Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Gold Hits New High of $1920; Miners Should Follow
- Trichet Warns Heads of States; Italian President Warns "Markets Lost Confidence in Italy"; IMF Warns again on Bank Capitalization; Mish Warns Trichet
- CAM Bank, Taken-Over by Bank of Spain, Reports €1.1 Billion Loss, 19% Non-Performing Loans
- Deutsche Bank CEO says "It's Obvious Many Banks Will Not Survive if Forced to Value Sovereign Debt at Market Prices"
- European Equities Hammered; German DAX Down 5%; US Futures Down 2%; Italy 10-Year Yield Sharply Higher at 5.56%; Gold Hits 1900 Again
Gold Hits New High of $1920; Miners Should Follow Posted: 05 Sep 2011 11:25 PM PDT It only took 7 sessions to take back a sharp $200 plunge about a week ago. click on chart for sharper image In 2008, gold sold off with everything else but treasuries. Miners were crushed. This time I expect gold and miners to do much better in a big market decline, perhaps even rise. Other Currencies Look Sick The Euro, the US dollar, the Yen, and the Yuan all look sick for differing reasons. The Eurozone may break apart, Bernanke is likely to double up on QE and the US deficit is out of control, Japan has a horrendous debt problem, and inflation is out of control in china as is China's infrastructure spending and housing bubble. The one thing the Euro, the US dollar, the Yen, and the Yuan all have in common is competitive currency debasement by central bankers hoping to increase export to everyone else. Mathematically that is impossible. Once currency stands out (and it's not the Swiss Franc). It's gold. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 05 Sep 2011 05:12 PM PDT The warnings are flying today so let's take a look at a few of them, including a couple of my own. Trichet Warns Heads of States The New York Times reports Euro Zone Leaders Get Warning From Central Bankers With stock and bond markets on a roller-coaster ride reminiscent of the 2008 financial crisis, Jean-Claude Trichet and Mario Draghi, the current and incoming chiefs of the European Central Bank, had a pointed message for European leaders Monday: Get your act together.Italian President Warns "Markets Lost Confidence in Italy" Italy's president is nothing more than a figurehead with little power. Nonetheless, his message comes through loud and clear. Reuters reports Italian President warns on "alarming" debt signals Italian President Giorgio Napolitano urged swift action to strengthen planned austerity measures on Monday, saying a severe market selloff was a clear warning that markets had lost confidence in Italy.ECB Warns its Willingness to Buy Bonds "should not be taken for granted" Here is a pair of bonus warning from the Reuters article. The ECB has also stepped up its warnings, with Mario Draghi, who takes over as head of the central bank in November, delivering a pointed warning on Monday that its willingness to continue buying bonds "should not be taken for granted."The Prime Minister's approval rating falling to 22% is a huge warning sign as is the strike by CGIL. Voters have had enough austerity programs. In Germany, voters warn Merkel thay have had enough of her. IMF Renews Warning on Bank Capitalization France 24 reports IMF head warns again about Europe bank capitalisation The head of the International Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde insisted that European banks needed extra capital, in a magazine interview on Monday.Hello Trichet, Draghi How about a Little Realism? This is my warning to Trichet: Hello Mr. Trichet. The odds 17 sovereign states "get their act together" quickly regarding a fiscal union is zero. There is no agreement on Eurobonds even from Germany and France, so how are 17 countries supposed to quickly agree on that? Finland and Austria want collateral, and pray tell why shouldn't they? Is every country supposed to do exactly what you want? Greece is going to default and you and your big ego made matters worse by refusing to accept that fact, so much so that you and the ECB failed to plan for it. You want 17 countries to get their act together. How about one central bank, the ECB, led by you, get its act together and admit your policies have failed? How about the ECB coming up with a legitimate plan for dealing with it this crisis instead of illegally making demands on sovereign nations? The market gave you fair warning on Greece and you refused to see it. Now the market has said "time's up". Face the facts Mr. Trichet "The Euro has failed." Mr. Trichet, you better come up with a plan to deal with the aftermath, because odds of a Eurozone breakup are large and growing. Given Trichet was one of the key architects of the now-failed Euro experiment, much of what is happening now is his fault. General Market Warning I repeat my general market warning made on August 4: Crashes Happen When "Oversold" Last evening in an interview with Chris Martenson I said "This is not a prediction Chris, but markets does not crash on overbought conditions, they crash on oversold conditions."Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
CAM Bank, Taken-Over by Bank of Spain, Reports €1.1 Billion Loss, 19% Non-Performing Loans Posted: 05 Sep 2011 04:01 PM PDT On July 25, the Wall Street Journal reported Bank of Spain to Take Over CAM Spain's central bank said Friday it decided to take over Caja de Ahorros del Mediterraneo as the country's plans to clean up its ailing savings banks enter their final phase.CAM Lost €1.1 billion in Recent Announcement Please consider CAM lost 1.136 billion, delinquencies reached 19% It do not take long for CAM to blow much of that €2.8 billion injection.
CAM is tiny relative to all the other European bank issues. However, the important point is to expect to see more Spanish bank implosions because they are coming. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 05 Sep 2011 09:39 AM PDT Josef Ackermann, CEO of Deutsche Bank admitted the obvious today with statements recognizing that many organizations will fail at mark-to-market pricing. To show you the Fantasyland world these bankers live in, Ackermann also believes European banks are now much better capitalized and less dependent on short-term financing. Courtesy of Google Translate please consider Many banks will not survive if forced to value sovereign debt at market prices The chairman of Deutsche Bank, Josef Ackermann, today highlighted another obstacle to resolving the debt crisis that crosses the euro zone.Somehow we are supposed to believe banks do not need to raise capital, even though banks cannot survive mark-to-market pricing, and even though a very biased head of the IMF states that European banks need to raise capital. Only in the fantasyland world where there are no sovereign debt defaults can banks remotely be considered adequately capitalized. The stress-free tests came to the same conclusion as Ackermann by the same ridiculous measure (assuming no losses on sovereign debt). Europe rejects IMF call for more bank capital Reuters reports Europe rejects IMF call for more bank capital European politicians on Thursday rejected an International Monetary Fund call for banks to raise up to 200 billion euros ($290 billion) in new capital, adding to fears that policymakers may be underestimating the severity of the debt crisis.DAX Down 30% from Year's High, Bank Stocks Hammered Again Bloomberg reports German Stocks Drop to Two-Year Low as Deutsche Bank, Commerzbank Decline German stocks retreated to their lowest level since August 2009 after German Chancellor Angela Merkel's party suffered its fifth election loss this year and European services and manufacturing growth weakened in August.US and European Banks Had Ample Opportunity to Recapitalize US and European banks had ample opportunity to recapitalize in late 2009 and all of 2010 in the wake of global reflation tactics by Fed chairman Ben Bernanke and central bankers in general. They failed to do so. It's crystal clear to everyone but bankers and brain-dead analysts that banks need to recapitalize, except now it will happen after share prices have collapsed. Bank of America is now trading at $7.25 (and barring a miracle it will be lower tomorrow). It could have and should have raised capital when shares were close to $20 in April 2010. Of course Bank of America should never have purchased Countrywide Financial or Merrill Lynch in the first place, so one has to wonder what the hell these CEOs do for the enormous salary and benefits compensation they receive. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 05 Sep 2011 08:41 AM PDT European Indices Click here to refresh Yahoo!Finance Major World Indices Asia-Pacific Indices Italy 10-Year Government Bond Yield Last month the ECB stepped in to "support" Italian bonds. What is it going to do, buy all of them? Metals Much-to-do was made over the recent sharp plunge in gold. The pullback lasted precisely three days and now gold is flirting with all-time highs once again. In bull markets, sharp pullbacks need to be bought, and in bear markets sharp rallies sold. The only trick is catching the turning point, and that is frequently not easy. However, given the Eurozone crisis, and the likelihood that central banks and governments everywhere will attempt more fiscal and monetary stimulus, it is foolish to call a top in gold as many have done all year. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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