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Germany Crushes All Hope Of Greece Getting Debt Relief
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/08/2015 07:42 -0500"At the moment and in principle we see, as the chancellor said expressly in her press conference in Brussels, no occasion at all to discuss this issue - there is no leverage or basis for that," Martin Jaeger said at a news conference. "That refers to a haircut in the classic sense but I explicitly add we also take that to mean measures that aim to bring about a reduction in the cash value of debt - those are things that you hear in discussions under profiling, restructuring and similar things."
Financial Nonsense Overload
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/07/2015 18:45 -0500In the end, finance—at any level—has to be about rules and numbers, or it becomes about nonsense. Break enough of your own rules, and your money turns to garbage, because in a world where money is debt and debt is garbage, money is garbage. But there is a proven method for solving this problem and moving on: it's called national bankruptcy. Greece is bankrupt; if its resolution brings on the bankruptcy of Spain, Italy and others, and if that in turn bankrupts the entire Eurozone, then that's exactly what must happen. But something else might happen instead.
Disorderly Collapse - The Endgame Of The Fed's Artificial Suppression Of Defaults
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/07/2015 16:40 -0500Nobody apparently learned much from the whole bubble-bust affair as banks and financial firms are at it again, this time in corporate debt. The artificial suppression of default, in no small part to perceptions of those bank reserves under QE (just like perceptions of balance sheet capacity pre-crisis), has turned junk debt into the vehicle of choice for yet another cycle of “reach for yield.” In the past two bubble cycles, we see how monetary policy creates the conditions for them but also in parallel for their disorderly closure. It isn’t money that the FOMC directs but rather unrealistic, to the extreme, expectations and extrapolations. Once those become encoded in financial equations, the illusion becomes real supply.
Ragin' Contagion: When Debtors Go Broke, So Do Mercantilist Exporters
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/07/2015 13:45 -0500Despite endless assurances that the Greek debt crisis is contained, the reality is that the ragin' contagion of debt crises will spread not just to other deeply indebted nations but to the mercantilist economies that depend on selling goods to borrowers. Strip out the borrowing, and you strip out most of the customers for German, Dutch and Chinese goods.
Greece is Just the First of MANY Countries That Will Be Going Belly-Up
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/07/2015 10:53 -0500The Big Crisis, the one in which entire countries go bust, has begun. It will not unfold in a matter of weeks; these sorts of things take months to complete. But it has begun.
The Biggest Winner From The Greek Tragedy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/07/2015 09:12 -0500For every loser there is a winner, and in the case of Greece and its tragedy, just as millions are about to lose everything, a few not only made billions but quietly, under the guise of "sovereign bailouts" transferred their entire risk onto the taxpaying public.
ECB Board Member Says Introduction Of Another Greek Currency "Most Realistic Scenario"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/07/2015 07:44 -0500ECB’S RIMSEVICS SAYS INTRODUCTION OF ANOTHER CURRENCY IN GREECE IS MOST REALISTIC SCENARIO, MAY BE ONE LESS EURO ZONE MEMBER IN FUTURE
It Begins: ECB Hikes Greek ELA Haircuts; Full "Depositor Bail-In" Sensitivity Analysis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/06/2015 20:54 -0500Earlier today we reported that as Bloomberg correctly leaked, the ECB would keep its ELA frozen for Greek banks at its ceiling level disclosed two weeks ago. However we did not know what the ECB would do with Greek ELA haircuts, assuming that the ECB would not dare risk contagion and the collapse of the Greek banking system by triggering a collapse in Greek banks if and when it boosts ELA haircuts. Turns out we were wrong, and as the ECB just announced "the Governing Council decided today to adjust the haircuts on collateral accepted by the Bank of Greece for ELA."
Russia Is Taking Full Advantage Of Greek Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/06/2015 20:00 -0500With Greece’s debt situation spiraling downwards, the European project is showing some cracks. The July 5 referendum could end up amounting to a mandate on whether or not Greece stays in the euro. In the meantime, the turmoil offers an opportunity for Russia to advance its interests... and with The Krlemlin reporting that Putin held discussions with Hollande today, it appears something is going on behind the scenes.
Greece Fallout: Italy & Spain Have Funded A Massive Backdoor Bailout Of French Banks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/06/2015 18:00 -0500France has managed to use the Greek bailout to offload €8 billion in junk debt onto its neighbors and burden them with tens of billions more in debt they could have avoided had Greece simply been allowed to default in 2010. The upshot is that Italy and Spain are much closer to financial crisis today than they should be.
Why Greece Matters A Lot: The Case Of Europe's Falling Dominoes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/06/2015 15:37 -0500Broken Market Ignites Momentum In Stocks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/06/2015 14:06 -0500Wondering who was buying the market with both hands and feet this morning? Questioning the rationality of sucvh voracious dip-buyers? We have the answer to 'how' the market soared to Friday's highs...
Citi Identifies Contagion "Trigger Point" For More ECB QE
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/06/2015 13:21 -0500Should markets fret, and ECB action becomes necessary then we think the markets will price ECB action well before highly stressed levels. If we for instance take it view of the monetary policy stance impact seriously then market moves that take real yields to levels that persisted before the ECB started easing policy (negative rates started in Jun 2014) may be a trigger point.
The Next Derivatives Implosion Just Started in Europe
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/06/2015 12:47 -0500Spain has over $1.0 trillion in debt outstanding… and Italy has €2.6 trillion. These bonds are backstopping tens of trillions of Euros’ worth of derivatives trades. A haircut on them would trigger systemic failure in Europe.
Piketty: "Germany Has Never Repaid Its Debts; It Has No Standing To Lecture Other Nations"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/06/2015 09:38 -0500"When I hear the Germans say that they maintain a very moral stance about debt and strongly believe that debts must be repaid, then I think: what a huge joke! Germany is the country that has never repaid its debts. It has no standing to lecture other nations. ... Germany is really the single best example of a country that, throughout its history, has never repaid its external debt. Neither after the First nor the Second World War. However, it has frequently made other nations pay up... "




