France
The Pain in Spain is too Big to be Contained
Submitted by ilene on 04/15/2012 15:23 -0500Better stock up on the Depends now.
Bernanke and Germany Wake Up to a Merda Storm
Submitted by ilene on 04/14/2012 16:03 -0500Herb Stein’s Law is in full alert: "If it isn’t sustainable, it will end."
Soros On Europe: Iceberg Dead Ahead
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/14/2012 14:04 -0500- B+
- Central Banks
- Citibank
- Cognitive Dissonance
- Deutsche Bank
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Fail
- Finland
- fixed
- France
- George Soros
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Ireland
- Italy
- Japan
- LTRO
- Meltdown
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- Netherlands
- Reality
- Recession
- Shadow Banking
- Sovereign Debt
- Willem Buiter

George Soros has been a busy man the last few days. Appearing at the INET Conference a number of times and penning detailed articles for the FT (and here at Project Syndicate) describing the terrible situation in which Europe finds itself - and furthermore offering a potential solution. Critically, he opines, the European crisis is complex since it is a vicious circle of competing crises: sovereign debt, balance of payments, banking, competitiveness, and structurally defective non-optimal currency union. The fact is 'we are very far from equilibrium...of the Maastricht criteria' with his very clear insight that the massive gap, or cognitive dissonance, between the 'official authorities' hope and the outside world who see how abnormal the situation is, is troublesome at best. Analogizing the periphery countries as third-world countries that are heavily indebted in a foreign currency (that they cannot print), his initial conclusion ends with the blunt statement that "the euro has really broken down" and the ensuing discussion of just what this means from both an economic and socially devastating perspective: the destruction of the common market and the European Union and how this will end in acrimonious recriminations with worse conflicts between European states than before.
Mark Grant On The Dangerous Road Ahead
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/14/2012 09:53 -0500Of the twenty-five largest banks in the world there is only one that does not need to raise additional capital to de-lever to a 20x leverage and a 5% of Tangible Capital Ratio and that is Citigroup which has a current leverage of just 13 times and I also point out that Wells Fargo with a 14 times leverage needs a minor amount of capital to accomplish these goals. At the far other end of this scale is Deutsche Bank which is levered 62 times and would need a massive amount of new capital and tremendous shrinkage to accomplish these goals. The assets of DB are also equivalent to the entire GDP of Germany so that the bank could devour the country if Deutsche Bank were to hit the wall. Then the most leverage can be found at Credit Agricole at 66 times which would also swamp France, given its size, if asset values continue to decline or if Spain or Italy need to be bailed out and the contagion worsens.
Suddenly A Nasty Fight over Subsidies for Nukes in Europe
Submitted by testosteronepit on 04/13/2012 21:06 -0500But they forgot to check with the Germans.
Three Conversations
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 04/12/2012 18:52 -0500So let's talk Greece, Paris and Natural Gas.
El-Erian Breaches The Final Frontier: What Happens If Central Banks Fail?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/12/2012 11:45 -0500- Bank of England
- Bank of Japan
- Bill Gross
- Brazil
- Bureau of Labor Statistics
- Capital Markets
- CDS
- Central Banks
- China
- Circuit Breakers
- Commercial Paper
- default
- Equity Markets
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Excess Reserves
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Gilts
- Global Economy
- Greece
- High Yield
- India
- Italy
- Japan
- Meltdown
- Monetary Policy
- Moral Hazard
- None
- Precious Metals
- Purchasing Power
- ratings
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Risk Premium
- Sovereign Debt
- St Louis Fed
- St. Louis Fed
- Stagflation
- Switzerland
- Unemployment
- Wall Street Journal
- Yield Curve
"In the last three plus years, central banks have had little choice but to do the unsustainable in order to sustain the unsustainable until others do the sustainable to restore sustainability!" is how PIMCO's El-Erian introduces the game-theoretic catastrophe that is potentially occurring around us. In a lecture to the St.Louis Fed, the moustachioed maestro of monetary munificence states "let me say right here that the analysis will suggest that central banks can no longer – indeed, should no longer – carry the bulk of the policy burden" and "it is a recognition of the declining effectiveness of central banks’ tools in countering deleveraging forces amid impediments to growth that dominate the outlook. It is also about the growing risk of collateral damage and unintended circumstances." It appears that we have reached the legitimate point of – and the need for – much greater debate on whether the benefits of such unusual central bank activism sufficiently justify the costs and risks. This is not an issue of central banks’ desire to do good in a world facing an “unusually uncertain” outlook. Rather, it relates to questions about diminishing returns and the eroding potency of the current policy stances. The question is will investors remain "numb and sedated…. by the money sloshing around the system?" or will "the welfare of millions in the United States, if not billions of people around the world, will have suffered greatly if central banks end up in the unpleasant position of having to clean up after a parade of advanced nations that headed straight into a global recession and a disorderly debt deflation." Of course, it is a rhetorical question.
A Grimy Dipstick into France’s Gritty Economic Realty
Submitted by testosteronepit on 04/12/2012 09:41 -0500Bankruptcies, jobs, and the hoped-for deus ex machina....
Frontrunning: April 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/12/2012 06:34 -0500- Fed's No. 2 Strongly Backs Low-Rate Policy (Hilsenrath)
- World Bank Cuts China 2012 Growth Outlook on Exports (Bloomberg)
- BlackRock's Street Shortcut: Big Banks Would Be Bypassed With Bond Platform; 'Not Going to Cannibalize' (WSJ)
- George Soros - Europe’s Future is Not Up to The Bundesbank (FT)
- Fed May Have Aggravated Income Inequality, El-Erian Says(Bloomberg)
- Shirakawa Pledges Japan Easing Amid Political Pressure (Bloomberg)
- Spain’s Debt Struggle Opens Door to Sarkozy Campaign Message (Bloomberg)
- Iran Woos Oil Buyers With Easy Credit (FT)
- Syria Pledges to Observe Ceasefire (FT)
Europe Will Collapse in May-June
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 04/11/2012 17:43 -0500
What makes this time different? Several items:
- The Crisis coming from Europe will be far, far larger in scope than anything the Fed has dealt with before.
- The Fed is now politically toxic and cannot engage in aggressive monetary policy without experiencing severe political backlash (this is an election year).
- The Fed’s resources are spent to the point that the only thing the Fed could do would be to announce an ENORMOUS monetary program which would cause a Crisis in of itself.
Nuclear Power Is Expensive and Bad for the Environment … It’s Being Pushed Because It Is Good For Making Bombs
Submitted by George Washington on 04/11/2012 10:30 -0500Since the 1980s, the U.S. Has Secretly Helped Japan Build Up Its Nuclear Weapons Program ... Pretending It Was "Nuclear Energy" and "Space Exploration" ...
Frontrunning: April 10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/10/2012 06:35 -0500- With a 2 Year delay, both FT and WSJ start covering the shadow banking system. For our ongoing coverage for the past 2.5 years see here.
- Trouble in shipping turns ocean into scrapheap (Telegraph)
- First-Quarter Home Prices Down 20.7% in Capital (China Daily)
- Bernanke Says Banks Need Bigger Capital Buffer (Reuters)
- Monti’s Overhaul Can’t Stop Pain From Spain: Euro Credit (Bloomberg)
- Spain Confronts Crisis Threat as Rajoy Seeks Deficit Cuts (Bloomberg)
- Japan’s Noda Announces Anti-Deflation Talks as BOJ Sets Policy (Bloomberg)
- White House makes case for Buffett Rule (CNN)
- Cameron to Make Historic Myanmar Trip (FT)
- 'Time for Closer Ties' With India (China Daily)
Overnight Sentiment: Lack Of Good News Is Not Good News
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/10/2012 06:18 -0500So far futures are broadly unchanged, following the release of a Chinese trade report which while showing a resumption in the trade surplus, on expectations of further trade deficit in March, showed it was primarily due to a slide in imports, not so much a rise up in exports, a fact which impacted the Aussie dollar subsequently. We already noted that in conjunction with the BOJ, this means that Asia's central banks will likely hold off on further easing, and defer to the Chairman, especially with food inflation in China still prevalent. Aside from that the traditional European weakness is back, where April Sentic Investors Confidence slid to -14.7 on expectations of -9.1: to be expected from a meaningless market-coincident indicator. Keep a close eye on PIIGS bonds where whack a mole is now firmly back as the LTRO benefit is long forgotten, 3 month half life and all that.
Big Brother Everywhere
Submitted by testosteronepit on 04/09/2012 19:00 -0500And the government is trying to catch up.
Another Nail In The Greek Coffin: Cheap, Migrant Workers Are Now Returning Home To Albania
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2012 12:57 -0500
Four months ago we presented what was easily the clearest and most undiluted by media propaganda clue about the future of the European experiment, when we noted that even immigrants from places such as Afghanistan and Bangladesh, using Greece as a stepping stone onward to the gateway Shengen country of Italy, no longer have the urge to pursue their European dreams, and instead return home. As Art Cashin explained, "Over the decades, immigrants from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and other poor nations would work their way to Patras. They would stay for days or weeks awaiting a chance to smuggle themselves on to a freighter headed for Italy. Once there, they could make their way north into Europe to find hope and opportunity and maybe a job. Last week his relatives told him that things were changing. The immigrants still come to their way station of Patras (hope still blooms). But now, after a couple of weeks in Greece, they are trying to hop ships going the other way. They are going back home. Life was better, or at least no worse, where they came from and they had friends and family for support back there." It appears that the immigrant boycott is spreading, only this time instead of "discretionary" immigrants, or those that have not been fully assumed by society (think "cheap labor" along America's south, such as California, Texas and Arizona), it is starting to hit the core of the cheap PIIGS labor force: the migrant workforce, and in this case the Albanian diaspora working out of Greece at a fraction of the normal cost. And as one Albanian migrant worker, so critical to keeping the Greek construction sector supplied with cheap jobs puts it, "It looks like there's no money left," he said of Greece. "It all dried up." As a result even the Greek illegal-yet-symbiotic-aliens are giving up and going back home. Yes folks: the "indicators" on the ground are telling us that it is now easier to make money in Albania than in Greece.







