Global Financial Crisis (4 Viewers)

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
111,749
Germany To Ban Naked Short Selling on Bonds

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/19/business/19views.html

_______________________________

This just broke earlier tonight.

Watch out.

Naked short selling on all securities should have been banned long ago, but this ruling will probably blow up some major European banks and will certainly put a strain on liquidity. They may also try to crack down on short selling in general, which would be absolutely disastrous.

Naked short selling is basically betting against a security that does not exist. For instance, say there are 100 shares of Juventus in circulation on the Milan stock market. Naked short selling would be if someone tried to short (basically a bet that the stock will decline) 10000 shares of Juventus, even while only 100 shares existed. The only reason why this ability exists is to create leverage.

Now, regular short selling is perfectly fine and adds liquidity to the marketplace. Liquidity is basically the ability to find available buyers and sellers to quickly make transactions. If they ban short sales outright, it will destroy the market as seen in the past.

Even though banning naked short selling is correct, it's too late. Damage is already done. The Euro, equities and even the bonds in question will be smashed with this decision coming at this time.

Interesting times, interesting times!
 

Buy on AliExpress.com

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
111,749
From Zerohedge...

Wednesday Trading Session Set To Be "The Most Volatile In Living Memory" Warns Telegraph, Plunge In Bunds Expected

If there was any doubt about where futures will open tomorrow, the following article from the Telegraph should assuage all doubts: "Traders greeted the move by BaFin, the German regulator, with a mixture of anger and astonishment. One bond trader said he expected Wednesday's trading session to be one of the most volatile in living memory: "It will be complete chaos, I really don't know what the Germans think they are doing."

We couldn't have summarized it better if we tried.

If this pans out as expected, look for Bunds to collapse tomorrow, and wipe out a few billion from Pimco's NAV. We warned in February that the flight to safety in Bunds was both shortsighted, and too good to last. Now that trading in Bunds may be effectively prohibited altogether, we will be very curious to see where market clearing occurs, if anywhere. Because the only thing worse than a low price is no price.
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/we...living-memory-warns-telegraph-plunge-bunds-ex

Might have to stay up, or not go to sleep, for this...
 

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
111,749
Germany Seeks 'Orderly’ Insolvency Option for Euro Members

By Tony Czuczka and Brian Parkin
May 19 (Bloomberg) -- Germany is proposing that the
European Union create the option of an “orderly state
insolvency” for countries using the euro, according to a
Finance Ministry document. That would set incentives for
governments to follow “solid” fiscal policies and for
“responsible” behavior by investors, the document said.

_________________

Yeah, they need to dispose of the trash in the Eurozone, like Spain, Italy, Portugal, the UK, France, Greece, Latvia and just about everybody else. Then maybe the EU could function again.

:seven:
 

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
111,749
Another down day in US equities. We were down almost 3% earlier but now the market has came back about a percent.

The S&P 500 is now below the 200-day moving average, which is bad news technically and could mean we go lower. That is a key technical indicator traders watch. We also broke some trendlines and if we breach the intraday low that occurred May 6th during the crash, it will confirm we are back in a bear market, IMO.
 

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
111,749
This is a great article by Karl Denninger, one which I'm going to post fully because it totally summarizes the problems and destruction we caused and face going forward.

The Roof Is On Fire

The Euro Zone is in serious trouble, and Britain and we are next.

The game's up folks.

Many people talk about us "printing" money. Indeed, there's a large brokerage that runs advertisements on CNBS with that exact claim, over and over and over. Ron Paul and Peter Schiff have run this mantra for years.

This chart says something else entirely:



THERE HAS BEEN NO PRINTING GOING ON!

No, what's been happening is worse.

Worldwide governments have borrowed and spent huge percentages of their GDP in a puerile attempt to protect a criminal class that has looted the public and bribed the legislature - THE BANKS.

There was always a point where this would fail, but it is flatly impossible for anyone to know exactly where it was beforehand.

But mathematically, there was a point where it would fail.

The gamble that Bernanke, Trichet, Obama, Bush, Paulson, Geithner and everyone else in the world took is that we could do this for a short period of time and that in doing so private demand would pick up and return us to "stability."

THESE PEOPLE DID NOT STUDY THE ABOVE CHART, AND THEY'RE F^#KING IDIOTS FOR BELIEVING THAT WHICH WAS TRIED IN 2003-2007, WITH A HIGHER DEBT LOAD THAN WE HAD THEN, WOULD WORK NOW WHEN IT FAILED IN 2003.

Failed?

Yes, FAILED.


O'Neill was on Bloomberg the other day. He was Bush's Treasury Secretary during part of his first term, until he resigned under pressure from the administration. Why did he resign in 2002?

BECAUSE HE KNEW THAT WHAT THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION WAS DOING WOULD NOT WORK.

A study he ran in 2002 showed that the United States would be running budget deficits of more than $500 billion going forward, and that to fix it we would have to enact an across-the-board tax increase of more than 60% or radically cut entitlement spending.

We did neither, of course, and Bush pushed through a huge entitlement increase in an attempt to appease Democrats. It did, but it also created a structural $500 billion budget deficit that we couldn't get rid of.

The remaining years of the "boom" from 2003-2007 were all fueled by fraud. Unable to generate positive GDP through organic growth and productivity we instead imported 20 million illegal Mexicans (who our current President refuses to send home and seal the border against, even though Calderon, who wants us to legalize them all, arrests and deports more illegal immigrants a year from Mexico than we catch!) and blew a huge housing bubble, giving anyone with a pulse a loan to buy a house irrespective of their ability to pay.

These weren't even mortgages - they were virtually all balloon notes that were never intended to be paid, but instead designed and intended to force the "buyer" to come back in 2 or 3 years and refinance, so the banks could skim off yet another set of fees for themselves and steal any equity that the hapless owner had accumulated. If there was excess "equity" the banks graciously let you have some of it during that refinance to buy a boat (with equity that didn't really exist, but for which you'd be obligated in the future.)

Three years ago I said we couldn't get away with the intervention. Those who have been reading The Ticker since the beginning know that I have written several open letters, have faxed tens of thousands of pages to Congress, and have offered to get in a car or on a plane and come testify - under oath - as to the mathematical certainty of what we face and what we must do.

You also know that nobody wants to hear it and no such invitation has been forthcoming, that I was basically laughed off CNBS and that the "rah rah" crowd all got millions of Americans to pile back into the stock market.

Yeah, ok.

Folks, it's quite simple. Accumulation of debt is inflationary. It pulls forward demand from tomorrow. Look at house prices from 2003-2007 for your best and finest example - they quadrupled in some areas and doubled in many more. 20%+ "appreciation" annually was common.

But when you take on debt to buy something you're buying today what you would otherwise consume tomorrow. This is the Wimpy action: "I will gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today."

But when Tuesday comes, you've already eaten the hamburger, you're hungry again, and if you pay the hamburger stand owner you now have no money with which to buy another hamburger.

When debt loads rise to the point that you can no longer buy both today's hamburger and pay for the one you ate last week the impact is deflationary, because today's demand, having been pulled forward from yesterday, can no longer be sustained. Without demand sales collapse and without sales there is no profit - and no employment.

Keynesian economic thought is fundamentally bankrupt, as it requires that treasuries be rebuilt during flush times so you can spend the money during bad times. Keynesian economics does not include, and never did, borrowing to spend. That's a corruption of Keynes beliefs but it is where attempting to apply Keynes economic "theories" to the real world always ends up, as government will always find a place to blow a surplus, thereby guaranteeing there won't be one to spend when the bad times come.

As such the best we can do is allow business cycle downturns to work themselves out. Yes, this process will suck. Yes, people will lose their jobs. Yes, people will go bankrupt. But we must never, ever backstop businesses - including banks. We can (and should) backstop depositors (people) through a self-funded insurance fund (which is what the FDIC is supposed to be, and would be if run correctly) but even there we can't make people 100% whole, as it drives them to "reach for yield" and thus chase insolvent institutions. Changing the FDIC to pay 80% of insured deposits (instead of 100%) would be sufficient to both prevent people from being bankrupted but also stop the "chase for yield" that winds up supporting those who have already gone bust.


I remain willing and able to get on that plane or in that car and come testify before any body of Congress, under oath, or lay it all out on any form of broadcast media.

But Congress doesn't want to hear it, and "Tout TV" sure as hell doesn't want to broadcast it - especially not the above chart and what it means, even though that, properly explained, makes everything crystal-clear - and irrefutably so.

It sucks to have to say "See, I told you so!", because we had an opportunity to flush these banksters down the toilet in 2007 and 2008, and failed to take it. Yes, we would have had to recognize the Depression we are in right now, but by now it would be over and employment would be truly recovering. We would have been forced to put in place something like The Fair Tax to keep our government from imploding and that would have brought 70% or more of all the multinational corporations to our shores over the intervening couple of years, stabilizing our economy. We would have broken the back of the bankster cartel, jailed a bunch of 'em and made damn sure it could not happen again by re-imposing Glass-Steagall. Those who were not jailed would have fled to other nations, waving their fingers at us at how "those countries" would be better off. Then they would have flushed in their excessive debt loads while we, in America, would have taken our medicine already.

Yes, all this would have been at the rest of the world's expense - that's what happens when you do it right and everyone else does it wrong.

But we didn't choose to do that. We still can do the right thing, by the way, but now the damage is greater, because you can't unbreak an egg. The $3 trillion+ that we borrowed and spent is gone.

Our options remain as they were in 2007. We can take our medicine and accept the damage that has already been done yet papered over and shoveled under the carpet or we can continue to lie and pray that we don't end up like Greece.

But prayer doesn't work when you're asking God to intervene against a mathematical reality that you created by your own hand, and thus what's coming - and you're asking for the divine to stop - is something you deserve.
http://market-ticker.org/archives/2336-The-Roof-Is-On-Fire.html

:delpiero:

There is no recovery whatsoever. We are fucked.
 

AngelaL

Jinx Minx
Aug 25, 2006
10,215
Germany Seeks ‘Orderly’ Insolvency Option for Euro Members

By Tony Czuczka and Brian Parkin
May 19 (Bloomberg) -- Germany is proposing that the
European Union create the option of an “orderly state
insolvency” for countries using the euro, according to a
Finance Ministry document. That would set incentives for
governments to follow “solid” fiscal policies and for
“responsible” behavior by investors, the document said.
sounds ok - in theory, but I don't see certain EU countries following such policies.



Yeah, they need to dispose of the trash in the Eurozone, like Spain, Italy, Portugal, the UK, France, Greece, Latvia and just about everybody else. Then maybe the EU could function again.

:seven:
Err... I don't think the UK is in the 'Eurozone' at least not yet.
 

JBF

اختك يا زمن
Aug 5, 2006
18,451
The eurozone must overhaul the management of its economy to ensure economic recovery and the survival of the euro, a global body has warned.

According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the recent debt crisis poses a threat to Europe's weak recovery.

"Bolder measures" needed to be taken to ensure the crisis is brought under control, the OECD said.

It forecast the eurozone's economy would grow by 1.2% this year.

That is better than the 0.9% growth estimate the OECD made in its last economic outlook in November.

"A gradual recovery is under way driven by economic policy stimulus, a rebound in world trade and improving financial conditions," the organisation, made up of 31 countries, said.

"[But] the sovereign debt crisis has highlighted the need for the euro area to strengthen significantly its institutional and operational architecture to dissipate doubts about the long-term viability of the monetary union," it said.

The report added that "bolder measures" needed to be taken to "ensure fiscal discipline".

Following the multi-billion euro bail-out package for Greece announced earlier this month, Germany has been among those calling for tougher measures for member states that do not manage their finances effectively.

The OECD appeared to agree, arguing for "closer surveillance" of public finances by regulators and more effective sanctions for countries that fail to reduce borrowing quickly enough.

Globally, OECD members are expected to grow by 2.7% this year, and 2.8% in 2011.

The grouping includes most major developed economies, but excludes fast-growing engines of growth such as India and China.

The UK is forecast to grow by 1.3% this year and 2.5% next year, the OECD said, stronger than many other world economies.

But the report warned that interest rates - so far kept at historic lows - would have to rise to control inflation.

It said the Bank of England should raise the cost of borrowing to 3.5% by the end of 2011 from its current level of 0.5%.

BBC
-----
No shit! :lol:
 

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
111,749
This is absolutely hilarious stuff by Hugh Hendry, the Brit hedge fund manager.


The American professor is exactly why we are in trouble and why matters are getting worse. This idiot said that the Greek crisis was only known about two months ago, which is obviously wrong. Take a look at any Greek bond or CDS chart over the past year, you fucking retard.

Keynesian economics: failed theories that only protect the few in charge, disaster for everyone else.
 

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
111,749
"Let's purge this system of its rottenness. Let's take on a recession. It's going to be tough, people are gonna lose their jobs. They are going to lose their jobs anyway. We can spread this over 20 years, or we can get rid of it over 3 years."

:delpiero:
 

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
111,749
From ZeroHedge:


Economic Deterioration Continues: Initial Claims And GDP Revision Both Miss

Initial jobless claims come in at 460,000, on expectations of 455,000, down slightly from a revised last week number of 474,000. This number is indicative of a general Nonfarm Payroll deterioration, as a reduction in the unemployment rate needs initial claims to be below 400k. This further confirms that the Fed is on some alternative planet when it comest to making economic projections, as recently quantified by ConvergEx: "According to the minutes from its latest Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting in April, the Fed predicts unemployment will fall to 9.3% this year followed by 8.2% in 2011. In order to reach these projections, by our calculations, the economy will need to add 385,000 jobs each month from now through December 2010 and 323,000 each month from now through December 2011. These already seemingly high numbers appear even more extraordinary when taking the government’s temporary hiring of census workers out of the equation. Also, in the 3 months since the FOMC’s prior meeting, unemployment projections became more optimistic: The average expected unemployment rate for this year dropped 0.3 percentage points from 9.6% to 9.3%." With every month that the economy keeps not adding the number of needed people to hit the target rate, the back end just gets heavier, thus making the attainment of the Fed's expectations ludicrious.Also today, the revised GDP number of 3.0% came in, well below both estimates (3.4%, and 3.7% by Goldman Sachs as pointed out two days ago), and below the initial read of 3.2%. Time to get those QE2.0 printers ready.
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/ec...ues-initial-claims-and-gdp-revision-both-miss

Not going to happen, the FED and government are lying through their teeth, just like about pretty much everything nowadays.
 

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
111,749
Fitch, the rating agency, just cut Spain's credit rating down a level, and that sent the Euro sliding. The announcement also tanked stocks in the US. The Euro found some support at a pivot point though -- not much volume today as we are heading into a three-day weekend in the US (Memorial Day).
 

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