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Showing posts with label Eurozone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eurozone. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

The Imminent Failure Of The Eurozone

This article originally appeared on the Daily Capitalist.

You know those movies with the bomb set to a timer ticking down to øø.øø where the sweaty hero nervously cuts one wire at a time while holding his breath and then at øø.ø1 he stops the bomb? Well Europe is like that except that the bomb goes off and kills everyone.

Our planet has a problem. Its leading economies, the U.S., Japan, and the E.U. are declining. That is, about one-sixth of the world's population is losing ground. These big economies are the ones that lead the rest of the world, including China. Countries like China, India, and Brazil, depend on the health of the big economies to keep buying their products and commodities so they can grow and generate wealth for their citizens. 

What is especially concerning is the blow-up that is about to happen in Europe. It is not something that is happening "over there." In a world that is so interconnected financially and by trade, a sinking Europe is everyone's concern.

Their problems are much the same as ours with a twist. Their governments and central banks have also pursued reckless monetary and fiscal policies and now, effect is following cause. They have more or less followed the same policies as has the U.S., much to the same end. They spent large, engaged in Keynesian fiscal stimulus in a bailout attempt, ran up huge debts and deficits, and their economies are in decline.

The twist is the European Monetary Union (EMU), known as the eurozone. It is as if here in the U.S. there was no federal government and each state was truly sovereign, but there was a Federal Reserve Bank. Some states spend more than others, funding deficits by borrowing huge sums to support programs their citizens wanted. The profligate states want the Fed to buy their debt and float them loans created out of thin air, or otherwise they will go belly up and they will take down many states' banks. The responsible states know they will be stuck with the bill.

The EMU started on the idea that it would bind the EU closer. In essence it was a political decision rather than an economic decision. They passed a stern rule that said no state could run of deficits of more than 3% of their GDP. Except for Estonia, Finland, and Luxembourg, all countries, including Germany, now exceed the limit. Thus their politicians sacrificed fiscal probity for political gains.

They have hit the wall: Greece will soon default on their sovereign debt. On Tuesday, yields on one year Greek bills  reached 60%.  It is a sign that investors have no faith in the Greek government's ability to repay their debt. 

The EU, ECB, and the IMF are trying to establish a European Financial Stability Facility (EFSB) in order to further bail Greece out. They have already pledged €110 billion and they are trying to put another package together of €109 billion. But Finland insists that Greece puts up additional collateral, which is not possible. Since the collateral would be part of the bailout money, it would be, in essence, Germany and France guaranteeing Finland's contribution.

Greece has missed every fiscal target it or its saviors has had. They are trying to get their deficit down to 7.6% of GDP through more austerity measures, but it looks like they will miss again (est. 8.5+%). Basically they are asking the Greeks to do something they don't want to do, and they will no doubt take to the streets again in protest.

If they default, then that opens a can of worms. European banks, other than Greek banks, hold €46 billion of Greek sovereign debt. Belgium's Dexia hold Greek sovereign debt equal to 39% of its equity; for Germany's Commerzbank, it's about 27%. On top of that, EU banks are into private Greek companies for about €94B (France, €40B; Germany €24B). According to the Wall Street Journal, the total market cap of all EU banks was just €240. The same article also points out additional unknown liabilities to insurers and investment banks. 

The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) has warned banks they need to write down, or mark-to-market, the Greek debt they hold. Whether they do or don't doesn't matter. The fact is that these banks are undercapitalized and in trouble. Their "stress tests" are a fiction. Liquidity is starting to shrink in their banking system because of these jitters. Rabobank, for example, said it is growing cautious about interbank lending – now limited to overnight loans. More banks are stepping up to the ECB window for funds. Overall, credit is starting to tighten. Nervous Greek depositors are withdrawing funds from their banks. Rich Greeks never trusted their banks.

In other words the Europeans have created a problem that they can't solve, easily at least.

Here are their alternatives:

1. Keep bailing out Greece, with the specter of Italy and Spain being the next target of market forces as EU economies cool off. This is not appealing to Germany and France who know their taxpayers will have to put up most of the money.

2. Have the ECB buy as much Greek debt as necessary to keep Greece afloat. The problem with that is inflation and the prospect that they may be setting a bad precedent for other countries. 

3. Have the EU issue bonds guaranteed by individual countries, which again is mainly Germany and France. Same problem as No. 1. As Sarkozy said they don't wish to guarantee debt they don't control – the spenders have no incentive to curtail spending.

4. Opt for a fiscal union whereby Brussels controls spending and taxation. Or, at least, as Sarkozy and Merkel propose, coordinate their fiscal and tax policies and pass a balanced budget amendment in each country. Good luck with that. Chances: zero.

Which one of those policies will best satisfy these three necessary goals required to ameliorate the worst damage:

Remove the need for the ECB to buy bonds continually on secondary markets;Ensure that troubled countries have access to financing;Prevent the strong countries from being dragged down by the weak.

Which one of the above policies will prevent Greece from defaulting, will let the rich countries off the hook, will create enormous liquidity in the eurozone, and will bail out the banks?

The answer is the obvious one, the one that won't hit the taxpayers of the EU's powerful economies, that reduces the net effect of debt to sovereigns, that bolsters the reserves of nearly insolvent banks (at least on paper), and puts the problem off for another day. That would be solution No. 2— quantitative easing, or monetization of Greek debt.

It also lets the taxpayers of Germany, France, and Belgium, whose banks hold lots of Greek public and private debt, off the hook because Greece will be able to repay their obligations in devalued euros. That is, the taxpayers in those countries won't have to pay the tab to refloat their banks. Or, at least as big of a tab as if Greece defaulted.

This plan solves nothing except in the very short-term. The day after tomorrow, inflation will melt away much of the eurozone's sovereign debt as well as private debt, and savers will be robbed of their capital. Capital will be destroyed and consumed by price inflation. Their economies will continue to stagnate, unemployment will remain high, tax revenues will eventually decline in real terms, and they will again be facing the same problems they face today. There is no way to avoid it. 

The EU faces an insolvable problem, but it is one they created. You can't have a monetary union without a fiscal union. At least when no nation is obligated to play fair. They either terminate the EMU or paper it over. There is no other practical fix, at least when economies of member states are declining. They are the poster child for the failure of Keynesian-Monetarist economics.

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Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Gold Could See $1,800/oz On Seasonal Strength And Deepening Eurozone And U.S. Debt Crisis

From Gold Core

Gold Could See $1,800/oz on Seasonal Strength and Deepening Eurozone and U.S. Debt Crisis

Gold is trading at $1,504.13/oz, €1,039.34/oz and £933.89/oz. 

Gold is higher today and showing particular strength against the euro and the Japanese yen. The relief rally seen in equities since the latest Greek ‘bailout’ is under pressure as S&P have said the debt rollover proposal would be a “selective default”. The ECB may selectively reject the S&P Greek downgrade and arbitrarily select the best credit rating being offered.   

Gold in USD – 1 Year (Daily)

The risk of contagion in Eurozone debt markets and banking systems remains. Portuguese, Spanish and Italian debt has been sold this morning. Systemic risk from contagion in the credit-default swaps market also remains a threat.

In the U.S. political squabbling over raising the $14.3 trillion debt ceiling continues. However, it is likely to be resolved as the massive liabilities incurred (not including unfunded liabilities of over $60 trillion) simply cannot be paid back. It is therefore likely that more debt monetization (creating money to buy government bonds) will occur leading to further currency debasement and the risk of stagflation and severe inflation.

Cross Currency Rates

Gold's Seasonal Strength - July to December Could See $1,800/z Challenged

Gold has been supported in the traditionally weak “summer doldrums” period due to institutional demand and strong physical demand at the $1,500/oz level, particularly from Asia.

The summer months of June and July normally see seasonal weakness and it is thus a good time to buy on the seasonal dip. 

Gold is now entering its period of traditional seasonal strength which is seen between July and December.

Gold tends to take a break in October and then has a second period of seasonal strength from the end of October to the end of December.

This has been primarily due to Indian religious festival, store of wealth, demand in the autumn and western jewellery demand prior to Christmas. 

Since the liberalization of the gold market in China in 2003, demand for jewelry and bullion from China for Chinese New Year (mid to late January) is also becoming an increasingly important factor.

It is likely that seasonal weakness in equity markets, with both the ‘sell in May’ factor and tendency of stock markets to be weak and occasionally to crash in October may also lead to safe haven demand during this period.

As noted in the chart above, gold rose strongly (by 22%) from July 2010 to December 2010. This trend was also seen the previous year in 2009 when gold fell in June, rose marginally in July, was flat in August and then rose strongly from September into early December.

As shown in the excellent Erste Group report on gold released yesterday, the strongest months for gold are September, August and then November (see table below).

Thackray's 2011 Investor's Guide notes that the optimal period to own gold bullion is from July 12 to October 9. During the past 25 periods, gold bullion has outperformed the S&P 500 Index by 4.7 percent.

"In GOLD we TRUST" - 5th Annual Special Report by Ronald-Peter Stöferle of Erste Group

While meeting clients and industry associates in Austria last week, I had the pleasure of meeting Ronald-Peter Stöferle. We had a great conversation about gold and silver bullion, the markets and the challenges facing us today. He is very astute, knows his history and understands monetary economics. 

Unfortunately we had to cut short our wide ranging conversation as he had to put the finishing touches to his excellent report. 

The report is extremely comprehensive and is an important read for anyone wishing to properly understand the gold market today and why gold remains a safe haven asset and an essential diversification.

"In GOLD we TRUST" covers the following highlights:

*    The foundation of a return to "sound money" has been laid
*    Guilt without atonement? Excessive structural debt suggests further appreciation of gold
*    Negative real interest rates continue to provide gold with perfect environment
*    No reason for "AUROPHOBIA"
*    Adieu "Exorbitant Privilege"
*    US Treasuries: from the risk-free fixed income paper to the risky no-income paper
*    Why gold is (still) no bubble
*    Excursus: the creation of money from the perspective of the Austrian School of Economics
*    Gold and silver as official means of payment vs. "Gresham's Law"
*    The monetary system at the crossroads - on the way to a new gold standard?
*    Gold as portfolio insurance
*    Renaissance of investment demand - institutionals as "elephant in the room"
*    Gold mining shares with historically low valuations
*    Risk/return profile of gold investments remains very favorable
*    Next target price at USD 2,000
*    At the end of the parabolic trend phase we expect at least USD 2,300/ounce

In our commentary section today - http://www.goldcore.com/commentary , we feature an excellent interview between Lars Schall and Ronald and we also feature Fuller Money’s synopsis of "In GOLD we TRUST". The report itself was picked up by Zero Hedge yesterday and can also be read in our commentary section.

SILVER 
Silver is trading at $34.71/oz,€23.98/oz and £21.55/oz. 

PLATINUM GROUP METALS 
Platinum is trading at $1,723.25/oz, palladium at $764/oz and rhodium at $1,925/oz. 

NEWS
(Reuters)  
Gold edges down on dollar gains, technicals weak

(Ottawa Citizen)  
Canadian mint cashes in after posting $2.2 billion in revenues

(The Telegraph) 
Gold and gems worth up to £14 billion unearthed from Indian temple

COMMENTARY
(Lars Schall)  
Schall Interviews Stoeferle: “Gold Will Continue To Thrive”

(The Globe And Mail) 
Gold entering its season of strength

(Zero Hedge)  
Moody's July 4 Bomb: Rating Agency Finds 10% Of Chinese GDP Is Bad Debt, Claims "China Debt Problem Bigger Than Stated"

(The Market Oracle)
Gold and Silver Investors, Don't Underestimate The Chinese

(The Telegraph)
Down on the Fourth of July: the United States of Gloom

(Fullermoney)
Fuller Money on the Definitive Gold Report

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