Fail
Greece Needs A €130 Billion Debt Haircut: Citi
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/21/2015 11:49 -0500"The size of the required ‘upfront’ (i.e. to be introduced in 2016) principal haircut to be €110bn (60% of annual Greek nominal GDP in 2014). Note that we do not see much difference in an alternative scenario based on a ‘tranched’ principal haircut framework (of around €15bn per year), also starting in 2016. However, a ‘backloaded’ (i.e. to be introduced in 2022) approach relying on a single haircut would be more expensive, amounting to €130bn (72% of annual Greek nominal GDP in 2014)."
"Something Revolutionary Is In The Air": Grexit By "Insurrection" Is The "Most Probable" Outcome
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/21/2015 06:32 -0500My own most likely Grexit scenario is a different one yet again. Donald Tusk, the president of the European Council, hinted at this in his interview with the Financial Times last week when he said that he felt "something revolutionary" in the air. He is on to something. The most probable scenario for me is Grexit through insurrection.
"The Spell Is Broken" In China, Selling Pressure To Remain "Relentless": BofAML
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 19:15 -0500"Now that the spell is broken, we expect that many holders may want to sell to the forced buyers in the market. In addition, although difficult to assess accurately, due to a lack of data, we estimate that around 1/5 of the free float is still carried on margin. The high margin cost means that selling pressure is high as long as investors do not expect the market to go up significantly.we expect the market to experience another leg down, possibly within months."
We Need A Crash To Sort The Wheat From The Chaff
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 07:32 -0500The only way to sort the wheat (real collateral based on enterprise value) from the chaff (phantom collateral created by central banks' speculative bubbles) is for a crash to force price discovery and the cramdown of losses.
What's Scarce Geopolitically: Stability, Ways To Get Ahead, & Innovation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/19/2015 15:00 -0500Conserving what is failing is not a path to stability.
Credit Deflation & Gold
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/19/2015 13:00 -0500So having acquired substantial quantities of gold for itself and having also ensured it is widely held by its public, the Chinese government is arguably in a more compelling position to encourage a gold revaluation as a means of stabilising her economy in a credit crisis than America was eighty years ago. It will be China's only option, and if the government doesn't go for it, China's middle classes certainly will. This simple fact could override all the geostrategic considerations upon which China-watchers have tended to focus. A gold revaluation would be presented to the world as bound up with China's domestic economic problems, instead of an act aimed at undermining the dollar's reserve status: a solution that is less confrontational than outright disagreement with Western central banks over gold's role in the international monetary order.
Fat Tails & The Invisible Vulnerability Of Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/19/2015 11:30 -0500"...rising asset prices provide investors confirming evidence that their strategy is good and everything is fine. This induction problem lulls investors into a sense of confidence, and sets the stage for the shock when events turn down. That nonlinearity causes sudden change only adds to the confusion."
Varoufakis Slams Bailout #3 As "Greatest Macroeconomic Disaster In History" While Tsipras "Doesn't Eat Or Sleep"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2015 20:30 -0500In an rare convergence of Greek and German viewpoints, overnight former Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis told the BBC that "economic reforms imposed on his country by creditors are "going to fail", ahead of talks on a huge bailout. At the same time, Germany's most noted Eurosceptic, Hans-Werner Sinn, in an interview with the newspaper "Passauer Neue Presse" also earlier today warned that any new aid would be "totally worthless" and "would never come back." Meanwhile, the Greek PM, who is facing an economic abyss "does not eat, does not sleep, but he has no choice -- he has a debt to the people who put their faith in him" his mother Aristi Tsipras, 73, told Parapolitika weekly.
Was Greece Set Up To Fail?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2015 15:45 -0500What have the bailouts achieved? Well, the Greek economy is doing worse than ever, and the people are poorer than ever; and both have a lot more bad ‘news’ to come. The bailouts needed to be as big as they were to 1) successfully make the international banks ‘whole’ that had lent as much as they had into the Greek economy, 2) get the IMF involved, 3) and absolve the notorious -and cooperative- domestic oligarchy from any pain. And make all the usual suspects a lot more money in the process. It therefore doesn’t look at all unlikely that Greece was saddled with an artificially raised deficit, and that the intention behind that, all along, was to get the Troika ‘inside’ for the long run. So the country could be stripped of all its assets.
Gold, Stocks, Oil... Choose One
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2015 12:45 -0500Would you rather have one “Share” of the S&P 500 at $2,124, or 41 barrels of crude oil, or 1.86 ounces of gold? Yes, they are all worth the same amount at the moment, but the price relationship between the three has shifted over the decades.
An "Austrian" Economist's Advice For Greece & The EU
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/17/2015 21:25 -0500Greece’s and the European Union’s economic and political crisis will not be resolved through a new debt deal between the government in Athens and the European authorities. It will be merely one more stop-gag “solution” to a problem whose nature is endemic to the current ideology and politics of State-Power and collectivism. Its real solution requires something deeper and more comprehensive: a revival of the classical liberal ideal of individualism and the economics of free market capitalism. This, unfortunately, is not likely to occur any time soon.
Thank Goodness Everything's Fixed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/17/2015 13:05 -0500The trick is to borrow as much as you can and leverage it to the hilt, and buy, buy, buy.
How China Is Hiding Its "Hard Landing"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/17/2015 10:40 -0500An "esoteric point" about China's GDP data has suddenly become a very big deal as the world looks to China for economic leadership amid a global deflationary supply glut, lackluster demand, and depressed trade.
Greece Is Just The Beginning: The 21st Century 'Enclosures' Have Begun
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/16/2015 21:30 -0500Greece is only the beginning. Greeks driven out of their country by the collapsed economy, demise of the social welfare system, and extraordinary rate of unemployment will take their poverty to other EU countries. Members of the EU are not bound by national boundaries and can freely emigrate. Closing down the support system in Greece will drive Greeks into the support systems of other EU countries, which will be closed down in turn by the One Percent’s privatizations. The 21st century Enclosures have begun.
How Socialism Destroyed Puerto Rico, And Why More Defaults Are Looming
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/16/2015 20:30 -0500- BLS
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Bureau of Labor Statistics
- Census Bureau
- China
- Consumer Prices
- Creditors
- default
- ETC
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Fail
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- fixed
- Fox News
- Freddie Mac
- Fresh Start
- Greece
- Obama Administration
- Obamacare
- Peter Schiff
- Puerto Rico
- Reality
- Sovereign Debt
- Unemployment
- World Bank
With Puerto Rico missing a payment on a bond overnight "due to non-appropriation of funds" but denying that this constitutes anything close to a default, the territory may be about to retake the limelight as Greece is now "fixed." As Peter Schiff explains, this is far from over... As in Greece, the Puerto Rican economy has been destroyed by its participation in an unrealistic monetary system that it does not control and the failure of domestic politicians to confront their own insolvency. But the damage done to the Puerto Rican economy by the United States has been far more debilitating than whatever damage the European Union has inflicted on Greece. In fact, the lessons we should be learning in Puerto Rico, most notably how socialistic labor and tax policies can devastate an economy, should serve as a wake up call to those advocating prescribing the same for the mainland.


