Eurozone

Tyler Durden's picture

EU: "Greek Eurozone Membership Is At Stake" And Greece Must Agree On Tough Measures Or Return To Drachma





The loudest warning to date. From Reuters:

  • EU Commissioner Damanaki says Greece's Eurozone membership is at risk
  • EU Commissioner Damanaki says Greece must agree on tough measures or return to Drachma, according to state news agency

Incidentally, Greece would like nothing more than to return to the Drachma. And here are the next steps...

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Eurozone Debt Crisis Deepens Sending Euro Lower And Gold To New Record At EUR 1,080/oz





The euro, global equities and bonds in peripheral Eurozone countries are all lower this morning on heightened concerns about the debt crisis in the Eurozone. The euro has fallen against all currencies and is now at a record low against gold at EUR 1,080.21/oz. Silver is lower against most currencies but is higher against the Australian dollar and the euro ( EUR 24.80/oz). Greece’s 10 year government debt has surged to 16.98%, Portugal’s to 9.6% and Ireland’s to a new record at 10.76%. The yield on Italian 10-year government debt is up 9bp to 4.85% after S&P cuts its rating outlook on Italy’s sovereign debt to “negative” from “stable”. The Spanish 10 year bond has risen 11 basis points to 5.57%. Besides sovereign debt risk, gold is also being supported by geopolitical risk as seen in the increasingly unstable nuclear armed Pakistan where armed militants attempted to take over Pakistan’s naval air force headquarters. There is increasing tension between the U.S. and Pakistan after what the U.S regards as Pakistan’s failure or collusion regarding Osama Bin Laden. China has increasing economic and military ties and interests in Pakistan and has vowed to standby Pakistan and has called on the world to respect Pakistan’s sovereignty. Separately, in an interview with the Financial Times on Saturday, Henry Kissinger has warned of a world war involving Pakistan and India.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Even As Periphery Languishes, Stronger Core Eurozone Growth Sends Euro Higher





Following last week's ECB very dovish conference, in which Trichet was believed to have put any tightening plans in the eurozone on hold for an indefinite amount of time, today's release of very strong core Eurozone data once again brings the specter of a rate hike to the fore, sending the EURUSD notably higher, and of course, leading to a weakening in the dollar. In addition, the already well known schism between Europe's core and periphery continues, following very weak data reported in the austere PIIGS countries, offset by consensus beating growth in Germany and France. From Bloomberg: "Euro-region economic growth accelerated to the fastest pace since the second quarter of 2010, powered by forecast-topping expansion in Germany and France that offset the impact of tougher austerity measures from Ireland to Spain. Gross domestic product in the 17-member euro area rose 0.8 percent from the fourth quarter, when it increased 0.3 percent, the European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said in a statement today. Economists had forecast the economy to expand 0.6 percent, according to the median of 31 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. GDP rose 2.5 percent from a year ago." All of which once again proves that there is no possibility that Germany and France will ever allow a disintegration of the euro, and will continue to bail out all their troubled neighbors as the continued pegging of Germany's red hot economy to such weaklings as Greece is the only factor that matters for the country's export-led growth.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Total Confusion Rages Over Greece Which [May|May Not] Get A New Bailout Package, [And|Or] [Kept|Kicked Out] Of Eurozone





This morning the news wires are filled with the now usual contradictory, and full of lies propaganda about a Greece imminent [restructuring|golden age]. Since very likely all are wrong, we will focus on what appear to be the most credible ones: we will start with the Dow Jones story which has been official refuted by Greece, thus giving its extra validity. As Reuters reports: "News agency Dow Jones, citing a senior Greek government official, reported that Athens expects to receive a new aid package totalling nearly 60 billion euros . Greece denied it was discussing a new package..."It's certainly positive for peripheral sentiment and is assisting in the unwinding of some yesterday's safe-haven flows into Bunds," said Rabobank rate strategist Richard McGuire. Senior euro zone policymakers acknowledged on Monday that Athens will need a second bailout package soon to avert a disorderly overhaul of its debt obligations but rating agencies said more drastic measures may be necessary." Of course, this news comes out strategically and just in time for Greece to auction off a fresh 26-week T-Bill for €1.625 BN at a new record yield of 4.88% (compared to 4.80%) before an an even lower bid to cover of 3.58 vs. 3.81 previously. One can only imagine what a flop the auction would have been without the latest rumor (and even China appears to have given up on Greece: "Foreign take up in Greek 6-month T-Bill sale 34.2% vs. Prev. 41%, according to debt agency chief.") Bottom line as some trader summarized it: "It's very difficult to trade as there are so many conflicting headlines about a restructuring being the only way forward or not. Something will have to give." Exactly - here is a hint: a restructuring, in the city square, with a Molotov Cocktail... and damn soon.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Euro Gold Targets Record EUR1,072/oz On Risk Of Forced Greek Default And Eurozone Debt Contagion





Gold and silver continue to rebound from their sell offs as Euro zone periphery worries intensify with real risks of defaults and possible contagion. Gold has risen from €1,010/oz to over €1,057/oz since Friday. The long period of correction and consolidation may soon see a break out above resistance at record nominal highs of €1,072/oz - less than 1.5% below the current price. The recent strength of the euro looks set to end as sovereign debt risks come to the fore again. This will likely see the euro fall versus most currencies and especially against gold. There has been the usual misinformed and non evidence based assertions that the gold and silver markets were ‘bubbles’ and that they have burst. The same simplistic assertions were made after the sharp price corrections seen in 2008 and were proven badly wrong.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Here We Go Again: German Government Advisor Says Eurozone May Not Remain Intact Over Next 12 Months





Your daily diversion comes from German government advisor Bofinger:

  • Eurozone needs a very comprehensive solution, or may not remain intact over next 12 months
  • Need to consider EU stimulus measures for Greece in addition to belt-tightening
  • Have to change overall approach for Eurozone periphery countries

Euro now sliding since apparently the EURUSD traders did not get the Friday memo that the G-7 have decided fair value for the pair is 1.35 tops. Oh yes, in the meantime we can't wait for Germany to get back to the DEM which will buy about $10 USD and make German exports a thing of the ancient past.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Breaking: Greece Threatens To Leave Eurozone, Reintroduce Own Currency





  • GREECE THREATENS TO LEAVE EURO AREA, GERMANY'S DER SPIEGEL SAYS
  • FINANCE MINISTER FROM EUROZONE AND EU COMMISSION HOLDINGS CRISIS MEETING TODAY IN LUXEMBOURG
  • MEETING AGENDA INCLUDES POSSIBLE NEAR-TERM DEBT RESTRUCTURING FOR GREECE
  • EUROGROUP CHAIRMAN JUNCKER "TOTALLY DENIES" MEETING TO BE HELD TODAY TO DISCUSS GREECE
    • And cue panic and furious denials:
  • French finance ministry official cannot neither confirm or deny Spiegel report of emergency Eurozone meeting
  • Austrian Finance Minister spokesman says Eurozone breakup "absolutely unthinkable"
  • German government source says theres no plan for Greece to leave the Eurozone
  • Senior Greek government official denies report that Greece raises possibility of leaving Eurozone
  • IMF SAYS IT HAS `NO COMMENT' ON REPORT OF GREEK EURO EXIT BID
 
Tyler Durden's picture

PMs Higher As Eurozone Downgrades, Libya and Japan Ignored for Now





Gold commenced 2011 at $1,420.78/oz and with two days of trading left in the first quarter, gold is marginally higher at $1,420/oz. It is therefore flat for the quarter after another quarter of correction and consolidation. A lower quarterly close would be the first lower quarterly close in 9 quarters. This may be beneficial to some of those short the gold market who may be attempting to 'paint the tape' and engineer a lower quarterly close - in the forlorn hope that this could lead to momentum selling by trend, following hedge funds and traders. A lower quarterly close may be achieved but the fundamentals of anaemic supply and continuing strong demand both from the investment sector, but also from the jewellery and industrial sectors (dental and electronics primarily) internationally, and particularly in China and Asia in general will likely see gold continue to rise in 2011. Interestingly, March 2010 and the first quarter last year (see chart above), also saw gold flatline prior to strong gains in April and the second quarter of 2010 (Q2 10). Gold rose by nearly 6% last April and by nearly 12% in the quarter. The unresolved eurozone debt crisis and the emergence of the Japanese natural and nuclear disasters and geopolitical risk in oil producing nations means that the fundamentals today are as sound as they were in 2010 - if not more sound.

 
Leo Kolivakis's picture

Sun Setting on Greece and Eurozone?





Are Greece and Eurozone doomed? I'm not buying the drama...

 
Tyler Durden's picture

EURUSD (And Futures) Surge On Unprecedented ZEW German And Eurozone Economic Sentiment Beat





With the algos having promptly switched to trade stocks higher with dollar weakness (unlike on days when a strong dollar also somehow miraculously leads to stock strength), the world was looking for some data point to validate this morning's ramp in futures, timed perfectly to further neutralize Apple's holiday announcement. The catalyst ended up being the latest ZEW numbers of German and Eurozone economic sentiment, which came so strong in spite of ongoing European insolvency, that all one can do is laugh. These printed as follows: Eurozone ZEW Survey (Economic Sentiment) (Jan) M/M 25.4 vs. Prev. 16.6 (Prev. 15.5); German ZEW Survey (Economic Sentiment) (Jan) M/M 15.4 vs. Exp. 7.0 (Prev. 4.3). Once these hit overnight, the EURUSD went balistic and, of course, futures surged, completely eradicating any threat of a market-wide circuit breaker being hit, which would have been the case hat Apple made the Jobs announcement during regular market hours. On the other hand, how Europe, er, Germany is supposed to preserve its export-led miracle in light of a 500 basis point surge in the EURUSD in just one week, is something only Goldman's Houdini economic team can explain.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

The Cold War In The European Core: Luxembourg Wants Eurozone Bonds; Germany Says Drop Dead





Last night, in a less than surprising Op-ed in the FT, Jean-Claude Juncker and Giulio Tremonti, prime minister and treasury minister of Luxembourg and Italy’s minister of economy and finance respectively, once again floated the idea that the time has come for a joint European bond issuance mechanism, because apparently lack of individual monetary policy is not enough, European countries now have to surrender their fiscal decision making to a bunch of dogmatic bureaucrats in Brussels. The desperate duo, which knows all too well, that they could well be next on the bond vigilantes radar, write: " The European Council could move as early as this month to create such an agency, with a mandate gradually to reach an amount of outstanding paper equivalent to 40 per cent of the gross domestic product of the European Union and of each member state." We ridiculed the idea last night, noting that this proposal would only happen over Germany's dead body, which already sees as contributing far too much to keeping the European experiment alive and getting only dirty looks from its voters. Today, Germany steps up and confirms: "Germany on Monday rejected the idea of increasing the size of the European Union's safety net and ruled out a proposal to issue a joint euro zone bond." And additionally recent pressure to hike the rescue fund by the IMF and internally were also promptly shut down by Germany, which as we pointed out last week threatened to pull out of the Euro if the political wrangling by pathological liars such as the Greek elite continued: "We see no reason at all at the moment for an increase in the size of the euro rescue shield -- no reason at all." Which means that with no recourse to do anything structural, the ECB is back to buying up Portuguese bonds in a fake bid to create a sense of normalcy in the bond market, which everyone with half a brain knows will collapse the second the ECB pulls out or runs out of paper.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

IMF Tells Eurozone To Buy More, More, More Bonds And That It Needs A Bigger Boat, Er, Rescue Fund; Belgium Wants A Bigger Pie Too





It appears that one way or another, the IMF will provide a lot more American money to the European rescue. Reuters reports that according to the IMF the euro zone should have a bigger rescue fund and the European Central Bank should boost its bond buying to prevent the sovereign debt crisis from derailing economic recovery. "International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn
will present the report on the economy of the 16 countries using
the euro at a meeting of euro zone finance ministers and
European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet on Monday." And presumably, and we are speculating here, if the Euro zone can not afford it, the IMF will be more than happy to step in. After all recall that on August 30, the IMF extended the duration of the Flexible Credit Line (FCL), "concurrently removing the borrowing cap on this facility, which previously stood at 1000 percent of a member’s IMF quota, in essence making the FCL a limitless credit facility, to be used to rescue whomever, at the sole discretion of the IMF's overlords." We would think that an infinite amount of money should be enough to rescue even Spain when the time comes. Which begs the question: with everyone expecting muni bonds to be the purchasing target of QE3, will Bernanke again fool everyone and instead opt for direct European bond monetization? After all, the destruction of dollar value is and always has been the Fed's primary imperative, and what better way to achieve this than to collateralize the greenback with Greek bonds?

 
naufalsanaullah's picture

Risk back on as positive US & China data and short covering in Eurozone sov credit drive markets





Busy day in the markets today as Eurozone concerns took a breather and a backseat to a barrage of positive dataflow, starting with a big beat in Chinese November manufacturing PMI (55.2 vs 54.8 expected vs 54.7 prior) that helped boost markets. Significant support levels in the euro, which I pointed out in last night’s piece, and moving average ceiling in the US Dollar Index, set up a market ripe for a rally and the data catalysts followed through. A great beat in US November ADP employment (+93k vs +70k expected vs +82k prior) and a 56.6 print for US ISM PMI, higher than the 55.5 consensus estimates, helped send markets rallying further. Upward revisions by GS to its macro forecasts for both US & global growth added fuel to the fire.

 
Leo Kolivakis's picture

Eurozone's Big Boys Hold the Aces?





Last November it was Dubai, this November it's Ireland. And the fear mongering continues, allowing the big banks and top hedge funds to set themselves up for the next leg up...

 
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