Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- "Dead Before Arrival": Bundesbank Shoots Down EU Banking-Union Proposal; Eight Lessons the EU Needs to Learn
- Fitch Managing Director Says Spain Will Miss Budget-Deficit Targets By "Substantial Margin"; Yields in Spain and Italy Soar; Spanish 10-Year Yield Hits Record High 6.83%
- 23% of Small Business Owners (Approximately 6.21 million) Report "No Pay for a Year"; New Zealand, Singapore, US, Best Places to Start and Run a Business
Posted: 12 Jun 2012 12:47 PM PDT A group of eurozone Nannycrats has agreed to meet later this month to devise a master plan for a eurozone fiscal and banking union. Here is a synopsis from my post on Sunday Details of the Secret "Nannyplan" Emerge; Proposed Nannygroup Uniforms Nannyplan Details
Nannyplan Synopsis
List of Nannycrats Working on the Master Nannyplan
Notably missing is anyone representing Germany although the plans include eurobonds. Even if one ignores the eurobond issue, the nannyplan cannot possibly fly. Barroso Pushes Nannyplan in Financial Times Interview Yesterday, EU Commission President Barroso pitched his Banking Union idea in a Financial Times Interview making a preposterous claim that his plan "could be achieved without treaty changes". All 27 EU countries should submit their big banks to a single cross-border supervisor as part of a banking union to be enacted as soon as next year, the president of the European Commission has urged.Bundesbank Warns on Banking Union UK chancellor UK George Osborne immediately shot down the idea for the UK. One day later the Bundesbank, Germany's Central Bank, did the same. Please consider Bundesbank warns on EU banking union Germany's Bundesbank has warned of possible risks from banking union in the EU, saying it would be tantamount to a back-door pooling of sovereign debt, unless accompanied by fiscal union that allowed control over national budgets."Dead Before Arrival" Note that this is not a case of "dead-on-arrival". Rather, this is a case of the Bundesbank declaring the proposal is "dead-before-arrival" given the nannyclowns have not yet gotten together to finalize their plans. Barroso claims the EU needs to learn the lessons of the sovereign debt crisis. On that I agree. The difference is Barroso failed to learn the proper lessons. Eight Lessons the EU Needs to Learn
The Key points are 6, 7, and 8 with the market providing a big warning on number 8 right now. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 12 Jun 2012 09:56 AM PDT The selloff on Spanish and Italian bonds continued today with yields in Spain hitting euro-era record highs. On the deficit side of matters, I do not believe Spain will meet its budget-deficit targets, and neither does Fitch. Fitch Managing Director Ed Parker said Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy will miss budget-deficit targets this year "by a substantial margin." according to a Bloomberg report. 10-Year Spanish Bond Yield Hits Record High The previous euro-era 10-year Spanish Bond Yield high-water mark was 6.7%. That record was shattered today with a rise to 6.83%, closing at 6.7%, right at the previous high. The yield closed up 20 basis points (.2 percentage points). Yields Climb in Italy 10-Year bonds in Italy were hammered as well, with the yield climbing as high as 6.3% before settling at 6.17%, up 14 basis points. Emperor Has No Clothes Moment Yesterday, on news of a Spanish bailout, stocks and bonds gapped up (yields down). The yield on the 10-year Spanish bond dropped as low as 6.01%, but the selling began immediately. I commented that the sell-the-news reaction represented An "Emperor Has No Clothes" Moment: ESM Has Failed Already. The jump from 6.01% coupled with significant follow-through today offers substantial evidence that time has expired for Europe to address the crisis. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 12 Jun 2012 12:59 AM PDT Citing a new survey by Citigroup, CNBC Reports All Work, No Pay for Some Small Business Owners. Here are some interesting highlights.
I would like to show a link to the Citigroup report but I cannot because CNBC did not provide one. Readers know this is one of my pet peeves, so I am calling them on it. Recession Brought Small-Business Boom Inquiring minds just may be wondering how many small businesses there are. A report written May 20, 2011 may surprise you. Please consider Recession Brought a Small-Business Boom "Compared to 2007, there was a huge increase in the number of business failures in 2008, 2009, and 2010. In fact, the number of business failures in 2009 was almost twice that of the amount of failures in 2007," writes Byron Vielehr, president of global risk and analytics at D&B, in response to questions emailed by Portfolio.com.27 Million Small Businesses Citing the Small Business Association (SBA) Get Busy Media reports 27 million small businesses in Small Business Stats for Small Business Week 2011 According to the SBA Startup Times and Costs There are some interesting charts and graphs in the article. Here is a clip showing several pertinent pieces of information. Singapore and New Zealand are the best two places to start a business and run a business. The US is 4th and 3rd respectively. It would be interesting to see where Greece, Italy, Spain, Ireland, and Germany fall, but there are no links to the data or studies. Ease of Startup Explains Recession Boom Notice the success stats on the above graph do not add up. If 44% of new firms survive 4 years, by implication 56% don't. Yet somehow only 49% fail in 5 years. Regardless, the above chart explains the startup boom at the height of the recession. Millions of people started businesses and most of them will not make it. Stats from 2007 and 2008 as to how many businesses will last 5 years are invalid. Business climate is far more unfavorable now. Crunching the Numbers If there are 27 million small business owners and 23% have not received any pay for a year, there are 6.21 million business owners who received no paycheck for at least a year. Notes About Unemployment Bear in mind, that making money or receiving a paycheck is irrelevant to the BLS when they compute the unemployment rate. If you work as little as 1 hour, whether you collect a paycheck or not, you are considered employed. In addition to the 6.21 million business owners with no paycheck, factor in those selling trinkets on EBay out of desperation and collecting a few dimes in the process. Also factor in all those starting multi-level marketing schemes and calling it a business. How many get sucked into that losing proposition every year? Yet, to the BLS, it's a job if you worked any hours. The ease of starting a business in the US is a great thing. Unfortunately, making money in a small business startup is not so easy. Historic trends suggest half of small businesses will fail within 5 years, and I highly suspect future trends will be much worse. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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