Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- “We Embittered the People to Protect the Future of the Nation"
- Voters Punish New Democracy and Pasok; New Election, Euro Exit Coming Up? Best thing For Greece is Tell the Troika "Go to Hell"
- Splintering of Greece: Will Anyone Rule? Exit Poll Has Anti-Bailout Party in Second Place
- New American Dream is Renting; Reflections on Renting Houses, Cars, Books, Clothes; Will Rentership Fuel the Next Boom? What About Home Prices?
“We Embittered the People to Protect the Future of the Nation" Posted: 06 May 2012 09:53 PM PDT If you want to understand the reason PASOK went down in flames in a crushing defeat in Greek elections, simply look at the arrogance and gall of party leader Evangelos Venizelos in a statement following the election. "We embittered the people so we could protect the future of the nation", said PASOK party leader and troika sponsored clown, Evangelos Venizelos. Ekathimerini reports Election swing leaves Greece teetering. PASOK leader Evangelos Venizelos and New Democracy chief Antonis Samaras both declared themselves open to the idea of forming a pro-European national unity administration that would include other parties and would seek to renegotiate the terms of the EU-IMF loan agreement.National Salvation Party The idea that Troika sponsored clowns can form the basis of Greek salvation is ridiculous. Furthermore, Venizelos' statement is right up there with other top Orwellian idiocies. Top Orwellian Comments Of All Times
We can safely add "We embittered the people so we could protect the future of the nation" to that list. As I said, Best thing For Greece is Tell the Troika "Go to Hell", and the election proves most Greek voters know it, even though they have been brainwashed into wanting to stay in the euro. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 06 May 2012 06:20 PM PDT Assuming no defects in Pasok or the New Democracy parties, the pro-austerity may just scrape together enough votes to barely piece together a ruling coalition. How long the coalition lasts is another matter as Pasok was humiliated with a third place showing. Reuters reports Angry Greeks reject bailout, risk euro exit The latest official results, with over 61 percent of the vote counted, showed the only two major parties supporting an EU/IMF program that keeps Greece from bankruptcy would be hard pressed to form a lasting coalition.Best thing For Greece is Tell the Troika "Go to Hell" Short-term Greece is likely to face strong inflation, perhaps even hyperinflation if it returns to the Drachma. However, long-term Greece faces a 10 year or longer permanent recession with austerity upon austerity upon austerity if the eurozone stays intact and Greece stays in the eurozone. Had Greece left the eurozone two years ago it would be far better off today, and the sooner it tells the Troika where to go, the sooner Greece has a chance to recover. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Splintering of Greece: Will Anyone Rule? Exit Poll Has Anti-Bailout Party in Second Place Posted: 06 May 2012 09:55 AM PDT Preliminary exit polls are not good for the pro-austerity, keep Greece in the Eurozone at any cost coalition as 3 parties vie for top post An exit poll commissioned by Greek media shows three parties are vying for the top spot in the country's critical parliamentary elections, with no definitive front-runner and none gaining enough votes to form a government.It is widely expected that New Democracy and PASOK will combine to form a coalition. Both want to stay with the Euro. However, New Democracy wants changes made to agreed upon austerity measures. PASOK leader Evangelos Venizelos is nothing but a tool for the eurocrat clowns and appears to be a big loser in the elections vs expectations just a few short weeks ago. Exit Poll Has Anti-Bailout Party in Second Place Other exit polls show the Radical Left Coalition (Syriza) at 16-19%. Bloomberg reports New Democracy Slightly Ahead in Greek Election, Exit Poll Shows Antonis Samaras's New Democracy party showed a slight lead in Greek elections today, receiving between 17 percent and 20 percent of the vote, an exit poll forecast.Spotlight on the Radical Left The Wall Street Journal proclaims Greek Leftist Comes Into His Own Young and charismatic, Alexis Tsipras may be the man to watch on the Greek political scene.The WSJ article was written three days ago. If exit polls are accurate, the Radical Left will not be in third place with 10% of the vote, but rather second place with perhaps as much as 18 or even 19 percent of the vote. It is going to be very difficult forming a coalition government out of this splintered mess. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 06 May 2012 01:07 AM PDT Housing has now gone full circle. President Bush's "Ownership Society" has morphed into the "Rentership Society". The attitude applies to more than houses as noted in the Wall Street Journal article Renting Prosperity by Daniel Gross. Americans are getting used to the idea of renting the good life, from cars to couture to homes. Daniel Gross explores our shift from a nation of owners to an economy permanently on the move—and how it will lead to the next boom.Zipcars and College Textbooks Gross points out that students are increasing renting books as opposed to buying them. Of course there are also Kindle and other electronic ways of purchasing or renting books as well. The same holds true for cars, and not just long-term leases either. Gross writes ... The Bureau of Labor Statistics says that private transportation—owning and running a car—is the second largest cost for a typical American household, accounting for 16% of expenditures. Factoring in finance costs, depreciation, repairs, insurance, taxes and gas, AAA calculates that an owner of a midsize sedan who drives 15,000 miles a year spends $8,588 a year on his car.Will Rentership Fuel the Next Boom? When? Why? Gross put together a nice article explaining what is happening but the article falls far short of the opening premise "how it will lead to the next boom". I see no reason renting Zipcars, textbooks, or houses will lead to a boom in anything. Every dime Zipcars makes is a dime lost by GM, Ford, and Toyota. Kindle is going to put numerous bookstores out of business. Younger Americans are not buying cars and houses because they cannot afford them. Collectively saddled with a trillion dollars in student loans, many cannot afford to buy much of anything, especially poor job prospects and falling wages. I see no boom from this. Rather, I see pressures on profits in multiple places for multiple reasons. What About Housing? Renting cars and textbooks is the start of a trend that makes perfect economic sense. However, Zipcars, textbooks, clothes, and electronics are one thing, and housing is another. When sentiment on houses reaches the widespread belief "It's Better to Rent", prices are bottoming. I expressed that thought on numerous occasions since 2005. This is how I currently see things. ![]() This is how I have called the housing bubble and bust in real time over the years.
The first four links above are quite humorous. The denial from Bernanke and others is stunningly funny. Bottoming Process Some cities are further from the bottom than others, but it is likely some cities have now finally bottomed. That said, I do not think home prices are going much of anywhere "in general" because there is still years of shadow inventory and years of foreclosures to work through. Moreover boomer demographics suggest much downsizing is ahead (and who will boomers sell their mansions to?) Finally, generation Y has far different attitudes than boomers regarding wealth, debt, and possessions and will carry those attitudes for a long time having seen firsthand the trouble their parents and grandparents got into with too much debt, and how they are in the same boat with student debt. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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