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by Alasdair Macleod

There was yet another European Union summit at the end of June, which (like all the others) was little more than bluff. Read the official communiqué and you will discover that there were some fine words and intentions, but not a lot actually happened. However, there are some differences when compared with past meetings that need explaining:

  1. The European Council is being asked to consider permitting the European Central Bank to have a regulatory role alongside national central banks “as a matter of urgency by the end of 2012.” When this new super-regulator is eventually established, perhaps the ECB might be able to recapitalize banks directly. This was needed three years ago; the Eurozone will be lucky not to have a new banking crisis in the next few months, let alone by the year-end.
  2. A bail-out for Spain’s banks is agreed in principle, but it is to be funded by the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) until the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) is up and running. The EFSF has no money and relies on drawing down funds from all member states including Greece, Spain, Italy, Ireland, and Portugal, and the chances of the ESM being ratified by the individual Eurozone parliaments is very slim. We are told that Spain’s banks need about €100bn, but how much they really need is not known.
  3. The ESM will not rank as a prior creditor to the disadvantage of bond holders. This is a positive step, but makes it more difficult for national parliaments to authorize the ESM.

The big news in this is the implication the ECB will, in time, be able to stand behind the Eurozone banks because it will accept responsibility for them. This is probably why the markets rallied on the announcement, but it turned out to be another dead cat lacking the elastic potential energy necessary to bounce.

e another dead cat lacking the elastic potential energy necessary to bounce.

The Growing Pressures Likely to Blow the Eurozone Apart
by Alasdair Macleod

There was yet another European Union summit at the end of June, which (like all the others) was little more than bluff. Read the official communiqué and you will discover that there were some fine words and intentions, but not a lot actually happened. However, there are some differences when compared with past meetings that need explaining:

  1. The European Council is being asked to consider permitting the European Central Bank to have a regulatory role alongside national central banks “as a matter of urgency by the end of 2012.” When this new super-regulator is eventually established, perhaps the ECB might be able to recapitalize banks directly. This was needed three years ago; the Eurozone will be lucky not to have a new banking crisis in the next few months, let alone by the year-end.
  2. A bail-out for Spain’s banks is agreed in principle, but it is to be funded by the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) until the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) is up and running. The EFSF has no money and relies on drawing down funds from all member states including Greece, Spain, Italy, Ireland, and Portugal, and the chances of the ESM being ratified by the individual Eurozone parliaments is very slim. We are told that Spain’s banks need about €100bn, but how much they really need is not known.
  3. The ESM will not rank as a prior creditor to the disadvantage of bond holders. This is a positive step, but makes it more difficult for national parliaments to authorize the ESM.

The big news in this is the implication the ECB will, in time, be able to stand behind the Eurozone banks because it will accept responsibility for them. This is probably why the markets rallied on the announcement, but it turned out to be another dead cat lacking the elastic potential energy necessary to bounce.

e another dead cat lacking the elastic potential energy necessary to bounce.

by Alasdair Macleod

Executive Summary

  • European banks have shifted their priority from supporting national governments to combating captial flight
  • Hollande's policies are accelerating France's path to insolvency, thus advancing the date of the Eurozone collapse
  • The euro can fall MUCH farther from here
  • We are currently at a stalemate being forced by Germany, but it will soon end and downward momentum will quickly build

If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.

In Part I, we examined the economic pressures likely to blow the Eurozone apart and concluded that there is increasing disquiet in Germany over the cost of supporting stricken economies and her increasing reluctance to write open-ended cheques. The first creditor country to leave will probably be Finland, or perhaps one of the other smaller members less committed to the Eurozone project. Let's now explore how this might come about, along with the consequences for the rest of the world.

Sovereign Debt Markets

It is obviously not possible to anticipate tomorrow’s events with any certainly, but we can lay down some pointers, the most obvious of which is changing yield levels in sovereign debt markets. Let's focus on Spain because she currently causes the most concern.

Before mid-November last year, Spain’s ten-year bond yield had run up to 6.58%, up from the 4% level that prevailed before her debt crisis became an issue (see chart below). At end-November, the yield fell in anticipation of the ECB’s first long-term refinancing operation (LTRO), because Eurozone banks used some of the money to arbitrage between Spanish bond yields and the considerably lower cost of funding from the ECB. This way of making money is encouraged by Basel 3 rules, which define short-term sovereign debt as being the highest quality, so no haircut is applied. This regulatory quirk has been conspiratorially used by the ECB, commercial banks, and governments themselves to ignore fundamental lending realities…

The Consequences of a Eurozone Breakup
PREVIEW by Alasdair Macleod

Executive Summary

  • European banks have shifted their priority from supporting national governments to combating captial flight
  • Hollande's policies are accelerating France's path to insolvency, thus advancing the date of the Eurozone collapse
  • The euro can fall MUCH farther from here
  • We are currently at a stalemate being forced by Germany, but it will soon end and downward momentum will quickly build

If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.

In Part I, we examined the economic pressures likely to blow the Eurozone apart and concluded that there is increasing disquiet in Germany over the cost of supporting stricken economies and her increasing reluctance to write open-ended cheques. The first creditor country to leave will probably be Finland, or perhaps one of the other smaller members less committed to the Eurozone project. Let's now explore how this might come about, along with the consequences for the rest of the world.

Sovereign Debt Markets

It is obviously not possible to anticipate tomorrow’s events with any certainly, but we can lay down some pointers, the most obvious of which is changing yield levels in sovereign debt markets. Let's focus on Spain because she currently causes the most concern.

Before mid-November last year, Spain’s ten-year bond yield had run up to 6.58%, up from the 4% level that prevailed before her debt crisis became an issue (see chart below). At end-November, the yield fell in anticipation of the ECB’s first long-term refinancing operation (LTRO), because Eurozone banks used some of the money to arbitrage between Spanish bond yields and the considerably lower cost of funding from the ECB. This way of making money is encouraged by Basel 3 rules, which define short-term sovereign debt as being the highest quality, so no haircut is applied. This regulatory quirk has been conspiratorially used by the ECB, commercial banks, and governments themselves to ignore fundamental lending realities…

by Chris Martenson

After Alice fell down the rabbit hole, nothing made sense anymore. A new logic reigned, and she had to adapt to it as readily as she could. Talking cats that disappeared except for their grin, caterpillars perched on magic mushrooms, and other oddities had to be encountered and dealt with.

Similarly, we find ourselves suddenly confronted with a fantastical menagerie. Such as the formerly inconsequential Greek interparty political wrestling matches becoming of critical importance to the fate of the entire world banking system, stock markets mainly discounting the likelihood and size of the next round of magic money-printing, a world that has decided Spain’s 6% deficit matters a lot while the US’s 8% deficit doesn’t matter at all, untrustworthy institutions that just abscond with client money without charge, and stock markets that are now mostly in the hands of robot machines trading in sub-millisecond cycles.

The signs of distress are obvious. The old forms of logic no longer work and the new logic cannot be traded reliably, as it owes its direction to pulses of fresh money and gyrating sentiment. All asset classes trade in lockstep, with nowhere to run and nowhere to hide. It’s either risk on or risk off, and knowing which might prevail at any given moment is now a 24/7 occupation, and a risky one at that.

The entire stock market is now simply living off of expectations of the future quantitative easing (QE) efforts, with another decision or announcement expected tomorrow at 2:15 EST.

This is the world we live in now, and hardly anybody even questions it anymore.

“More Stress Is Needed”
PREVIEW by Chris Martenson

After Alice fell down the rabbit hole, nothing made sense anymore. A new logic reigned, and she had to adapt to it as readily as she could. Talking cats that disappeared except for their grin, caterpillars perched on magic mushrooms, and other oddities had to be encountered and dealt with.

Similarly, we find ourselves suddenly confronted with a fantastical menagerie. Such as the formerly inconsequential Greek interparty political wrestling matches becoming of critical importance to the fate of the entire world banking system, stock markets mainly discounting the likelihood and size of the next round of magic money-printing, a world that has decided Spain’s 6% deficit matters a lot while the US’s 8% deficit doesn’t matter at all, untrustworthy institutions that just abscond with client money without charge, and stock markets that are now mostly in the hands of robot machines trading in sub-millisecond cycles.

The signs of distress are obvious. The old forms of logic no longer work and the new logic cannot be traded reliably, as it owes its direction to pulses of fresh money and gyrating sentiment. All asset classes trade in lockstep, with nowhere to run and nowhere to hide. It’s either risk on or risk off, and knowing which might prevail at any given moment is now a 24/7 occupation, and a risky one at that.

The entire stock market is now simply living off of expectations of the future quantitative easing (QE) efforts, with another decision or announcement expected tomorrow at 2:15 EST.

This is the world we live in now, and hardly anybody even questions it anymore.

Total 38 items