Germany
Tick By Tick Research Email - A Delirious Mr Mario Draghi
Submitted by Tick By Tick on 01/16/2012 02:18 -0500Mario Draghi once again mistakes a Solvency issue for one of Liquidity
How Safe Are Central Banks? UBS Worries The Eurozone Is Different
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/16/2012 01:34 -0500With Fed officials a laughing stock (both inside and outside the realm of FOMC minutes), Bank of Japan officials ever-watching eyes, and ECB officials in both self-congratulatory (Draghi) and worryingly concerned on downgrades (Nowotny), the world's central bankers appear, if nothing else, convinced that all can be solved with the printing of some paper (and perhaps a measure of harsh words for those naughty spendaholic politicians). The dramatic rise in central bank balance sheets and just-as-dramatic fall in asset quality constraints for collateral are just two of the items that UBS's economist Larry Hatheway considers as he asks (and answers) the critical question of just how safe are central banks. As he sees bloated balance sheets relative to capital and the impact when 'stuff happens', he discusses why the Eurozone is different (no central fiscal authority backstopping it) and notes it is less the fear of large losses interfering with liquidity provision directly but the more massive (and explicit) intrusion of politics into the 'independent' heart of central banking that creates the most angst. While he worries for the end of central bank independence (most specifically in Europe), we remind ourselves of the light veil that exists currently between the two and that the tooth fairy and santa don't have citizen-suppressing printing presses.
Is German Anger Finally Coming To A Boil? Even Local CEOs Say Time To Exit Euro May Have Arrived
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/15/2012 15:31 -0500It would appear that the German public (and political class to some extent) are beginning to see the European project in the same manner as we described back in July. As the increasing burden of saving the eurozone from its own excess falls on the shoulders of every Tobias, Dirk, and Heike taxpayer in Germany, even industry leaders, such as Wolfgang Rietzle, the CEO of Linde, this weekend according to Reuters, are suggesting a line in the sand has to be drawn and that "if we do not succeed in disciplining countries then Germany needs to exit." This has been very much a view we have held for months, that instead of the periphery limping away one-by-one, the very core of the foundation will simply decide enough is enough or as Reitzle notes (among many other critically insightful comments) "the willingness of countries to reform themselves is abating if, in the end, the European Central Bank steps in." This morning Germany's FinMin Schaeuble added to the potential separation rhetoric with his comments, via Bloomberg:
- *SCHAUEBLE SAYS ECB AS LENDER OF LAST RESORT WOULDN'T CALM MKTS
- *SCHAEUBLE SAYS JOINT EURO REGION BOND SALES NOT A SOLUTION
Hardly reassuring given the dreams of every GGB owner and BTP-exposed insurance company are banking on the ECB cranking the presses to 'secure' nominal returns in the real world. Friday's mass downgrade (and S&P's more interesting Q&A) have perhaps left Germany on the hook for up to 56% of its GDP via the EFSF support mechanisms and as we noted six months ago, the moment for Atlas to shrug draws closer with every downgrade and SMP action.
Preliminary Thoughts On The European Downgrade From Goldman And Morgan Stanley
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/15/2012 14:52 -0500It has been a busy weekend for Wall Street, which has been doing all it can to spin the S&P downgrade in the best favorable light, although judging by the initial EURUSD and EURJPY reaction, so far not succeeding. Below we present a quick report written by Goldman's Lasse Nielsen on why in Goldman's view the downgrade's "impact is likely to be limited" and also the quick notes from an impromptu call MS organized for institutional clients (which had just two questions in the Q&A section, of which only one was answered - it appears virtually noboby believes that global moral hazard will allow anyone to fail at this point, so why bother even going out of bed).
Video And Post-Mortem of Spectacular Carnival Cruise Liner Accident Off Tuscan Coast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/15/2012 11:59 -0500
To those who woke up on Saturday to images of a massive cruise liner keeled over following a very peculiar Friday night accident off the coast of Italy, no, this was not a prop for the latest James Cameron movie: it is the Carnival Corp's Costa Concordia, which carried over 4,200 passengers and crew, and foundered after hit a submerged rock off the Tuscan island of Giglio in very calm conditions. At last count 11 passengers and 6 crewmembers were missing, with at least 6 confirmed dead as of last night. Here is what is known as of right now.
Der Verkauf Ist Verboten - Germany Considers Ban On Sovereign Bond Sales
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2012 17:11 -0500When back in August, Europe declared a short selling ban of any financials (here we are willing to channel Romney, and make a $10,000 bet with anyone that said ban will never be lifted), and which as we predicted has had no favorable impact on bank stocks which have since tumbled, we suggested that the next step will also be the final one: the passage of laws prohibiting sales of any kind. As usual we were partially joking. And as so often happens, we are about to be proven right again. As the FT reports in its headline article today, whose gist is simple enough, that Europe is on the verge, it is the tactically-placed final paragraph that is of particular curiosity. It says the following: "Speaking on the fringes of a start-of-year retreat of her Christian Union lawmakers in the city of Kiel, Ms Merkel said she would consider calls from her party colleagues for legislation to bar institutional investors such as insurance companies from selling bonds when ratings were downgraded, or fell below investment grade." Allow us to recopy and repaste the key part: "legislation to bar institutional investors such as insurance companies from selling bonds."
The Real Dark Horse - S&P's Mass Downgrade FAQ May Have Just Hobbled The European Sovereign Debt Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2012 18:55 -0500- Belgium
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Carry Trade
- CDS
- Credit Conditions
- Creditors
- default
- Default Rate
- Estonia
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Finland
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Investment Grade
- Ireland
- Italy
- keynesianism
- LTRO
- Market Conditions
- Monetary Policy
- Moral Hazard
- Netherlands
- Portugal
- Rating Agency
- ratings
- Recession
- recovery
- Slovakia
- Sovereign Debt
- Sovereign Default
- Sovereign Risk
- Sovereign Risk
- Sovereigns
- Unemployment
All your questions about the historic European downgrade should be answered after reading the following FAQ. Or so S&P believes. Ironically, it does an admirable job, because the following presentation successfully manages to negate years of endless lies and propaganda by Europe's incompetent and corrupt klepocrarts, and lays out the true terrifying perspective currently splayed out before the eurozone better than most analyses we have seen to date. Namely that the failed experiment is coming to an end. And since the Eurozone's idiotic foundation was laid out by the same breed of central planning academic wizards who thought that Keynesianism was a great idea (and continue to determine the fate of the world out of their small corner office in the Marriner Eccles building), the imminent downfall of Europe will only precipitate the final unraveling of the shaman "economic" religion that has taken the world to the brink of utter financial collapse and, gradually, world war.
Faber's Latest Rant On Global Monetization Wars
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2012 17:54 -0500
There is a little for everyone in Marc Faber's latest appearance on CNBC. The infamous boomer (and doomer) believes (as we do) that today's downgrades are less significant for stocks (at least until the realization that banks and more importantly insurance companies are about to be cut as well - keep a close eye out on Allianz and Generali (of ASSGEN fame) - it is not incidental that they are abbreviated to A&G, just one letter away from our own AIG) as it is largely priced in but the equity market's rally of the last few weeks (with its lack of breadth and volume) is strongly suggestive of a bear-market rally (as opposed to the decoupling bull market that so many hope for). His view quite simply is that the ECB has undergone a backdoor monetization and without this the EUR would be significantly stronger especially given the huge short-interest (though he sees the trend for EUR is down). Some highlights include: EUR weakness may help exports but the debt servicing costs of major European firms with huge US denominated debt wil suffer greatly, most European nations should be CCC-rated, nominally European stocks will outperform and holding quality dividend paying companies is preferred, valuation is practically impossible given ZIRP, and finally noting the irony, the worse the global economy gets (and the Chinese economy suffers), the more money printing will occur lifting nominal equity prices while real economies stumble and standards of living drop, so hold gold.
Ratings Actions Out
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2012 17:16 -0500Not sure why they felt the need to wait until 430 since most of it was leaked already. Germany back to stable outlook is good. Austria and France chance EFSF but guess that is what LTRO is for. Italy and Portugal would be in trouble in the real world but so long as ECB views them as money good the countries and banks can keep printing money (sorry use LTRO). Roughly in line with expectations. I think the need to redo the EFSF and ESM concept is an issue that will need to be digested. Is BBB+ for Italy and junk for Portugal enough to cause some collateral provisions to be triggered or force some sellers? I don't think it will in any meaningful way but needs to be watched. I'm surprised Belgium got by but then again it is a rating agency.
European CDS Rerack
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2012 09:54 -0500Now that a "few good hedge funds" have finally made CDS a credible instrument all over again but trampling all over ISDA putrid, corrupt and meaningless corpse, here is an update of Eurozone CDS.
Friday The 13th Is Here: Eurozone Sources Say Several Countries May Face Imminent Downgrade By S&P
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2012 09:00 -0500The one we've all been waiting for:
- Eurozone Sources Say Several Countries May Face Imminent Downgrade By S&P -Dow Jones
- Eurozone source says Germany will not be downgraded - RTRS... So France will be?
- S&P declines to comment
Ladies and gents -happy Friday the 13th - the French downgrade is nigh. The only question - one or two notches. EURUSD promptly sliding on the news
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: January 13
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2012 08:22 -0500European Indices are trading up at the midpoint of the session following strong performance from financials, however, Italian bond auction results dampened this effect after failing to replicate the success of the Spanish bond auction yesterday with relatively lacklustre demand. There has been market talk that this lull in demand for Italian bonds is due to technical error preventing some participants from bidding in the auction, but this still remains unconfirmed. Heading into the North American open, fixed income futures are still trading higher on the day having seen the Bund touch on a fresh session high and with peripheral 10-year government bond yield spreads widening ahead of the treasury pit open. Markets now anticipate the release of US trade balance figures and The University of Michigan confidence report.
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 01/13/2012 05:53 -0500- Apple
- Auto Sales
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barack Obama
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Bond
- Budget Deficit
- China
- Corruption
- Credit-Default Swaps
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Debt Ceiling
- default
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Gross Domestic Product
- Housing Market
- Hungary
- India
- International Monetary Fund
- Investor Sentiment
- Iran
- Italy
- Joseph Stiglitz
- Mexico
- Monetary Policy
- Nikkei
- Nobel Laureate
- Quantitative Easing
- Recession
- recovery
- Renminbi
- Reuters
- Serious Fraud Office
- Vladimir Putin
- Volatility
- Wall Street Journal
- Yuan
All you need to read.
Germany Is Just Buying For Time… More Bailout Funds Aren’t Coming
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 01/12/2012 18:36 -0500The EU, in its current form, is most certainly in its final chapter as both the political environment and market conditions have rendered all proposed “solutions” to the crisis moot.
Wait... Wasn't the Greek Issue Solved Already?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 01/12/2012 13:49 -0500In plain terms, both the IMF and Germany have stated they will help Greece if and only if Greece agrees to various measures… which they KNOW Greece cannot agree to. And so the Greek issue has become a kind of “hot potato” that no one wants to keep holding. Meanwhile, every day that this issues doesn’t get solved, the EU as a whole moves closer to systemic failure.





