Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Cameron Rebukes Euro Leaders at Davos, Calls Financial Transaction Tax "Quite Simply Madness" ; Mathematical Impossibilities
- Steen Jakobsen on Maximum Intervention "Now is the Time You Need Metals – Particularly Gold and Gold Stocks"; Fool in the Shower
- Chart of the Day: Central Bank Balance Sheet as Percent of GDP: Fed, ECB, BOJ, BOE
Posted: 26 Jan 2012 12:47 PM PST Bickering in Davos at the World Economic Forum has taken center stage as U.K. Prime Minister Cameron rebukes euro leaders over crisis David Cameron has delivered a firm rebuke to Germany at the World Economic Forum, calling on Berlin to contribute significantly more resources and guarantees to help solve the eurozone crisis.Tobin Tax Cameron is correct regarding the financial transaction tax, commonly known as a "Tobin Tax" named after Nobel Laureate economist James Tobin who originally proposed the idea for currency transactions only. Now they want to tax everything. Mathematical Impossibilities The sentiment expressed by Germany that other nations need to become "more like Germany" as in "export more" sounds good when you hear it, but it is a mathematical impossibility. Not every nation can be an exporter. If one country has a balance-of-trade trade surplus, another country must have a trade deficit. Thus, the only way for other countries to become more like Germany is for Germany to become less like Germany. The same holds true for the trade relationship between the US and China. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 26 Jan 2012 08:36 AM PST Steen Jakobsen, chief economist for Saxo Bank in Denmark has some interesting thoughts to share on gold an metals in an email update that just came in. Steen writes ... Interesting session with Fed yesterday! Both the ECB and the FED have now clearly showed that the changed board of directors is far more willing to print money and keep rates low forever than ever before in central banking history – which is probably not a good thing or is it?As pertains to metals and Baum I agree. Here is my favorite line from "Fool in the Shower". Two policy makers -- no names were attached to the forecasts -- expect the funds rate to first begin rising in 2016. (My money is on New York Fed President Bill Dudley and Governor Janet Yellen.) That would mean eight years of 0 percent interest rates. There will be a revolution in this country before then if the economy is lousy enough to warrant 0 percent interest rates for that long. Even the fool in the shower knows that. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Chart of the Day: Central Bank Balance Sheet as Percent of GDP: Fed, ECB, BOJ, BOE Posted: 26 Jan 2012 08:20 AM PST Here is an interesting chart by Peter Garnry, an Equity Strategist at Saxo Bank in Denmark. ![]() The race is on to see which central bank can load up its balance sheet with the most garbage the fastest. Reader Scott says ... Lemme see here, the EFSF was, once upon a time, going to lever itself up by taking the first 20% of losses on PIIGS sovereign bonds. This would give it the 'firepower' to quell the crisis in the Eurozone. How laughable that now seems. Such an arrangement would not even protect the ECB's 'investment' . Instead we hear rumors of schemes to foist the ECB's holdings off onto the EFSF with the ECB's 30% haircut already attached. So now, if I get this right, the EFSF is now the bailout mechanism for the ECB's SMP and that the PSI must now be broadened to become the PPSI or Public Private Sector Involvement and ESM is to be readied by this summer to take the place of the EFSF . And all of this just to deal with Greece. Given the failed bailouts, collapsed arrangement, lies, violations of EU law, summits, press conferences can Merkel, Sarkozy, Barroso and Rehn cobble together only to have fall apart before everyone realizes the jig is up? That they have no solution because there is no solution. The system is bankrupt.The system is indeed morally and mathematically bankrupt. Some points above may not be perfectly accurate in entirety but the idea conveyed is certainly accurate. The key question is "when does everyone realize the jig is up?" Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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