Thursday, May 03, 2012
Merkel's In Hot Water... So No More Bailouts... Sorry Spain
Spain, which is now at the forefront of the Great Western Debt Default Collapse, has opted to seek funding from the mega-bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) rather than going directly to the ECB or the IMF.
The reasons for this are clear: the IMF doesn't have the funds (nor will it as the US won't fund a European bailout during a Presidential election year). And the ECB is now backed into a political corner with Germany.
However, Spain is discovering that even ESM funding doesn't come without strings attached:
Germany Rejects Spain Banks Tapping Bailout Fund, Meister Says
Spain's rating downgrade at Standard & Poor's doesn't alter Germany's stance that banks can't have direct access to Europe's financial backstops, a senior lawmaker from Chancellor Angela Merkel's party said.
"The German position is absolutely strict," Michael Meister, the deputy caucus chairman of Merkel's Christian Democrats, said in a phone interview in Berlin. "And since such aid programs require unanimity, there's not going to be any change. All sorts of people can try to set things in motion, but Germany won't vote for it."
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/
The ESM funding idea is really just Spain playing for time (the ESM doesn't actually have the funds to bail Spain out). But the fact that Germany is now making the ESM a political issue indicates the degree to which political relationships are breaking down in the EU. And once the political relationships break down... so will the Euro.
Indeed, Germany has no choice. If it decides to prop up Spain it will receive a ratings downgrade (something which France is about to experience anyway). Europe with a downgraded Germany is not a pretty sight.
Moreover, Germany's decision to prop up the Euro is finally beginning to arouse furor from the German population. In particular, the below story which reveals that Germany has in fact put German taxpayers on the hook for over €2 trillion in back-door EU rescue measures could be the proverbial tipping point that sends German voters over the edge.
German tempers boil over back-door euro rescues
Professor Hans-Werner Sinn, head of Germany's IFO Institute, said German taxpayers are facing a dangerous rise in credit risk from a plethora of bail-out schemes. "The euro-system is near explosion," he told Austria's Economics Academy on Thursday.
Dr Sinn said Germany is on the hook for much of the €2.1 trillion (£1.72 trillion) in rescue measures for EMU debtors - often by the back-door - that will saddle Germans with ruinous losses one day.
"It is a horror scenario," he said, warning that the euro system is splitting friendly countries into blocs of mutually hostile creditors and debtors, exactly the opposite of what was hoped.
Earlier this week, the Foundation for Family Business in Munich filed a criminal lawsuit against the Bundesbank, accusing the board of disguising the true scale of risk born by German citizens.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
This is the last thing Angela Merkel needs right now. Between this and inflation arising in Germany she's in major political hot water. So expect Germany to push even harder when it comes to fiscal austerity in the future...
On that note, I fully believe the EU in its current form is in its final chapters. Whether it's through Spain imploding or Germany ultimately pulling out of the Euro, we've now reached the point of no return: the problems facing the EU (Spain and Italy) are too large to be bailed out. There simply aren't any funds or entities large enough to handle these issues.
Labels: Debt crisis, Default, Deflation, End game, Euro default, Euro finished, europe, point of no return
Thursday, January 26, 2012
The Fed Cannot Act Without a Crisis... And One is Coming
Well the Fed disappointed as I stated it would. How anyone could be surprised by this is beyond me. The Fed was admitting that the consequences of QE rendered it less "attractive" as an option as far back as May 2011.
Moreover, the last six months have shown the Fed to be relying heavily on verbal intervention rather than direct monetary intervention. Every FOMC meeting (and any time the market takes a dive) some Fed official steps forward and promises that the Fed stands ready to help if needed.
The reasons for this are three fold:
1) Why bother with monetary intervention when you can get the same effect from verbal intervention?
2) The Fed is too politically toxic now to simply unveil a massive new monetary scheme without a Crisis hitting first.
3) The Fed is well aware of the consequences of QE (higher food and gas prices) and while it focuses on CPI as the measure of inflation, the political pressure engendered by higher costs of living are certainly on the Fed's radar.
In plain terms, the bar for more QE is set much, much higher than the vast majority of analysts realize. The reason is that the Fed can no longer simply prime up the printing presses if the economy takes a dip.
We've seen this clearly in the last two Fed FOMC statements, in which the Fed downgraded its view of the US economy to posting "modest growth" (Fed speak for next to none) and then offered a "highly accommodative stance," (Fed speak for "we're out of ideas but can always hit the 'print' button") as way of dealing with this.
Let's cut the BS here. The Fed has maintained a more than highly accommodative stance for three years now and U-16 unemployment, food stamp usage, home prices, and virtually every other economic metric indicate that they've done little to boost the US economy in any meaningful way. QE has and always will be about boosting asset prices in the hope that the Fed can stimulate a recovery by getting the S&P 500 to some level.
The only problem with this is that people don't engage in financial speculation to pay their bills. Incomes have and always will be the single most important metric for gauging consumer strength. And the Fed's policies of the last few years have done nothing to boost incomes (unless you work on Wall Street).
If you read headlines stating "Fed Gave Trillions to Banks" and you've been laid off and are living off food stamps, your blood pressure might tend to rise.
And you might tend to vote based on that.
Folks, the reality is that the Fed's hands are tied. That's why they keep issuing these innocuous policies (keeping interest rates low until 5056 or some insane future date) without actually doing anything. They know that additional easing means inflation soaring, which makes the Fed that much more a target of popular outrage.
So if you're counting on the Fed propping the market up throughout 2012 as it did in 2011, you may be in for a rude awakening in the coming months. Every day that we get closer to the 2012 Presidential election, the bar for more QE goes higher and higher. Truly unless we get some kind of major Crisis, the Fed won't be doing much of anything.
So let the traders run their "end of the month" games this week. But don't be surprised if stocks start to take a dive in early February.
Labels: Crash, crisis, Debt crisis, Deflation, End game
Monday, December 19, 2011
Deflation
Here's the 30-Year Treasury Bond:
As you can see, we've already surpassed the former all-time established during the nadir of the 2008-2009 Crisis. To say this is deflationary would be an understatement. Indeed, on the shorter end of the bond curve Treasuries are yielding 0% (the 3-month), 0.02% (the six month) and 0.2% (the two year).
Put another way, investors are essentially willing to lend to the US for almost NOTHING in return for up to two years... based solely on the notion that by doing so they're at least "guaranteed" a return OF capital.
DE-flation.
Here's Gold:
Considering that Gold is a leading indicator for stocks... and that the precious metal only breaks below its long-term uptrend in times of systemic risk, the above breakdown is a MAJOR red flag that something BAD is brewing in the financial system. That something is another round of DE-flation.
How about Agricultural commodities... which anticipated QE Lite and QE 2 before every other asset class?
As you can see, we've wiped out ALL of the QE 2 gains and are now on the verge of breaking back into a trading range that goes back to 2009. Again, DE-flation.
And then there's stocks... the most clueless of asset classes, which simply don't "get it"... yet.
As you can see, while Europe's banking system is imploding, Gold has broken its long-term uptrend, and US Treasuries are signaling a Crisis even worse than 2008, stocks are bouncing off of support as though there's no real danger.
This can be attributed to three factors:
1) Light volume (fewer and fewer folks are investing in stocks which allows Wall Street to move the market more easily).
2) End of the year performance gaming by hedge funds and institutions (most of which have had horrible years)
3) Misguided hope and delusions... just like the ones we had in 2008 when stocks didn't "get it" until the whole system was ready to collapse
In simple terms, the best analysis of today's markets is that we are getting MAJOR red flags across the board that another round of DE-flation is here.
Against this backdrop, stocks are as clueless as they were in 2008. And given that most traders will be taking off early this week, those remaining will be able to move the market any way they please as volume will be even lower than the abysmal levels we've seen for most of 2011.
So my advice is to avoid trading this week if you can help it. There is simply too much uncertainty in the market: stocks could rally based on end of the year shenanigans... or they could just as easily collapse due to Europe or any number of other issues in the system today.
However, the larger picture indicates that deflation is back and it's back with a vengeance. It would be wise to prepare in advance for this as stocks are ALWAYS the last to "get it." And by the looks of the recent action in Gold and Treasuries, "It" is going to be something VERY unpleasant.
Labels: collapse, Crash, Debt crisis, Deflation