Belgium
Where Gas Prices Are Highest
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/15/2012 11:16 -0500
Think the US has it bad with its "soaring" gas price, which is now back to $3.75 per gallon? Think again. Here, courtesy of Bloomberg, is a list of the countries whose gasoline cost puts what Americans pay at the pump to shame. In order of descending gas prices, below are the 20 places in the world where one does not want to "fill 'er up."
14 Aug 2012 – “ Not Fade Away " (The Rolling Stones, 1964)
Submitted by AVFMS on 08/14/2012 10:47 -0500No exactly fireworks, but anything that isn’t totally bad these days is good to have.
Good news, but then not so good news?! So, no QE, after all?
13 Aug 2012 – “ Can You Feel it? " (Mr. Fingers / Ch. Prommers, 1986)
Submitted by AVFMS on 08/13/2012 10:53 -0500Not much life. Nor conviction.
Barely a pulse.
Can you feel it?
Belgian National Bank Governor Gets It: Bailing Out Spain "Makes No Sense"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/11/2012 20:12 -0500
A week ago we explained quite clearly why instead of encouraging self-defeating, short-termist behavior by promising to save Europe's insolvent countries if and when needed, which does nothing to resolves Europe's problems and make it worse in exchange for a brief respite from bond selling, the ECB should be doing precisely the opposite: encouraging local governments to understand that there is no magic bazooka from the central banks. Specifically we said that "this Catch 22 of confounding cause and event can continue seemingly indefinitely, although in reality it can't. Because fundamentally what the bond market does is keep sovereigns "honest" - just as Schauble said a week ago, Spanish yields at 7% are not the end of the world - instead what they are is a signal to the country to get its spending in control in order to reduce its deficit, and fundamentally get its house in order - yes, that means getting government spending to a sustainable level and firing hundreds of thousands of workers, as well as probably raising taxes even more. It also means pain all around, but the pain is inevitable and will only be worse the longer reality is denied." This logic is so clear that only a lifelong economist, PhD or Goldman apparatchik can not grasp it: sadly that accounts for most of the people "in charge." Which is why we were delighted to read that at least one person "gets it" - Belgian national bank governor Luc Coene, the same Belgium that is also the heart of the bureaucratic labyrinth known as the EU, who told Belgium's two largest newspaper that "buying the bonds of these countries would only serve to weaken the ECB and do nothing to resolve underlying issues of competitiveness. “It makes no sense for the ECB to start financing those countries,” said Mr Coene, “It would only lead to the ECB taking on the whole public debt of Spain and Italy onto its balance sheet." Bingo. And not a moment too soon - we really were starting to pull a Mogatu here.
10 Aug 2012 – “ Rainbows & Pots of Gold " (Stereophonics, 2003)
Submitted by AVFMS on 08/10/2012 11:29 -0500Otherwise… No titbits…
Nada. Rien. Nichts. Nothing.
09 Aug 2012 – “ Beautiful Days " (Venus, 2003)
Submitted by AVFMS on 08/09/2012 10:56 -0500ECB to EU governments: “Guys, we won’t fly solo…”
Bond Market to ECB “Show me the money!”
Equity market “Someone said Money? Buy!”
08 Aug 2012 – “ Pump Up The Volume " (M|A|R|R|S, 1987)
Submitted by AVFMS on 08/08/2012 10:55 -0500Will drift.
Won’t help trading volumes…
Flattish to slightly lower US open. Drifting…
07 Aug 2012 – “ Life on Mars? " (David Bowie, 1973)
Submitted by AVFMS on 08/07/2012 11:12 -0500To be correct, it is a series of games of chicken, as next to the different sovereigns, the ESM/ESFS, the ECB, and why not the IMF, below the sovereigns there are the regions, be it in Spain or, as it stands, in Germany.
The German Economy Caves, And Eurozone Bailouts Take On New Dimension
Submitted by testosteronepit on 08/06/2012 19:56 -0500The ear-piercing screech of the German export machinery as it down-shifts....
For Italy, It Is Game Theory Over
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/27/2012 14:57 -0500
We discussed the use of Game Theory as a useful tool for analyzing Europe's predicament in February and noted that it was far from optimal for any (peripheral or core) sovereign to pre-emptively 'agree' to austerity or Eurobonds respectively (even though that would make both better off). This Prisoner's Dilemma left the ugly Nash-Equilibrium game swinging from a catastrophic break-up to a long, painful (and volatile) continuation of the crisis. Recent work by BofAML's FX team takes this a step further and in assigning incentives and from a 'do-not-cooperate' Nash-equilibrium between Greece and Germany (no Greek austerity and no Eurobonds) they extend the single-period game across the entire group of European nations - with an ugly outcome. Analyzing the costs and benefits of a voluntary exit from the euro-area for the core and periphery countries, the admittedly over-simplified results are worrying. Italy and Ireland (not Greece) are expected to exit first (with Italy having a decent chance of an orderly exit) and while Germany is the most likely to achieve an orderly exit, it has the lowest incentive to exit the euro-zone - since growth, borrowing costs, and a weakening balance sheet would cause more pain. Ultimately, they play the game out and find while Germany could 'bribe' Italy to stay, they will not accept and Italy will optimally exit first - suggesting a very dark future ahead for the Eurozone and with EUR tail-risk so cheap, it seems an optimal trade - as only a weaker EUR can save the Euro.
He Who Deleverages Best: Presenting The 'Credit Intensity' Of Europe's GDP Growth
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/21/2012 13:06 -0500
To evaluate the impact of private sector deleveraging on economic growth/GDP in the context of a rapidly releveraging sovereign, we present the following analysis from Citi which observes various European countries and analyzes the "credit intensity" of GDP growth, or in other words which country has preserved, or even grown its GDP even as its private sector has seen substantial deleveraging. The results are interesting and may present a framework for evaluation the winners and losers in Europe in the era of "great sovereign leveraging", permitting a reverse engineering of the success stories, and applying their lessons to the losers.
20 Jul 2012 – " Alabama Song (Whisky Bar) " (The Doors, 1967)
Submitted by AVFMS on 07/20/2012 11:34 -0500Time to panic? Or heading to the next whisky bar? Question is now what next? Somehow, we’ve been here before, but since then we had LTRO1, LTRO2, a (bank) bail-out, lots of European haggling and bickering… Hot Summer.
Mass Shooting Incidents In The Last Two Decades
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2012 07:10 -0500At least superficially, they appear to be coming more and more often.
19 Jul 2012 – " One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer " (John Lee Hooker, 1966)
Submitted by AVFMS on 07/19/2012 10:59 -0500Still the divergent world views between equity and rates as during the last days.
EGBs better supported. Equities, too…
Spain held so so today, did overshoot 7%, but closed back below. The level itself is just symbolic; we all know…Fact is, Spanish funding is a costly thing.
Credit feeling slightly heavier than equities.
18 Jul 2012 – " Eisgekühlter Bommerlunder " (Die Toten Hosen, 1983)
Submitted by AVFMS on 07/18/2012 10:49 -0500Middle East situation not really in the prices, as the tension in Syria is growing to new heights.
IMF annual review of EZ policies pitches a lot of already pitched ideas (QE, etc etc). No news
Nothing crisp from Ben – outside comments that “Europe is not close to having a long term solution”… Thanks for the thumb up!




