Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Americans Prefer Spending Cuts Over Tax Hikes; Obama Throws Fat Pitch, Republicans Will Not Even Step Up to the Plate
- More BullSweet Stress-Free Tests of European Banks
- Zepol: U.S. Imports Down 7.4% in June, Big 3 Postpone New Transpacific Service; Soft Patch or Prolonged Global Slowdown?
- Italian, Spanish Bond Yields Head North, Greek, Irish Bond at New Record Highs
Posted: 15 Jul 2011 06:09 PM PDT A Gallup poll shows On Deficit, Americans Prefer Spending Cuts; Open to Tax Hikes Americans' preferences for deficit reduction clearly favor spending cuts to tax increases, but most Americans favor a mix of the two approaches. Twenty percent favor an approach that relies only on spending cuts and 4% favor an approach that uses tax increases alone.Republican Voters Open to Compromise There are other questions in the survey including questions on "why" people are concerned about the debt limit. Inquiring minds may wish to give the link a closer look. The interesting factor to me is that only 26% of Republicans say the budget should be balanced only with spending cuts. Among the Democrats, only 8% say it should be done only with tax hikes. The key take-away is Americans from both parties are willing to accept a budget balancing process that is weighted towards spending cuts as long as there are some tax hikes. Congress is not open to the same viewpoint. As I said, I am open to compromise as long as the cuts are genuine, the cuts are not back loaded, and as long as some other key items are tossed in the mix, such as scrapping Davis-Bacon and ending collective bargaining of public unions. The US would benefit greatly from such an approach. Unfortunately, Republicans are willing to piss away a golden opportunity to present such a plan in favor of plans that will likely not reduce the deficit at all. Obama Throws Incredibly Fat Pitch Obama says he is ready to make hard choices. I suggest Republicans should put him to the test. Obama offered up a fat pitch that Republicans can hit out of the park. All Republicans have to do is insist on ending collective bargaining rights of public unions and scrapping Davis-Bacon in return for very modest tax hikes. Such a deal would be well worth it. Republicans would even win if Obama rejected it. Sadly, Republicans will not play ball at all. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
More BullSweet Stress-Free Tests of European Banks Posted: 15 Jul 2011 10:23 AM PDT Ho Hum. EU officials have announced the results of more Stress-Free bank tests in Europe. 20 banks were expected to fail, only 8 did. Please consider 8 Banks Fail EU 'Stress Tests' Eight banks flunked the European Union's "stress tests," with a combined shortfall of €2.5 billion ($3.54 billion) in capital under a simulated worst-case economic scenario, the European Banking Authority said.Did the stress tests include a Greek default? What about Irish, Portuguese, or Spanish defaults. What exactly was stressed? The answer to those questions is no. Here is the Executive Stress Test Summary The stress test exercise. The 2011 EBA's EU wide stress test had the objective of assessing the resilience of a large sample of banks in the EU1 against an adverse but plausible scenario. The scenario assesses banks against a deterioration from the baseline forecast in the main macroeconomic variables such as GDP, unemployment and house prices – for instance, GDP would fall 4 percentage points from the baseline. The scenario includes a sovereign stress, with haircuts applied to sovereign and bank exposures in the trading book and increased provisions for these exposures in the banking book. Changes in interest rates and sovereign spreads also affect the cost of funding for banks in the stress. The stress testing methodology, which was published by the EBA on March 18th, 20112, entails a static balance-sheet assumption, and also does not allow the banks to take actions to react to shock. The resilience of the banks is assessed against a benchmark defined with reference to capital of the highest quality -- Core Tier 1 (CT1) -- set at 5% of risk weighted assets (RWA).It is interesting to see "Stress Tests" in quotes. It appears the article does not believe there was much stress to the tests and I don't either. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 15 Jul 2011 09:19 AM PDT I received some interesting shipping data points from a friend in the shipping industry. Data points are from reportedly from American Shipper and Zepol. US Imports Fell 7.4% Year-Over-Year
TEU stands for "Twenty-foot equivalent unit", a measure used for capacity in container transportation. Big 3 Container Lines Postpone New Transpacific Service The world's three biggest container lines have postponed plans to introduce a transpacific shuttle service this year until the second quarter of 2012, one of the lines said Wednesday. Maersk Line, Mediterranean Shipping Co. and CMA CGM had planned to start in May a new transpacific loop but adverse demand conditions forced the lines to postpone the start of the service three times. Service has been pushed back until 2012. Soft Patch or Prolonged Global Slowdown? The soft patch theory is slowly dying on the vine, if not completely dead. Numerous supporting data points in manufacturing, ISM, jobs, in the US, Europe, and China confirm this is more than a soft patch. Europe will be back in recession soon and the US will follow. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Italian, Spanish Bond Yields Head North, Greek, Irish Bond at New Record Highs Posted: 15 Jul 2011 08:29 AM PDT It will be interesting to see how long it takes for Italian government debt yields to take out the spike high right before Trichet interfered in the Italian bond market. On the interference, yields tumbled across the board, but Greek and Italian bond yields have already made new highs. Greece 2-Year Government Bonds Ireland 10-Year Government Bonds Italy 10-Year Government Bonds Spain 10-Year Government Bonds The Bloomberg charts are inaccurate but the current yield information is accurate. On July 12, Italian yields broke above 6% before Trichet stepped in to buy Italian government debt. How long will it take before yields hit 6% again? Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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