Monday, December 19, 2011

Everybody's darling

S&P Cut Proves Absurd as Investors Prefer U.S.

Four months after Standard & Poor’sstripped the U.S. of its AAA credit rating and said the world’s biggest economy was no longer the safest of borrowers, dollar-denominated financial assets are doing nothing but appreciating.
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Comment: We live in a world where the greatest liars believe in their own lies. Financial markets - once the guardians of truth expressed in sound judgement - has become a ship of fools where ignorance and bad moughing rules and those who speak loudest but know less are called the smarties. Of course, this will not last. It never has. The fools are so much on their game that they probably only wake up when they are already drowning when their ship broken beyond repair.

IMF crisis fund money for Europe

European Ministers Seek $261 Billion in IMF Crisis Funds

European finance ministers will today seek to meet a self-imposed deadline for drawing additional aid to the debt crisis and to form new budget rules as investor confidence that a comprehensive solution is achievable wanes.
Euro-area finance ministers will hold a conference call at 3:30 p.m. Brussels time to discuss 200 billion euros ($261 billion) in additional funding through the International Monetary Fund and the mechanics of a so-called fiscal compact that was negotiated at a Dec. 9 European Union summit, according to two people familiar with the planning.
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Here's your daily dose of euro pessimism

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/eo20111217a1.html

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/811611d6-273a-11e1-b7ec-00144feabdc0.html#ixzz1gvlwVaWu

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,802703,00.html

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,802678,00.html

http://www.economist.com/node/21541840

http://www.handelsblatt.com/finanzen/boerse-maerkte/anlagestrategie/staaten-sind-die-gefaehrlicheren-schuldner/5951968.html?p5951968=all

http://blog.wiwo.de/chefsache/2011/12/17/warten-auf-d-day/

Comment: Which so much pessimism around, there is reason to be optimistic. Get ready for 2012: the year of the euro.

More Problems than Answers

The Pitfalls of the Merkozy Fiscal Pact

Last week's European Union summit has created more problems than it has solved. By agreeing to enter into a fiscal compact that would tighten control over national budgets and enact automatic sanctions against deficit offenders, the heads of state and government who make up the European Council have left the solid ground of EU law and entered into uncharted legal territory.

With British Prime Minister David Cameron unwilling to join the other EU member states in modifying the Lisbon Treaty to allow Brussels greater influence over member states' budgets, the rest of the summit participants agreed to enter into a new treaty entirely, one without the United Kingdom. The negotiations over this "17-plus treaty," which will include all countries within the euro zone as well as other willing EU members, are supposed to be completed by March...
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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Euro 500

Find the best European companies for investment
http://www.manager-magazin.de/unternehmen/artikel/0,2828,802575,00.html

The stock market in 2011

Stock Market Winners and Losers

The U.S. stock market returned almost nothing to investors in 2011. As of early December, the Standard & Poor's 500 index had netted 0.9 percent -- and actually lost 1 percent if dividends aren't included.
Such poor overall performance hides some wide variations: 80 stocks in the S&P 500 returned 20 percent or more in 2011, while 43 lost more than a third of their value.
Bloomberg Rankings analyzed S&P 500 returns as of Dec. 2 to determine which stocks were best and worst to shareholders in 2011. Their results follow, starting with 2011's 10 best performers.
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Sunday, December 11, 2011

2012 World Economic Outlook

The Continental Economics Institute Currency Review
2012 - World Economic Outlook

The year 2011 will be remembered as the year of the European sovereign crisis. This crisis is not yet over. On the contrary: The risk for 2012 is that the European crisis will spread across the globe. The stagnation in Europe and the United States will continue. Along with Japan the major world economies are in crisis. Step by step this crisis is also affecting emerging markets.
Economic Growth
The economic crisis shows up as a sovereign debt crisis. Yet the source of the current economic misery is the crisis in the housing market of the United States. The debt crisis is the consequence because the outbreak of the financial market crisis in 2008 has led to exorbitant spending by governments at the same time when the revenue from taxes fell because of the recession.
The effects of the global crisis are most disastrous in the periphery of the eurozone. Greece is experiencing a deep recession and is unable to pay its debt without help from the International Monetary Fund and the bailout fund created by the European Union. The conditions posed upon Greece require a sharp cut in public spending. This way the financial crisis produces also a social crisis.
A debt impariment of the larger European countries would exceed the capacity of financial aid from the IMF and the European Union and cause extreme turbulence in the global economy with the consequence of a deep recession in the global economy.
The negative expectations hinder economic activity not only in countries in crisis. The prospects for a rapid recovery of the global economy remain negative.
At the end of the year 2011 there were some indications that perhaps the U.S. economy could be on the road to recovery. But there is lack of a solid foundation for sustainable economic growth in the United States. The U.S. economy still suffers from deep distortions of its capital structure and the burden of public and private debt in the U.S. is worse than in Europe.

International trade
The need to put an end to the international trade imbalances as they show up in the figures of the current account balance of payments in many countries hampers the prospects for international trade. A large part of economic growth in China depends on the external sector.  In order to maintain a surplus in foreign trade requires deficits in other regions. In the past it was mainly the United States that absorbed the Chinese surplus. Because of the stagnation in the United States and Europe, China is faced with the challenge of finding other destinations beyond the advanced countries.
The urgency of reducing public debt requires compensating the weakness of domestic demand with exports. Thus, new conflicts in international trade are programmed. Among the first manifestations of the more confrontational environment in the arena of international trade were the complaints about a "currency war" launched by Brazil. The concern that some euro zone countries could abandon the common currency adds to haunt international trade.

Inflation
Despite extremely expansive monetary policies implemented in the United States, Europe and Japan in an effort to contain the global financial crisis, inflation is still relatively mild. The U.S. central bank continues to practice a monetary policy that combines interest rates almost at zero percent with quantitative easing and activity monetizing U.S. public debt. When the European sovereign debt crisis began to affect countries such as Spain and Italy, the European Central Bank has also initiated a program to monetize the debt by purchasing government securities of countries that experienced a high rate of interest in the process of refinancing their debt. Thus the global liquidity remains high and this increases the risk of inflationary consequences in a dimension that could become very difficult to control in the future.
From now on the anti-inflationary forces will operate with less impact. The factors which helped to contain inflation in the past decades such as strong productivity gains that came with an avalanche of new technologies, the intensity of global competition and the supply of cheap labor especially in China and Eastern Europe, are losing steam. 
With the shift in favor of monetary policies to fight the recession together with the weakening of technological progress and the use of the supply of cheap labor close to its limit, global inflation will be on the rise.

Markets
The auctions of debentures of Germany and Italy in November 2011 showed that not only the small countries of the periphery are in danger. It is likely that this trend will continue during 2012 and lead to a climate of anxiety with higher interest rates in the United States, Japan along with the countries in Europe. This scenario could become even more problematic when the credit contraction is accompanied by rising inflation.
This type of environment will not allow a major rise of the prices of financial assets. Selectivity will be increasingly important. The market is in the process of becoming highly heterogeneous producing an almost irrational coexistence of extremely overvalued assets alongside highly undervalued asset.
The current crisis shows up as a public debt crisis, but the deeper cause lies in the monetary system of today. The monetary system of fiat money allows an indebtedness of the economy beyond its capacity in the long run. A monetary system without anchor contains the tendency to produce one bubble after the other.
For decades, financial markets have had the feature that when one bubble was imploding, another bubble was already in the process of inflating. As of now it appears that we are near the end of this roller coaster. While in the past the motto of success was to go with the masses and follow the herd, now the same motto is a recipe for disaster. While in the past it was a good bet to expect subsidies and bailouts from the government when things should go wrong, one will wait in vain in the future. While in the past government bonds were the safest bet, such an investment has become high risk now.

Currencies
It is remarkable that the euro exchange rate has remained relatively stable despite the almost hysterical pronouncements of an imminent demise of the European monetary union. This bodes well for a new phase of strength of the euro once a more rational assessment of the situation will set in. With rising interest rates in the major economic areas, the attractiveness of emerging economies will fall and with it their respective currencies. This holds particularly for those emerging economies that have experienced strong overvaluations of their currencies in terms of purchasing power parity. Among the major currencies, the US dollar is about to suffer from the over-easing of the US central bank. There is also a high probability that the British pound will decline because of the isolation of Britain in the European Union.

Conclusion
Almost all governments are technically bankrupt. This is the big difference that marks the new period. The role of the public sector is beyond its zenith. A radical change of policy and of society and consequently of the financial markets is on its way. The next battle of this revolutionary process has already begun. This battle takes place in the arena of money about the establishment of a monetary system that would operate without state intervention.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Hiding behind ignorance

Wary U.S. uncertain of Israel's Iran plans

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama administration does not know Israel's intentions regarding potential military action against Iran, and the uncertainty is stoking concern in Washington, where the preferred course for now is sanctions and diplomatic pressure.
Although Israel remains one of the United States' closest allies and the two countries' officials are in regular contact, U.S. officials have a "sense of opacity" regarding what might prompt an Israeli military strike on Iranian nuclear sites, and about when such an attack might occur, according to a senior U.S. national security official.
Two key U.S. senators acknowledged on Tuesday that there are gaps in U.S. knowledge about Israeli leaders' thinking and intentions.
"I don't think the administration knows what Israel is going to do. I'm not sure Israel knows what Israel is going to do ... That's why they want to keep the other guys guessing. Keep the bad guys guessing," said Democratic Senator Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
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Comment: I don't get it. Doesn't the US government have any more reliable spies in the Israeli government?

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Greeks move ahead

Papademos Wins Greek 2012 Budget Vote

Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademoswon approval for the 2012 budget from parliament in Athens today, receiving a mandate to push through budget measures necessary to secure financing designed to avert a collapse of the economy and keep Greece in the euro.
A total of 258 lawmakers in the 300-strong chamber supported the confidence motion and 41 were against, Parliament Speaker Filippos Petsalnikos said in remarks carried live on state-run Vouli TV today. A total of 299 deputies voted in the poll.
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Comment: Facing the challenge, that is what it takes. The euros are up to this task. Who else is?

Monday, December 5, 2011

Frau Nein will get her Ja

During the financial crisis of 2008, German Chancellor Angela Merkel met Nicolas Sarkozy for a private lunch in the Paris house of Sarkozy’s wife, Carla Bruni.
This gesture of friendship didn’t keep the French president from using a news conference shortly thereafter to harangue Merkel for refusing to supplement a 130 billion euro ($175 billion) spending program proposed by the European Union with an additional German spending program. When asked how their countries were reacting to the crisis, Sarkozy said, “France is working at it, while Germany is just thinking about it.”
Every newspaper in Germany interpreted this correctly as a huge slap in the face for Merkel. The German chancellor wasn’t fazed. She had already been pressured by U.S. President George W. Bush and U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown, along with Sarkozy, to open the German purse strings and jump-start the economy with a huge spending program when she was in Washington for the Group of 20 summit in November.
“Madame No,” as she was known in the European press for her unwillingness to pump tax money into the German economy, never reacted publicly to Sarkozy’s words. Instead, she took six weeks to think about an adequate reaction to the financial crisis. Only in January 2009 did Germany finally announce an economic program worth 50 billion euros.
In stark contrast to the hastily set up spending programs of the U.S., U.K. and France, the German one was well thought through and delivered: Germany registered far fewer job losses during the crisis, and it was the first Western country to come out of it.

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Friday, December 2, 2011

King is in panic

Our whole system's in crisis: Mervyn King warns mortgage rates are likely to soar and tells banks to slash bonuses

  • Sir Mervyn King warns eurozone crisis 'beyond the control' of any UK authority
  • Bank of England preparing for the worst case scenario
  • Downing Street says Britain is in the grip of a second credit crunch
  • But Governor says Britain's banks are among the strongest in the world
By Hugo Duncan and Jason Groves


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2068875/Mervyn-King-warns-mortgage-rates-likely-soar-tells-banks-slash-bonuses.html#ixzz1fOoGddHN
Comment:  Forget about Italy, the weakest part of the chain is the UK, or, more specifically speaking, the City. When the financial sector implodes, almost nothing else is left for the Brits to live on.

Lenders of the last resort

Euro Central Banks May Provide $270B Through IMF

A European proposal to channel central bank loans through the International Monetary Fund may deliver as much as 200 billion euros ($270 billion) to fight the debt crisis, two people familiar with the negotiations said.
At a Nov. 29 meeting attended by European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, euro-area finance ministers gave the go-ahead for work on the plan, said the people, who declined to be named because the talks are at an early stage. The need for a new crisis-containment tool emerged as the effort to boost the 440 billion-euro rescue fund to 1 trillion euros fell short.
Under the proposal, national central banks would recycle funds through the IMF, potentially to underwrite precautionary lending programs for Italy or Spain, the two countries judged to be the most vulnerable now, the people said.
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Comment: The interventionist spiral is in full play and will go on and on.

Bank interdependence

The Economist explains
The problem here is the extraordinary level of interdependence within the financial markets of the rich world. According to data from the Bank for International Settlements, American banks had just $47 billion in exposure to Italian institutions (including the sovereign) as of June. That's a digestable amount. France, on the other hand, has $416 billion in exposure to Italy. That's very bad news for France, but it's also very bad news for America; American banks have a total exposure to France of some $271 billion. Trouble in Italy is manageable, from an American perspective. Trouble in France makes Americans nervous. But that's not where it ends. British banks have a total of $305 billion in total exposure to France. And American exposure to Britain is close to $800 billion.
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Comment: That's why it is so silly to rate individual countries. What should be done is a rating for the global banking industry and be set at junk.

Band of six

Adventures with coordinated statements, central banking edition

Nov 30, 2011 09:18 EST

If six different central banks coordinate a big liquidity operation, you end up with six different press releases, from the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank, the Swiss National Bank, and the Federal Reserve.
All of them start the same way, talking about how they’re coordinating action, cutting the interest rate on their liquidity operations by 50bp, and agreeing to provide such operations in each others’ currencies, in future, should that become necessary. Think of it as a holiday greetings card from the banks to the market.
And then, underneath the “happy holidays” boilerplate, each individual central bank adds a little personalized note about itself. Here’s how the ECB describes what it’s going to do: ...
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Comment: Central banking is not the solution, neither any of the formulas. Indeed, given the current structure, it is doubtful whether rules at all are better than discretion. What is needed is a depolitiziced sytem - something in the lines of a gold-based free banking system.