"Circumstantial evidence is a very tricky thing. It may seem to point very straight to one thing, but if you shift your own point of view a little, you may find it pointing in an equally uncompromising manner to something entirely different."-Sherlock Holmes
by Mark Grant
The article referenced the tremendous shrinkage in
lending of the banks of Europe. It pointed specifically to the French banks and
how they were setting up for all funding to be at the local level and to stop
funding from the parent banks in France. The article concentrated on the notion
that the French banks were setting up for some kind of break-up in the
Eurozone. To me, though, there was ever more than met the eye at first
thinking, meaning what happens after reading. It is relatively simple to read
some headline or story and absorb it; much more complicated and useful to think
through the meaning of what is presented. Here, past the obvious, was a rather
large indicator for the Emerging Markets and their bonds as these entities are
primarily funded by the European banks so that lending here, one may
realistically surmise, is shrinking dramatically so that first the Emerging
Markets will shrink as funding dries up and then their bonds will spike in
yield and their equities fall as their main basis of support is pulled. I think
now that whatever play anyone got in the Emerging Markets is now done and I
would be pulling in my horns from these markets. As Europe bounces off various
walls and as the American banks will have little to do with these areas; the
play is over and I suggest a thoughtful retreat.
Amid all of the talk of Union and the greater good and
the trumpeting of the three Musketeer’s “One for all and all for one;” we are about to get some concrete answers to help illuminate our
path ahead. Greece
has come nowhere close to their agreements in the Memorandum of Understanding
with the European Union and the IMF and we are about to be able to view the
whites of their eyes. Will Germany agree to more funding or not; this is the
primary question and one that is about to be addressed. I do not believe there is a rational person on the planet that
thinks that Greece can repay its debts; today, tomorrow or at
any point in the future so is it to be another $50 billion as requested by the
Greeks, debt forgiveness and a huge cutback in expectations or is it to finally
be the end of the road and an end to the charade? The response will center on
the ECB and their absorption of $238 billion in direct Greek sovereign debt
coupled with their exposure to God only knows how much in securitizations moved
from the European banks onto their balance sheet.
Did you think that the decrease in the exposure of the European banks to Greece was sold into the marketplace? Ah no my friends, it was just repackaged and moved onto the balance sheet of the ECB and so hidden from us which was a clever ploy I suppose in the short term but one that is turning out to be quite painful as losses surely mount and as various credits stop payment. The calculators must be running night and day in Berlin as the Germans try to figure out just how much pain they are able to bear but debt paid by even more debt almost always proves to be a scheme that fails in the end. The plan is almost certainly foundering so that the only real question now is “when is the end” and the answer to that; we may soon be given.
Did you think that the decrease in the exposure of the European banks to Greece was sold into the marketplace? Ah no my friends, it was just repackaged and moved onto the balance sheet of the ECB and so hidden from us which was a clever ploy I suppose in the short term but one that is turning out to be quite painful as losses surely mount and as various credits stop payment. The calculators must be running night and day in Berlin as the Germans try to figure out just how much pain they are able to bear but debt paid by even more debt almost always proves to be a scheme that fails in the end. The plan is almost certainly foundering so that the only real question now is “when is the end” and the answer to that; we may soon be given.
“Want of foresight, unwillingness to act when action would be simple and effective, lack of clear thinking, confusion of counsel until the emergency comes, until self-preservation strikes its jarring gong these are the features which constitute the endless repetition of history.”-Winston Churchill
The Great Game
The Europeans have played the Great Game badly; are playing
it badly and there will be consequences for their failures. All of this
nonsense with Greece, with Spain, could have been avoided by telling the truth
about the numbers, by not goose stepping with plans meant to mislead instead of
illuminating the truth, with trying to hide the self-evident and presenting
scams as solutions or by addressing the size of firewalls instead of trying to
cure the sickness of the nations that lie within them. The indefensible schemes that have been foisted upon us reflect errors
in judgment that are not just wrong headed in conceptualization but just plain
dumb. The
trivialized minds in Brussels and Berlin have vastly underestimated the
intelligence of the people that matter, the institutional investors that are
required to fund their programs and pick your language, “Nein, Non, No” is the
growing response that is echoed down the hallways of finance from one
institution to the next, from one nation to the next.
“Out of the Box” is not the Financial Times or the
Wall Street Journal but then it does not need to be for me to assess the
reaction of those that matter which are the world’s large institutional
investors. The savants in Brussels and Berlin think that it is the hedge funds
or other speculators that are causing the yields to rise for Italy, Spain and
the rest but they are 100% wrong. It is the real money institutions that are
fleeing and moving fast. The debt at the ECB can be expanded and the local
institutions can be pressured by their sovereigns but, in the end, there is not
enough money in these institutions to fund the European experiment. I can report to you with certainty that many large institutional
investors will no longer play, will not fund, as they have been consistently
lied to and abused by the European Union and her various branches. The first European bank stress tests
were a sham as manipulated by incorrect data and the second one was falsified
by its methodology and the projected 120% debt to GDP ratio for Greece was
little more than the antics of a fool while the baloney about the $125 billion
for the Spanish banks that would not affect the country of Spain is a fairytale
with the same substance as Snow White and her dwarfs. There is no Prince, there are no
glass slippers and the bills have to be paid and the money to pay them will not
be found in the pot of gold at the end of some rainbow. Day by day and month by month the
bills accumulate and there is not enough capital left in Europe to pay them unless the Germans are willing to have the same standard of living
as those in Greece and
that will not be happening so that it can be foretold that the play will end
badly. It is not
economics that will determine the end of the European fantasy but politics. If it were just economics I
could have given you the date of the end long ago but fiscal and monetary
policies have long ago given way to machinations of the political system in
Europe but the lies and deceit only have a lifespan that is so long and so the
trend, regardless of the daily fluctuations, is set in place. Down goes the
Euro, up goes the Dollar, up go Treasury prices, down go European bond prices,
down goes the equity markets, the recession worsens, the contagion spreads
until the counting houses are out of money and the printing presses only print
paper and some German in some political party rises that says, “Enough!”
At the end of a battle during World War II a Soviet General was quoted; "We gained 22,000 square miles of territory which is just enough to bury our dead.”
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