Switzerland
Bankia: The Failed Bank In The Coalmine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/10/2012 07:23 -0500The Immortal Bard must have been referencing Madrid when penning these lines or, if not, would likely approve of their application this morning. The nationalization of Bankia, the third largest bank in Spain, is not some isolated event that is singular and alone in nature regardless of the expected dampening and muted words and phrases issued by the Spanish government. The cancer has been identified but not isolated and you may be assured that it remains in the lymph nodes of the two major banks in Spain. Fortunately, during America’s financial crisis, many of the sub-prime mortgages were securitized and no longer resided on the balance sheets of the American banks. In the case of Spain we find not only the majority of the mortgages resident at the Spanish banks but we find an added dimension which is a huge amount of money lent to Real Estate developers which is impaired and still on the books of the Spanish banks. Further, in my opinion, none of these loans have been accurately accounted for and they are being carried at whimsical valuations by the banks or pledged as collateral at the ECB where the Spanish bank funding jumped 50% in one month and now stands at $294 billion. Following the bouncing ball; there is now so much encumbrance of assets between pledged collateral and covered bond sales that the actual worth of the two major Spanish banks is now someplace between “not much” and “De minimis” should the situation deteriorate to the point of impairment.
David Rosenberg's Take On Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2012 20:05 -0500"In less than two years, we are now up to a total of seven European leaders or ruling parties that have been forced out of office, courtesy of the spreading government debt crisis — tack on France now to Ireland, Portugal, Greece, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands. Even Germany's coalition is looking shaky in the aftermath of the faltering state election results for the CDU's (Christian Democratic Union) Free Democrat coalition partner. This is quite a potent brew — financial insolvency, economic fragility and political instability."
Frontrunning: May 7
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2012 06:25 -0500- Greek pro-bailout parties lack majority, final poll results (Reuters)
- Greek Election Gridlock Raises Risk for Bailout, Euro Future (Bloomberg)
- Socialist Hollande ousts Sarkozy as French leader (Reuters)
- Merkozy End Means Franco-German Gulf; Greek Voters Rebel (Bloomberg)
- Election swing leaves Greece teetering (Kathimerini)
- Merkel's Coalition Appears to Suffer Loss in German State (WSJ)
- The Only Solution to the Eurozone Crisis (FT)
- Cameron Faces Clamour From Party Right (FT)
- Falcone’s LightSquared Said to Get Week Credit Extension (Bloomberg)
- Hungary plans three-year, 15 billion euro IMF deal: state sec (Reuters)
- Putin pledges unity on return to Kremlin (Reuters)
Swiss Gold Stored At “Decentralised Locations” – SNB Does Not Disclose Where
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2012 09:36 -0500- BOE
- Central Banks
- China
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Hugh Hendry
- Hugh Hendry
- India
- Krugman
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- Paul Krugman
- Precious Metals
- Real Interest Rates
- recovery
- Reuters
- Swiss Franc
- Swiss National Bank
- Switzerland
- Transparency
- Wall Street Journal
- World Gold Council
There are deepening concerns in Switzerland about the debasement of the Swiss franc. The SNB has pegged the franc to the euro and is engaged in the same ultra loose monetary policies as the Federal Reserve, BOE and the ECB. The SNB won't allow the franc to rise above an arbitrary “ceiling” against the euro Walter Meier himself said on April 5 that the SNB is ready to buy foreign currencies in "unlimited quantities." Meier’s comments regarding the vastly depleted Swiss gold reserves came after Bayram Dincer, an analyst at LGT Capital Management in Pfaeffikon, Switzerland, called on the SNB to disclose where its gold is stored, in a letter published in the respected Swiss publication Finanz und Wirtschaft. Meier said that the SNB holds its physical gold reserves “domestically and internationally, with provisions for a crisis scenario being a main factor in the decision for this decentralized storage”. “The criteria for the storage countries are: appropriate regional diversification, exceptionally stable economic and political environments, immunity for central bank investments, access to a gold market where stocks could be liquidated if necessary,” he continued. He concluded by saying that “such a decentralized storage is still preferable to an exclusive storage in Switzerland. The listed factors can change over time and that’s why the central bank is reviewing and adapting the storage locations periodically.” The SNB’s monetary policies have been imprudent in recent years and their gold sales have lost the Swiss people a lot of money.
And So The World Burns: Global April PMI Summary
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/02/2012 08:01 -0500No need for much commentary here, suffice to say that those who thought Italy's massive drop in PMI from 47.9 to 43.9 in April was bad, apparently have not seen Hungary, Australia, Norway or Switzerland. The good news? Turkey is doing well to quite well... which likely explains why they are trying to confiscate the people's gold.
Guest Post: A Different Way Of Looking At China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/01/2012 14:04 -0500Hard landing, soft landing, civil unrest, dominant economic superpower – the forecasts flow freely regarding China. The fact that good data is hard to come by regarding China does not seem to inhibit many outside observers. In this piece I will look at China through the lens of economic structure, Chinese history and culture—concepts which a number of observers often overlook. My general conclusion is that Chinese GDP growth rates are about to undergo a gradual but nevertheless perceptible decline. But I now believe a hard landing crash is unlikely, assuming that Europe does not totally disintegrate and the US does not roll over into a full scale recession.
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: May 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/01/2012 07:02 -0500With a Labour Day market holiday across the continent, focus turns to the FTSE-100. The UK market is trading modestly higher with some strong earnings reports overnight lifting the index. Lloyds Group posted stronger than expected profits and reported confidence in the delivery of their financial guidance. The report has boosted Lloyds shares to become one of the top gainers of the day. Despite this, the financials sector is being held back from outperforming as Man Group fail to deliver on their sales figures, pushing their shares lower throughout the session. The only notable data release of the European session was UK Manufacturing PMI, coming in below expectations with a reading of 50.5 as manufacturing output was dampened across April by Eurozone weakness and contracting new orders. Following the release, GBP weakness was observed, with GBP/USD touching upon session lows. Pre-market, the RBA cut their cash target rate by 50BPS, a larger cut than expected. The board cited skittish market conditions and below trend output growth as the triggers for the rate cut. As such, AUD weakness is observed across the board and AUD/USD stops just short of breaking through 1.0300 to the downside. Looking ahead in the session, participants look toward US ISM Manufacturing for March due at 1500BST/0900CDT as the next key data release.
Frontrunning: April 30
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/30/2012 05:51 -0500- Only the cattle cars are missing: Greece opens detention camp for immigrants as election looms (Reuters)
- China really wants that Iran oil - China mulls guarantees for ships carrying Iran oil (Reuters)
- U.S. eyes testy China talks, Chen backer expects Chinese decision (Reuters, FT)
- Possible arsenic poisoning probed in death of coroner's official (LA Times)
- Europe’s Anti-Austerity Calls Mount as Elections Near (Bloomberg)
- Law firm Dewey dumps executive; talks with rival end (Reuters)
- Greek bank appeals for fresh equity (FT)
- Banks seek to put pressure on small rivals (FT)
- Obama falls short of meteoric expectations abroad (Reuters)
Frontrunning: April 27
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/27/2012 06:22 -0500- Hollande Says Germany Can’t Make Europe’s Decisions Alone (BBG)
- Monti Hits at Eurozone Austerity Push (FT)
- Firm that made loans to Chesapeake CEO defends them (Reuters)
- Bo Xilai's Son Doesn't Drive a Ferrari. He drives a Porsche (WSJ)
- Geithner Urges China to Loosen Hold on Finance System (BBG)
- and yet... Son of Bo Xilai Says Father’s Ouster ‘Destroyed My Life’ (BBG)
- U.S. growth slows as inventory accumulation wanes (Reuters)
- S&P 500 Dividend Payers Climb to Highest in 12 Years (BBG)
- Lacker Sees Fed May Need to Raise Rates in Mid-2013 (BBG)
- Ireland Passes Latest Bailout Review (WSJ)
Russia And Mexico Both Buy Nearly $1 Billion Worth of Gold in March
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/24/2012 07:41 -0500While gold demand from the western investors and store of wealth buyers has fallen in recent months, central bank demand continues to be very robust and this is providing strong support to gold above the $1,600/oz level. IMF data released overnight shows that Mexico added 16.8 metric tons of gold valued at about $906.4 million to its reserves in March. Russia continued to diversify its foreign exchange reserves and increased its gold reserves by about 16.5 tons according to a statement by its central bank on April 20. Other creditor nations with large foreign exchange reserves and exposure to the dollar and the euro including Turkey and Kazakhstan also increased their holdings of gold according to the International Monetary Fund data.Mexico raised its reserves to 122.6 tons last month when gold averaged $1,676.67 an ounce.Turkey added 11.5 tons, Kazakhstan 4.3 tons, Ukraine 1.2 tons, Tajikistan 0.4 ton, and Belarus 0.1 tonnes, according to the IMF. Ukraine, Czech Republic and Belarus also had modest increases in their gold reserves. Central banks are expanding reserves due to concerns about the dollar, euro, sterling and all fiat currencies.
Frontrunning: April 24
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/24/2012 07:13 -0500- China’s Biggest Banks Are Squeezed for Capital (NYT)
- Greeks detect hypocrisy as Dutch coalition stumbles (Reuters)
- Hollande Blames Europe’s Austerity Plan for Le Pen’s Rise (Bloomberg)
- In a Change, Mexico Reins In Its Oil Monopoly (NYT)
- China Tire Demand Slows as Economy Decelerates, Bridgestone Says (Bloomberg)
- Social Security’s financial forecast gets darker; Medicare’s outlook unchanged (WaPo)
- Fed’s 17 Rate Forecasts May Confuse More Than Clarify (Bloomberg)
- Senate to vote on array of Postal Service overhaul proposals (WaPo)
- Weidmann Says Bundesbank Is Preserving Euro Stability (Bloomberg)
Frontrunning: April 23
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/23/2012 06:26 -0500- A Forecast of What the Fed Will Do: Stand Pat (Hilsenrath) - they finally realized that they have to leak the opposite...
- Draghi's ECB Rejects Geithner-IMF Push for More Crisis-Fighting (Bloomberg)
- Wal-Mart's Mexico probe could lead to departures at the top (Reuters)
- The Sadly Unpalatable Solution for the Eurozone (FT)
- US Regulators Look to Ease Swaps Rules (FT)
- Yuan, Interest Rate Reform to be Gradual: China Central Bank Chief (Reuters)
- Run, Don't Walk (Hussman)
- Hollande Steals Poll March on Sarkozy (FT)
On the Swiss, the IMF and the G-20
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 04/19/2012 13:56 -0500What do you get for $50 billion? Happy Talk...
SF Fed: This Time It Really Is Different
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/18/2012 12:10 -0500
It appears that after months of abuse for their water-is-wet economic insights, the San Francisco Fed may have stumbled on to the cold harsh reality that this post-great-recession world finds itself in. The crux of the matter, that will come as no surprise to any of our readers, is credit and "its central role to understanding the business cycle". Oscar Jorda then concludes, in a refreshingly honest and shocking manner that "Any forecast that assumes the recovery from the Great Recession will resemble previous post-World War II recoveries runs the risk of overstating future economic growth, lending activity, interest rates, investment, and inflation." His analysis, which Minsky-ites (and Reinhart and Rogoff) will appreciate - and perhaps our neo-classical brethren will embrace - is that the Great Recession upended the paradigm that modern macro-economic models omitted banks and finance and this time it really is different in that the 'achilles heel' of economic modeling - credit - cannot be considered a secondary effect. His analysis points to considerably slower GDP growth and lower inflation expectations as he compares the current 'recovery' to post-WWII recoveries across 14 advanced economies - a sad picture is painted as he notes "Today employment is about 10% and investment 30% below where they were on average at similar points after other postwar recessions."
Frontrunning: April 18
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/18/2012 06:12 -0500- Australia
- Bank of England
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Best Buy
- BOE
- China
- Citigroup
- Claimant Count
- Creditors
- Fannie Mae
- Financial Services Authority
- Honeywell
- India
- Italy
- Japan
- Mervyn King
- Natural Gas
- New York Times
- Newspaper
- North Korea
- OTC
- Reality
- Reuters
- Sovereign Debt
- Switzerland
- Testimony
- Unemployment
- Vikram Pandit
- Warren Buffett
- Yuan
- First Japan now... Australia Ready to Help IMF (WSJ)
- "Not if, but when" for Spanish bailout, experts believe (Reuters)
- Spain’s Surging Bad Loans Cast New Doubts on Bank Cleanup (Bloomberg)
- Spain weighs financing options (FT)
- Spanish Banks Gorging on Sovereign Bonds Shifts Risk to Taxpayer (Bloomberg)
- Spain and Italy Bank on Banks (WSJ)
- Chesapeake CEO took out $1.1 billion in unreported loans (Reuters)
- China preparing to roll out OTC equity market – regulator (Reuters)
- Angry North Korea threatens retaliation, nuclear test expected (Reuters)
- North Korea Breaks Off Nuclear Accord as Food Aid Halted (Bloomberg)




