Ireland
What Is Killing Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/27/2013 09:36 -0500
A bank in some European country such as Spain lends money but the collateral, Real Estate or commercial loans, are going bad. The bank then securitizes a large pool of this collateral and pledges it at the ECB to receive cash. In many cases to take the pool the country has to guarantee the debt. So Spain, in my example, guarantees the loan package which is then pledged at the ECB and is a contingent liability and which is not reported in the debt to GDP ratio of the country but nowhere else that you will find either. “Hidden” would be the appropriate word. Then as time passes the loans get even worse so that the ECB demands cash or more collateral because they will not be taking the hit; thank you very much. The bank cannot afford to post more collateral so that the country, Spain, must post the collateral and add an additional guarantee for the new loan or they must post cash which is oftentimes the case. Consequently as time passes and more cash has been spent the country, Spain, begins to run out of capital and the 10.6% deficit figure, that Spain announced recently, is not anywhere close to the actual reality so that they will get forced to officially borrow more money from the ESM as the sovereign guarantee of bank debt becomes unsustainable.
Direct Challenge To Federal Reserve & Irish Central Bank Bubble Blowers: Recovery Or Parlor Tricks, Boom Or Bust
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 04/26/2013 09:08 -0500I always wanted to debate those smart guys at the Fed, ECB and Irish Central Bank. After all, blowing up country after country is a notable accomplishment, right???!!!
"The Battlefield Is The United States Of America"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/25/2013 18:31 -0500
When you’ve got a guy like Senator John McCain who says “The battlefield is the United States of America,” it tells you that almost nothing is safe in the Land of the Free. Whatever remains of civil liberties is going to feel the full brunt of the state’s boot heel.
Was It Just The Common Folk, I Mean Equity Investors Who Got Hosed By The Bank of Ireland - Preferred Stock, & I Mean It!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 04/25/2013 12:39 -0500A bank losing billions of dollars in a recessionary environment, REDUCES regulatory capital, failing to report liabilities - in order to pay special investors a special dividend! Sounds about right doesn't it? Unless your a common shareholder!
As Forewarned, The Irish Savers Have Just Been "Cyprus'd", And There's MUCH MORE "Cyprusing" To Come
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 04/23/2013 06:57 -0500This is the beginning of War and those on the losing side don't even realize they're in battle. Remember, Merkel has already declared the EU to give up sovereign authority for the greater good, the United Germanic Republic of Europe! This is how she will do it.
Japan's Inflation Propaganda And Why The BoJ Better Hope It's Not Successful
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2013 17:04 -0500
The existing (and ongoing) massive expansion of base money into the banking systems of the US, England, and Japan is without precedent. As Nomura's Richard Koo notes, at 16x statutory reserves, the liquidity 'should' have led to unprecedented inflation rates of 1,600% in the US, 970% in the UK, and 480% in Japan. However, it has not, yet. In short, Koo explains, businesses and households in these economies have stopped borrowing money even though interest rates have fallen to zero. There is little physical or mechanical reason for the BOJ’s easing program to work. But the program could also have a psychological impact - and Japanese media is on an 'inflation' full-court press currently. The risk here is that not only borrowers but also lenders will start to believe the lies. No financial institutions anticipating inflation could ever lend money at current interest rates. No actual damage will be done as long as the easing program remains ineffective. But once it starts to affect psychology, the BOJ needs to quickly reverse the policy and bring the monetary base back to 'normal'. If the policy reversal is delayed, the Japanese economy (and inflation) could spiral out of control.
Frontrunning: April 19
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/19/2013 06:59 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Bank Failures
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Bob Diamond
- Boeing
- Capital One
- Central Banks
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Dell
- Deutsche Bank
- Dreamliner
- E-Trade
- General Electric
- Global Economy
- GOOG
- Ireland
- Japan
- JPMorgan Chase
- Keefe
- Merrill
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- Natural Gas
- New York Stock Exchange
- Newspaper
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- REITs
- Reuters
- Shenzhen
- Six Flags
- Verizon
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yen
- Police Searching for 19-Year-Old Boston Bombing Suspect (BBG)
- Mayhem Erupts in Boston After MIT Campus Officer Slain (BBG)
- Elvis Impersonator Accused of Ricin Letters Sowing Fear (BBG)
- Blackstone Pulls Out of Dell Bid on Rapidly Falling PC Sales (BBG)
- Before Texas plant exploded: What did regulators know? (Reuters)
- Aso Says Japan Policy Unopposed at G-20 Meeting as Yen Falls (BBG)
- Bipartisan pair target $2.5tn US savings (FT)
- Plan for new Cyprus vote casts uncertainty on bailout (Cyprus Mail)
- Ireland picks through debtors’ lifestyles (FT)
What Should The US Do If One Of The Biggest Banks In Ireland Blatantly Defrauded US Investors?
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 04/18/2013 07:13 -0500There's never a good lawyer around when you really need one! With a 96+% (tens of $billions) loss to equity investors, one would think law firms and regulatory bodies would be chomping at the bit for this one!
A Continent In Trouble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/17/2013 07:44 -0500
Every scheme in Europe than can be rigged has been or is being rigged and, in the end, it will only be the fools that are left in this game. It is not the greater fools either but the mandated fools who take directions from Brussels who takes their directions from Berlin. We cannot emphasize enough the great risk that anyone takes now by investing in anything in Europe. You can ignore liabilities, you can play pretend and not count liabilities but in the end they are still there and the losses must be finally acknowledged. Gold gave you a head's up.
Dylan Grice: "The Gold Market Is Healthier Now"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2013 19:28 -0500
"Gold has become much more affordable in recent days as the price has collapsed. Such a collapse is unpleasant, but not cause for concern," advises Dylan Grice. "Gold remains durable," as a source of protection from loss of confidence in the system, and, he adds "a correction was overdue. Now, the gold market has become healthier." Critically, Grice warns during this interview with Finanz und Wirtschaft, "gold will not protect against a crash in the financial markets, it showed 2008," since if many investors simultaneously urgently need cash, they sell everything they have, including gold. However, Europe is a time-bomb, China's credit bubble is ow where the US was before the financial crisis, and while inflation may not be an imminent threat (and likely shuffled more gold holders out leaving "a more stable investor base,") Grice concludes, "Gold endures. If confidence in the currency is lost, or in the bond market; Gold is a safe haven." There are good reasons to own gold. And to buy gold, there is now a reason more than a week ago: It's 30% cheaper.
Portugal - Back In The Penalty Box
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/15/2013 21:15 -0500
Official projections put Portugal's debt to GDP at more than 124% by the end of this year. Utilizing Europe's continuing fantasy accounting; this is the number that Portugal and the EU posts for general consumption. However by counting liabilities and using American addition, subtraction and division I come up with a number of about 236%. In May 2011 Portugal did bite the dust and received $101 billion in bailout funds. Since then it has bobbed up, devastated its citizens with trying to meet the demands of the European Union and been hailed by both Brussels and Berlin for its imposition of the mandated austerity measures. Today we can assure you; Portugal is going down again. Former Portuguese PM Alberto Soares warns, "In its eagerness to do the bidding of Senhora Merkel, they have sold everything and ruined this country. In two years this government has destroyed Portugal." A careful reading of what the EU is now demanding reveals an actual shortfall of about $6 billion and where Portugal is going to come up with that is a good question (gold anyone?)
100 Years Old & Still Killing Us: America Was Much Better Off Before The Income Tax
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/15/2013 18:24 -0500
Did you know that the greatest period of economic growth in American history was during a time when there was absolutely no federal income tax? Between the end of the Civil War and 1913, there was an explosion of economic activity in the United States unlike anything ever seen before or since. Unfortunately, a federal income tax was instituted in 1913, and this year it turned 100 years old. But there was no fanfare, was there? There was no celebration because the federal income tax is universally hated. This year, the American people will shell out approximately $4.22 trillion in state and federal income taxes. That amount is equivalent to approximately 29.4 percent of all income that Americans will bring in this year, and that does not even take into account the dozens of other taxes that Americans pay each year. At this point, the U.S. tax code is about 13 miles long, and those that are honest and pay their taxes every year are being absolutely shredded by this system.
If I Provide Proof That The Entire Irish Banking System Is A Sham, Does It Set Up A Much Needed System Reboot? Let's Go For It..
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 04/15/2013 10:19 -0500If this article, in particular its conclusion, doesn't go viral throghout the EU, then the European media, analyst and regulatory community has #FAIED! its denizens!
Doug Casey On Second Passports
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/13/2013 19:43 -0500Getting a second passport is just part of a larger "permanent traveler" strategy. The ideal is to live in one place, have your citizenship in another, your banks and brokers in other jurisdictions, and your business dealings in yet others. That makes it very inconvenient for any one government to control you. You don't want all your eggs in one basket – that just makes it easier for them to grab them all. I understand it may not be easy for most people to structure their affairs that way. That's exactly why most serfs stayed serfs; it was hard and scary to think of anything other than what they were told they should do.
The Aerodynamics Of Nihilism
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/12/2013 17:29 -0500We live in a world now which may be described as, "Nothing Matters."
The money pours in each month from America, Europe and Japan and overrides anything and everything else. With pre-payments and calls the estimated amount of money provided by the Fed for the world's monetary supply is approximately $100 billion every month. It is not just the American banks that are the recipients of the hand-out but the foreign ones who ship it back to Europe or buy European sovereign debt courtesy of Mr. Bernanke. I suspect that if the American taxpayers were aware of the scheme that the citizens would not be pleased but then what the Fed is doing is not generally part of polite conversation in America and so it is not discussed.



