Swiss National Bank
Swiss Debt Is Now Repaying Itself
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2012 14:34 -0500
The Swiss National Bank may have pegged the EURCHF (and as noted earlier, is progressively accumulating losses defending the barrier - even as EURCHF options are leaning further and further towards the peg breaking), but what about its bonds? At the current rate, Swiss debt, which is quite negative, with 2 year bonds now trading at record NEGATIVE rates, will repay itself quietly in a few short decades: ahhh the benefits of compounding. And for an example of how this is done, hours ago, the government issued debt at a rate of 0.62%. Oh sorry, we forgot the negative sign.
Has The SNB Restarted The Printing Press?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2012 10:12 -0500The game for the Swiss National Bank seems to have changed completely. Again the central bank had increase money supply, as measured by deposits at the SNB by local banks and by the Swiss confederation, this time even by 13219 mil. francs (source). This money printing implies that the SNB had to buy in Euros in similar quantities in order maintain the floor. We have speculated that the SNB will double or triple the Forex reserves before it gives in and the floor will break. At the current speed of 13 bln per week, this will result in 676 bln. CHF per year, i.e. they will have tripled money supply and currency reserves in one year. This sum exceeds slightly the Swiss GDP, implying that a break of the floor from 1.20 to 1.10 (about 10%) on the basis of 50% Euros in the SNB reserves would result in a loss of around 5% of GDP at the central bank. Moreover, in the week ending in May 25th, nothing really extraordinary happened, what would happen in case of a Greek euro exit?
Capital Controls Coming to Greece and Switzerland
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 05/28/2012 18:44 -0500Just a phase....
Europe: "It's Like Asking A Bicycle Repairman To Fix A Jet Engine"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/25/2012 06:52 -0500Newedge: "Last thing I asked before I went traveling was "try not to break anything" while I’m away. I get back this morning and it looks like a bunch of teenagers have had a particularly messy drug-fuelled rave in the market’s front room. The day-on-day charts hide the roller-coaster ride we've seen on the back of the Euro. Bond markets are in lock-down awaiting what-ever-next “liquidity bomb” the authorities can find to drop. Aside from some minor bond crosses, there has been zip activity outside zero-coupon bunds, gilts and treasuries. There is more liquidity in the Atacama desert."
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.
Got an Edge?
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 05/02/2012 06:24 -0500The Swiss have the edge today. But for how long?
On Student Loans, Accounting Gimmicks, Electric Cars, FX and a note on SS
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 04/29/2012 07:12 -0500Thoughts on last and next week.
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...
Houston - We have a problem, in Switzerland
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 04/10/2012 14:09 -0500Not adding up.... but let's figure it out.
Betting on the race to the bottom
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 04/08/2012 21:02 -0500No soft landing for Japan.
Renewed European Fears Send CHF Soaring, Force Swiss National Bank To Defend EURCHF 1.20 Floor
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/05/2012 06:15 -0500
And like that, Europe is broken again. Following a spate of negative European data (what else is there), including a miss in German industrial production as well as a miss in UK manufacturing output, all eyes are again on Spain, especially those of the bond vigilantes, who have sold off the sovereign European bond market, sending the Spanish-Bund spread to over 400 bps for the first time since December 2011. The main reason today: a Goldman report saying Spain will unlikely meet its 2012 and 2013 budget targets, as well as JPM Chief Economist David Mackie saying Spanish government "missteps" have raised questions about its credibility, making investors reluctant to purchase Spanish debt. Stress has returned to periphery, if it broadened into bank funding markets more LTROs would be forthcoming; if that “failed to hold yields at an appropriate level” Spain may need assistance from the EFSF/ESM and the IMF. Euro area unlikely to return to stability in sovereigns without some burden sharing; nominal growth likely to stay below borrowing costs, making fiscal targets “all but impossible to achieve”. UBS piles in saying Spanish banking stresses still haven't been addressed. Finally, a big red flag is that market liquidity is once again starting to disappear, and as Peter Tchir points out, Main is now being quoted with 3/4 bps bid/ask spread, all the way up to 1 bps spread. In other words, as we have been warning for weeks, the period of fake LTRO-induced calm is over, and the market is demanding more central planner liquid heroin. The question becomes whether Europe has even more worthless collateral in exchange for which the ECB will continue handing out discount window money in sterilized sheep's clothing. Yet nowhere is the resumption in risk flaring more evident than in the Swiss Franc, where the EURCHF all of a sudden broke through the critical 1.20 SNB floor, which was set back in September 2011, the day gold was trading at its all time high. Said otherwise, everyone is once again scrambling for safety. And since they can't get it in the CHF, it is only a matter of time, before gold resumes its ascent as the paper currency alternative that sent it to its all time highs late last summer.
Market Sentiment: Mixed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/15/2012 06:19 -0500Relatively quiet overnight session in the markets, where Europe has seen several bond auctions, most notably in France and Spain, whose good results has in turn sent the German 30 Year Bund yield to the highest since December 12, all courtesy of the recently printed (and collateralized with second and third-hand Trojans) $1.3 trillion. Per BBG, Spain sold 976 million euros of 3.25 percent notes due April 2016 at an average yield of 3.37 percent. The bid-to-cover ratio was 4.13, compared with 2.21 when the notes were sold in January, the Bank of Spain said in Madrid today. It also auctioned 2015 and 2018 securities. France sold 3.26 billion euros of benchmark five-year debt at an average yield of 1.78 percent. The borrowing cost for the 1.75 percent note due in February 2017 was less than the yield of 1.93 percent at the previous sale of the securities on Feb. 16. Elsewhere, we got confirmation of the collapse in Greece, where Q4 unemployment rose to 20.7%, up from 17.7% in the prior quarter. China weighed on Asian market action again following ongoing concerns about domestic property curbs, and a slide in the Chinese Foreign Direct Investment of -0.9% on Exp of +14.6%. ECB deposit facility usage, primarily by German banks, was flattish at €686.4 billion, while in Keynesian news, Italian debt rose to a new record in January of €1.936 trillion. Watch this space, once inflection point occurs and vigilantes realize that not only has nothing been fixed in Italy, but the current account situation in Italy, and Spain, is getting progressively worse as shown yesterday, all at the expense of Germany.
The Biggest Debt Write-Down In Human History
Submitted by Michael Victory on 03/10/2012 22:32 -0500- Bank of England
- Bank of Japan
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Bond
- CDS
- Central Banks
- China
- Corruption
- default
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- France
- Greece
- Hyperinflation
- Insurance Companies
- Japan
- John Williams
- Medicare
- Mortgage Loans
- Obamacare
- Portugal
- Real estate
- Swiss National Bank
- Time Magazine
- Unemployment
- Unemployment Insurance
- Volatility
- Wachovia
- White House
Injection will have its desired affect.
Next Leg Of The Ponzi Revealed - Foreign Central Banks To Begin Buying US Stocks Outright Starting Today
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/01/2012 14:01 -0500We were speechless when we read this from Bloomberg...




