committee member of The Bilderberg Group. The goal of this globalist elite group is to bring about a one-world government and global financial system with a one-world currency Why not a one-world language?  How about that?

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:23 | 1321843 Nacho.Libre
Nacho.Libre's picture

dupe

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:38 | 1321857 Atomizer
Atomizer's picture

Its about robbing Peter to pay Paul. Think PIIGS.

IMF Backs G-8 Plan for Supporting Middle East, North Africa

http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/survey/so/2011/NEW052711A.htm

Nemat (IMF DM) explains her visions after only two months on the job. The fund is so misunderstood, we are told. Snickers.

http://www.imf.org/external/mmedia/index.aspx

Membership has its benefits. Fund your monies in advance, the Fund will scratch your back.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 05:10 | 1322036 Hephasteus
Hephasteus's picture

Just wanted to say I really appreciate a lot of your posts. I don't reply to them much but always read them. You find some neat stuff.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 00:39 | 1321859 GoatETF
GoatETF's picture

Once the bankers read, "Chuck Norris announces he will facilitate Greece restructuring on behalf of Greek people." all problems would be solved.

"We think 1% is fair Mr. Banker. Huh, what's that? Would you like to meet my left foot?"

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:21 | 1321898 CustomersMan
CustomersMan's picture

 

 

               Greece, Call Iceland, Notify BRIC countries, start issuing new Greek Currency, We in America love you and your courage to make the tough call..

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:18 | 1321899 Peter K
Peter K's picture

Next step, Euroland sends in the tanks. And of course, it will be at Greeces request.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:33 | 1321911 Missiondweller
Missiondweller's picture

Better to be poor and free than be enslaved by bankers.

Greece needs to drop out of the EU and default on their debt.

When Russia defaulted what was extarordinary was that life went on. A few years later they issued new bonds like nothing ever happened.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:35 | 1321914 scratch_and_sniff
scratch_and_sniff's picture

Incase anyone failed to notice, Greece has nothing to sell...we are talking about 300bln here remember, the country would need to be stripped clean, cant see the people letting that happen.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 14:45 | 1322938 Libertarian777
Libertarian777's picture

aah yes, but the IMF and ECB will take the future taxing power (read... indentured lives of their children) as 'collateral'.

 

We use to call it slavery. Now its just called...'reprofiling'

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:46 | 1321922 Dick Darlington
Dick Darlington's picture

How abt those German banks and their exposures to Greece... Der Spiegel has a shortlist of the biggest "bagholders", enjoy.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,765318,00.html

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 01:59 | 1321936 edotabin
edotabin's picture

...

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 02:13 | 1321949 Sock Puppet
Sock Puppet's picture

....

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 03:51 | 1322000 connda
connda's picture

Default, and walk away.  Bad option for the banks.  The best option for the people. This should set the stage for other countries on the brink of default. 

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 04:56 | 1322026 TK7936
TK7936's picture

This is Weimar all over again.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 07:28 | 1322120 overmedicatedun...
overmedicatedundersexed's picture

Justice, just a word..but without the majority seeing Justice done..nothing has legitimacy.

How the public is conditioned to see Justice as having been done is what we are seeing..

the world MSM is avoiding much written here on ZH..as Justice based on facts would provide too many Elite with long jail time and poverty.

so the cover ups and lies are told and retold until the people are conditioned to accept "austerity".The criminal elite stay out of jail and stolen wealth is kept safe from confiscation.

Watch Greece to see how well the elite maneuver this exercise.. coming to a country near you very soon.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 07:40 | 1322125 Lord Welligton
Lord Welligton's picture

The majority of depositors rushed to withdraw for pensioners and small savers and amounts ranging from 2-3000 lifted until 10 -15 000 euros. Κ?νητρο στις περισσ?τερες περιπτ?σεις ?ταν ο φ?βος μ?πως η χ?ρα οδηγηθε? σε πτ?χευση, οι καταθ?σεις δεσμευθο?ν ?στω και προσωριν? και με?νουν χωρ?ς ρευστ? ? ακ?μα και να χ?σουν τις αποταμιε?σεις τους. Motivation in most cases it was the fear that led the country into bankruptcy, deposits frozen even temporarily left without cash, or even lose their savings.

Ετσι εξηγε?ται και το γεγον?ς της ζ?τησης μεγ?λων χαρτονομισμ?των 200?ρικων κατ? προτ?μηση, με αποτ?λεσμα πριν το μεσημ?ρι τα μεγ?λα χαρτονομ?σματα να εξαντληθο?ν. This explains the fact that demand high notes 200arikon preferably so before noon on the big notes are exhausted. Ο λ?γος προτ?μησης των μεγ?λων χαρτονομισμ?των ε?ναι επειδ? μπορο?ν να κρυφτο?ν πιο ε?κολα λ?γω του μικρο? ?γκου των δεσμ?δων. The ratio of preference of great notes is because they can hide more easily because of the small volume of Hank.

http://translate.google.com/translate?js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&sl=el&tl=en&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.protothema.gr%2Feconomy%2Farticle%2F%3Faid%3D124771&act=url

Ordinary Greeks begining to panic.

The political class throughout Europe are radiply loosing control of the masses.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 09:01 | 1322204 i-dog
i-dog's picture

"The political class throughout Europe are radiply loosing control of the masses"

I think this is actually part of their plan! Firstly, to pressure governments away from austerity and into asset sales and restructuring. Secondly, as an excuse to impose martial law, when they are ready (mid-2012 is my guess).

The PIIGS will soon be saying "bye-bye" to gold reserves and "hello" to TSA-style sexual assaults at transportation and border checkpoints.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 09:10 | 1322222 Bob
Bob's picture

Somehow this goes beyond the TSA to my mind:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jUU3yCy3uI&feature=player_embedded

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 09:39 | 1322257 i-dog
i-dog's picture

My prediction is that the TSA will soon be armed and conducting such activities all over a city near you. The current airport deployment is just 'training wheels' for them and the slaves, while they wait for more scanning equipment to be delivered, more psychopaths to be recruited, and more excuses to extend search powers with the sheeple's full consent 'for your protection'.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 08:28 | 1322157 Monedas
Monedas's picture

I'm lovin' it watchin' our "sophisticated" Europeans squirm over Greece et al ! Whose Monedas, anyway ? He's the guy who figgered out in ten minutes the Wankel engine wouldn't fly ! Back in 70's when I was pimpin' metals until I stopped getting invited to parties....I proclaimed, " If they find some new fangled ceramic material that could handle all the "seal travel" of the Wankel engine....make piston rings out of it and Henry Ford's "four banger" would still be a better option !" Monedas 2011 Cheers, for the little German in all of us ! http://trololololololololololo.com/

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 11:37 | 1322495 FreeNewEnergy
FreeNewEnergy's picture

All of this fits perfectly into the US narrative, which could take a couple of different forms.

1. EU is a mess, dollar soars, sends stocks, silver, gold into freefall. Govt. announces they cannot raise debt ceiling due to inelastic credit markets, US begins defaulting on debt, snatching more pensions, 401ks, etc.

2. EU is a mess, dollar pops and stops, markets stabilize, US raises debt ceiling, all is well in the US. Europe and Japan are toast. The ponzi continues until the "next" crisis.

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 12:32 | 1322648 MallaKite
MallaKite's picture

Cant believe the children of the Roman Empire and possibly the greatest civilisation that ever lived, are gonna lay down and take it in the face.

 

Tell the Numbheads to get lost....

Mon, 05/30/2011 - 18:04 | 1323241 MrSteve
MrSteve's picture

Recall once upon a July 4th....

 

When in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them.

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!