Ireland
September Arrives, As Does The French "Dexia Moment" - France Nationalizes Its Second Largest Mortgage Lender
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2012 15:32 -0500
September has arrived which means for Europe reality can, mercifully, return. First on the agenda: moments ago the French government suddenly announced the nationalization of troubled mortgage lender Credit Immobilier de France, which is also the country's second lagrest mortgage specialist after an attempt to find a buyer for the company failed. "To allow the CIF group to respect its overall commitments, the state decided to respond favourably to its request to grant it a guarantee," Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said according to Reuters. What he really meant was that in order to avoid a bank run following the realization that the housing crisis has finally come home, his boss, socialist Hollande, has decided to renege on his core campaign promise, and bail out an "evil, evil" bank. Sadly, while the nationalization was predicted by us long ago, the reality is that the French government waited too long with the sale, which prompted the Moody's downgrade of CIF by 3 notches earlier this week, which in turn was the catalyst that made any delay in the nationalization inevitable. The alternative: fears that one of the key players in the French mortgage house of cards was effectively insolvent would spread like wildfire, leading to disastrous consequences for the banking system. End result: congratulations France: your Fannie/Freddie-Dexia moment has finally arrived, and the score, naturally: bankers 1 - taxpayers 0.
Europe's Scariest Chart... Got Scarier
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2012 18:31 -0500
While the general level of unemployment in Europe is rising in a scary enough way (more detail here), the one really concerning data point has gone from bad to worse. When we last looked at youth unemployment in Europe, things were stabilizing a little, though at extremely lofty levels. With the release of July's data, the situation has deteriorated rapidly; Euro-Zone youth unemployment hs now ticked back up to its euro-era record-high of 22.6% (18-year highs). Only Portugal saw an improvement is the rate of unemployment among the Under-25 age group (from 37.6% to 36.4%) though it remains anarchically high. Italy was the hardest hit, back above 35% with its largest rise in youth joblessness in 5 months, Ireland rose back above 30% for its biggest rise in 11 months as France jumped to two-year highs and Spain and Greece are practically deadlocked with ~53% of their younger-generation out of work - new all-time records. Why do we worry? Why is this so scary? Two reasons - this and this.
Guest Post: The End Of ECB Rate Cuts Or Draghi Against Weidmann To Be Continued...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/30/2012 11:33 -0500
Even in the unlikely case of a fiscal union, the conflict “Draghi against Weidmann”, between the ECB and the Bundesbank will continue for years. The ECB mandate and many european inflation figures do not allow for excessive ECB rate cuts or for state financing via the printing press, but Draghi wants to help his struggling home country.
Germany Is Cornered
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/30/2012 08:03 -0500
Several recent releases of data bring the problem into focus; a sharp focus. In Germany, once thought to be almost invincible and somehow outside the recession that is raging in Europe, the crisis is just beginning - but it is clearly indicated by the newest data which shows that Germany has begun the descent down the rabbit hole with the rest of its brethren. Germany is now trapped; having lost control of the situation - first by the way the game has been played; and second by the limitations of her capital. We suspect you will soon find a politician in Germany who is opposed to the policies of Ms. Merkel and who will rise to power based upon "Germany for the Germans". All of this is also defined by a very warped time-line. The problems are now, the recession is now, the economic difficulties are now and the solutions that have been proposed are one to three years out. Germany is in the box and we are afraid that it is now Frau Pandora and not Frau Merkel who owns the key.
Fingerboning Escalates: Buba Strikes Back To Draghi OpEd With Weidmann Interview
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/29/2012 09:03 -0500The first shot in the fingerboning wars (a key step up from mere jawboning) has barely been fired following Draghi's earlier OpEd in Zeit (posted here in its entirety), when the Bundesbank already had its response ready for print in the form of yet another interview with its head, Jens Weidmann, who says nothing new or unexpected, but merely emphasizes that no matter how loud the chatter, how empty the promises, or how hollow the bluffing, Germany's response continues to be, especially after today's higher than expected inflation across the country, 9, 9 and once again, 9. Perhaps the most notable part of the interview is Weidmann's comparison between the ECB and the Fed, and why one is allowed to monetize bonds, while the other shouldn't be: "The Fed is not bailing out a cash-strapped country. It's also not distributing risks among the taxpayers of individual countries. It's purchasing bonds issued by a central government with an excellent credit rating. It doesn't touch Californian bonds or bonds from other US states. That's completely different from what we have in Europe....When the central banks of the euro zone purchase the sovereign bonds of individual countries, these bonds end up on the Eurosystem's balance sheet. Ultimately the taxpayers of all other countries have to take responsibility for this. In democracies, it's the parliaments that should decide on such a far-reaching collectivization of risks, and not the central banks." Of course, when the wealth of the status quo is at risk, such trivialities as democracies are promptly brushed by the sideline...
Guest Post: In Defense Of Liberty Extremism
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/28/2012 09:56 -0500
It’s a safe statement to make that when Mitt Romney is finally crowned the GOP nominee for president during the Republican National Convention, any vestige of liberty will be firmly wiped away from the ballot box come this November. For those who have followed his campaign in the United States, Congressman Ron Paul has been swindled out of the nomination through various underhanded tricks at state conventions. The explanation is straightforward: Paul’s views are not comfortable within the Republican Party establishment. Today’s GOP is a party of banker interests, imperialism, and clandestine state empowerment while claiming to represent small, limited government. Romney embraces this platform while Paul’s decades-long voting record stands in opposition. For towing the party line, Romney has been anointed the “electable” candidate while Paul has been deemed an extremist.
European Bank Run Watch: Swiss Edition
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 08/28/2012 09:36 -0500It ain't safe no more???
With Vacation Over, Europe Is Back To Square Minus One: Merkel Backs Weidmann, Demands Federalist State
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2012 12:04 -0500Earlier today we showed for the nth time that with insanity and insolvency ravaging the old continent, at least one person has the temerity to avoid sticking his head in the sand of collectivist stupidity and denial. That person is Bundesbank head Jens Weidmann, who until now may or may not have had the backing of Germany's elected leader, Angela Merkel. Moments ago it became clear whose side Merkel, who recently came back from vacation and is set to spoil the party that the (insolvent) mice put together in her absence, is on. From Reuters, who quotes Merkel in her just released interview with German ARD: "I think it is good that Jens Weidmann warns the politicians again and again," Merkel said. "I support Jens Weidmann, and believe it is a good thing that he, as the head of the German Bundesbank, has much influence in the ECB."
The Up-To-The-Minute Guide For Understanding Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2012 07:49 -0500
Forget Merriam-Webster. The Mario-Webber dictionary is where it's at these days...
Top Economists: Iceland Did It Right … And Everyone Else Is Doing It Wrong
Submitted by George Washington on 08/25/2012 01:31 -0500Iceland Shows the Way
Citi Sees Greek Exit As Soon As September
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/22/2012 14:36 -0500
"Prolonged economic weakness will persist - especially in the peripheral countries - with further periods of intense financial market stress" is how Citi's Willem Buiter's economics team sees the future in Europe. While they continue to believe that the probability of a Greece exit from the Euro is around 90% in the next 12-18 months; but more critically it is increasingly likely in the next six months - conceivably as soon as September/October depending on the TROIKA report. There is a crucial series of meetings and events in coming weeks and while they believe that the ECB's conditional bond-buying (and ESM/EFSF) may help avoid a 'Lehman moment' around the GRExit, they believe that there will still be considerably capital flight out of periphery assets should it occur. The reason being simply that even if funding costs were reduced, the current mix of fiscal austerity and supply-side reform will not return any periphery country to a sustainable fiscal path in coming years.
Jacob Rothschild, John Paulson And George Soros Are All Betting That Financial Disaster Is Coming
Submitted by ilene on 08/21/2012 13:26 -0500We're doomed, doomed, I tell you.
Here Comes That Contagion... From Greece to Belize to... Spain? Italy? Ireland? Portugal?
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 08/21/2012 05:52 -0500Why doesn't anyone see this ass contagion?
Analysts Respond To "Unsourced" Reports Of Open-Ended ECB Monetization
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2012 05:56 -0500For whatever reason, yesterday's unsourced Spiegel report that the ECB is actually contemplating open-ended monetization with arbitrary yield targets on various European nations is the talk of the town, if only for a few more hours until, just like last year, the proposal is summarily dismissed, only to be reincarnated once Spanish yields pass north of 8% again. In the meantime, it has allowed those very well paid sell-side strategists to present their erudite opinions, which naturally do not matter in the grand (and not so grand) scheme of things as long as Germany sticks to the 9-9-9 plan.
"The Euro Crisis May Last 20 Years" - The European Headlines Are Back
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/18/2012 12:10 -0500In Europe, the "no news" vacation for the past month was great news. The news is back... As is Merkel.
- "The Euro Crisis May Last 20 Years" - Welt
- German finmin: no new aid programme for Greece - Reuters
- Westerwelle Opposes Relaxing Greek Aid Terms: Tagesspiegel
- Euro Countries Plan Strategies to Prevent Break-Up: Sueddeutsche (via Bloomberg)
- Deutsche Bank Among Four Said to Be in U.S. Laundering Probe - Bloomberg
- Bundesbank Vice-Head Opposes Schaeuble’s Banking Proposal: WiWo (via Bloomberg)
- Westerwelle Opposes Relaxing Greek Aid Terms: Tagesspiegel
- German Industry Group Head says No Place In Greece For Eurozone: WiWo (via Bloomberg)
- German Taxpayer Association Head Criticises ESM: Euro am Sonntag (via Bloomberg)
- Spain says there must be no limit set on ECB bond buying - RTRS
- France Favors Greece Rescue Package, Opposing Germany: Welt (via Bloomberg)





