Italy
Is The ECB Masking Accelerating Deposit Flight In Italy And Spain?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2012 11:30 -0500
While LTRO may have slowed the need for immediate asset sales and larger deleveraging in European banks, the two most significantly worrying trend concerns remain front-and-center - those of deposit flight and lending cuts. The latter remains a concern for the BIS, who note in their recent report, that lending curtailment by European banks focused primarily on risky (non-sovereign) and USD-denominated (EM mostly) debt as banks sought to reduce risk-weighted assets (RWA) to meet Basel III capital rules. It would appear though that banks remain in deleveraging (asset sale) mode, in anticipation of the end of ECB facilities down the road, which will become increasingly troublesome given the encumbrance of so many of their assets already by the ECB itself. What is most concerning though is the dramatic and accelerating deposit outflows from not just Greece but Italy and Spain (which just happen to be by far the largest 'takers' of LTRO loans). In other words, as more and more deposits outflow from these two major sovereign nations' banking systems (notably to Finland, Germany, and Luxembourg apparently), the only way to fund bank liabilities (as long as the interbank market remains dead - which is likely given everyone's self- and projected-knowledge) will be the ECB.
Mark Grant On The Increased Risks of Owning European Sovereign/Bank Debt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2012 07:09 -0500Many lessons are available to learn from the Greek debt crisis. Several more are probably to come as the intended and unintended consequences of what the Europeans have done begin to infect the bond markets. I point this morning to the vast differences now between the ownership of American debt and European debt and, as the immediate effects of the LTRO begin to wear off, several dawning realizations that I think will cause European debt to gap out against American debt regardless of the yields of Treasuries.
Frontrunning: March 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2012 06:50 -0500- Greek Bailout Payment Set to Be Approved by Euro Ministers After Debt Deal (Bloomberg)
- China Trade Deficit Spurs Concern (WSJ)
- Sarkozy Makes Populist Push For Re-Election (FT)
- ECB Calls for Tougher Rules on Budgets (FT)
- As Fed Officials Prepare to Meet, They Await Clearer Economic Signals (NYT)
- PBOC Zhou: In Theory 'Lots Of Room' For Further RRR Cuts (WSJ)
- Latest Stress Tests Are Expected to Show Progress at Most Banks (NYT)
- Monti Eyes Labor Plan Amid Jobless Youth, Trapped Firemen (Bloomberg)
Summary Of Key Events In The Coming Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2012 06:05 -0500While hardly expecting anything quite as dramatic as the default of a Eurozone member, an epic collapse in world trade, or a central banker telling the world that "he has no Plan B as having a Plan B means admitting failure" in the next several days, there are quite a few events in the coming week. Here is Goldman's summary of what to expect in the next 168 hours.
View From The Bridge: And They Think It’s All Over…
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2012 05:46 -0500So Greece has been saved – is that right? Well according to ISDA (the International Swaps and Derivatives Association) a “Restructuring Credit Event has occurred with respect to the Hellenic Republic” which in the vernacular means the Greeks are bust; tell us something we don’t know! The importance of this statement is that credit default swaps (CDS) on Greek debt are now triggered and holders will have their losses made good. There were any number of scurrilous rumours that ISDA would not declare a credit event to preclude their illustrious members from paying out, but when the net downside of $3 billion needs to be shared out amongst the likes of Barclays, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, UBS, BNP Paribas and Societe Generale, then a quick whip round in the bar after close of business and the jobs a good’un.
The Black Swan NO ONE is Talking About: Germany’s “Plan B”
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 03/10/2012 20:53 -0500Germany just launched a €480 billion fund that it will use to backstop its banking system should a Crisis hit. And in the fine print, which no one has caught,... the fund will also allow German banks to dump their EU sovereign bonds... as in German banks' PIIGS/ EU exposure disappearing in an instant. So... why would Germany do this?
David Kotok | Greece, Tragedy & Poetry
Submitted by rcwhalen on 03/10/2012 19:57 -0500Do not trust any government. Nothing new here. This Greek government invoked the collective action clause (CAC). It retroactively inserted provisions in a debt contract and then imposed them.
Greece Has Defaulted: Here Is Where We Stand
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/09/2012 19:33 -0500After reading this, everyone should have a fairly good grasp of what happened not only today, but ever since the great (and quite endless) European financial crisis took center stage, and what to look forward to next...
So, What's Next Step Towards The Eurocalypse?
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 03/09/2012 11:56 -0500Greece defaults & if it works, what makes anyone with a thirdof a synapse think that Portugal/Ireland will NOT jump in line to stiff creditors? This is more the end of the beginning than the beginning of the end of the crisis.
Why JPM Sees A "Lot More Printing" By The ECB
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/09/2012 10:21 -0500
While the catalyst for much of the recent rally in risk assets seems to have been on the back of Europe clambering back from the edge of the abyss (and admittedly hope for better global growth and US decoupling), JPMorgan's Michael Cembalest notes that Europe remains very much an Achilles Heel going forward. With former ECB member Stark's recent comments on the already 'shocking' quality of the ECB's balance sheet, it is the outflows (or net balance of payments) from the periphery that means the ECB will simply have to keep printing. ECB funding of Spanish and Italian banks is still a relatively small part of their liabilities and should we see even a crack in the resilience of these knife-sitting nations, the retail depositors, bondholders, and non-local wholesale/retail money is unlikely to stay put (especially if there is the continued lack of growth that seems inevitable). The latest Spanish data is dreadful, as Cembalest notes, but the economic situation in France remains weak and while JPM's analysis looks for a gradual closure of the periphery's current account deficit by 2015, the ECB's need to finance the gap in the interim raises a critical question. Since the ECB's printing has boosted the US stock market primarily, will the Fed now take the lead and return the favor (QE3 or more) to help its European partners grow their (net trade) way out of this hole?
Greek Creditors Don't Get the Courtesy of a Reach-Around
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/09/2012 07:08 -0500Only in Greece, can you wipe out €100 billion of debt, and have the new debt that replaces it trade at 20% of face value. So 85.8% of Greek law bonds “participated”. The government intends to use the Collective Action Clause to force the holdouts to participate. It is unclear if the government has actually used the clause already, or just intends to. Once they use the CAC, that will be a Credit Event for the CDS. English law bonds saw participation less than 70%. The deadline has been extended until March 23rd. As discussed all along, the English Law bonds gave some protection to holders and that clearly gave them the confidence to hold out. Given the Event of Default covenants, and the right to accelerate, some bondholders may push to accelerate after the Greek law bonds get CAC’d. The market now knows that the PSI will be “successful” and a massive amount of debt will be wiped out, but the new bonds are being quoted “when and if issued” at prices ranging from the high teens to mid twenties. Why are the new bonds so weak? SUBORDINATION!
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 03/09/2012 07:00 -0500- Australia
- Bank of England
- Bank of Japan
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Budget Deficit
- China
- Consumer Prices
- Corporate America
- Credit Rating Agencies
- Credit Suisse
- Creditors
- Crude
- Currency Peg
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- Equity Markets
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Freddie Mac
- Germany
- Greece
- Gross Domestic Product
- Hong Kong
- Housing Market
- India
- Italy
- Japan
- LTRO
- Natural Gas
- Netherlands
- Nikkei
- Nouriel
- Nouriel Roubini
- Quantitative Easing
- Rating Agencies
- Ray Dalio
- Recession
- recovery
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- The Economist
- Timothy Geithner
- Trade Deficit
- Vladimir Putin
- Wall Street Journal
- Yen
- Yuan
All you need to read.
Presenting Europe's Schizophrenia Post LTRO
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2012 12:25 -0500
Since Draghi's second savior LTRO, European markets have been flip-flopping gradually lower. These four charts do not seem to suggest a market that is confident about tail-risk containment, sovereign firewalls, or an orderly restructuring by Greece. Sovereign spreads are broadly higher (Spain, France, and Portugal the most), CDS spreads are underperforming (as protection is sought and CDS seen having value as a hedge), non-financial and financial credit is notably weaker, LTRO Stigma remains notably wide, stocks are broadly lower, and the EURUSD is back at 'fair' with its swap spreads (removing its over-pessimism). There has been no change in the price trends for UK-law versus Greek-law GGBs (i.e. noone believes this is over) and even if it were, a renewed focus on growth is hardly a market positive given lending trends and macro prints in Europe recently.
Guest Post: Our "Let's Pretend" Economy: Let's Pretend Financialization Hasn't Killed the Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2012 11:51 -0500
Being an intrinsically destabilizing force, financialization led to the global financial crisis of 2008. Central banks went into panic mode, printing and injecting trillions of dollars of new infectious material into the global economy in the hopes of sparking a new even grander cycle of financialization. But you can't create a new cycle of plague when the hosts are either dead or already infected. The world has run out of sectors that can be financialized; that plague has already killed or infected every corner of the global economy. Ironically, all the central banks' attempts to reinflate the speculative leverage-debt bubble are only hastening the disease's decline and collapse. The global markets are cheering today because the plague-riddled corpse of Greek debt has been turned into a grotesque marionette that is being made to "dance" by the European Central Bank before an audience that has been told to applaud loudly, even though the ghastly, bizarre spectacle is transparently phony. Greek debt is already dead; it can't be reinfected and killed again, and neither can the debts of Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Italy et al. Housing is also already dead, though the still-warm body is still twitching in certain markets around the world.
Mr. Market: Get It Through Your Head, The PSI DOESN’T Matter
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 03/08/2012 11:15 -0500This entire deal is just stupid. And all it’s done is alert Spain and Italy to the fact that handing over fiscal sovereignty and implementing austerity measures in exchange for bailouts is a waste of time. Indeed, Spain just woke up and smelled the coffee. And it's told the EU to "shove it."






