joi, 24 noiembrie 2011

Introducing SEOmoz's Updated Page Authority and Domain Authority

Introducing SEOmoz's Updated Page Authority and Domain Authority


Introducing SEOmoz's Updated Page Authority and Domain Authority

Posted: 23 Nov 2011 06:39 AM PST

Posted by Matt Peters

Here at Moz, we take metrics and analytics seriously and work hard to ensure that our metrics are first rate. Among our most important link metrics are Page Authority and Domain Authority. Accordingly, we have been working to improve these so that they more accurately reflect a given page or domain's ability to rank in search results. This blog entry provides an overview of these metrics and introduces our new Authority models with a deep technical dive.

What are Page and Domain Authority?

Page and Domain Authority are machine learning ranking models that predict the likelihood of a single page or domain to rank in search results, regardless of page content. Their input is the 41 link metrics available in our Linkscape URL Metrics API call and their output is a score on a scale from 1 to 100. They are keyword agnostic because they do not use any information about the page content.

Why are Page and Domain Authority being updated?

Since these models predict search engine position, it is important to update them periodically to capture changes in the search engines' ranking algorithms. In addition, this update includes some changes to the underlying models resulting in increased accuracy. Our favorite measure of accuracy is the mean Spearman Correlation over a collection of SERPs. The next chart compares the correlations on several previous indices and the next index release (Index 47).

The new model out performs the old model on the same data using the top 30 search results, and performs better if more results are used (top 50). Note that these are out of sample predictions.

When will the models change? Will this affect my scores?

The models will be updated when we roll out the next Linkscape index update, sometime during the week of November 28. Your scores will likely change a little, and may potentially change by as many as 20 points or more. I'll present some data later in this post that shows most PRO and Free Trial members with campaigns will see a slight increase in their Page Authority.

What does this mean if I use Page Authority and Domain Authority data?

First, the metrics will be better at predicting search position, and Page Authority will remain the single highest correlated metric with search position that we have seen (including mozRank and the other 100+ metrics we examined in our Search Engine Ranking Factors study). However, since we don't yet have a good web spam scoring system, sites that manipulate search engines will slip by us (and look like an outlier), so a human review is still wise.

Before presenting some details of the models, I'd like to illustrate what we mean by a "machine learning ranking model." The table below shows the top 26 results for the keyword "pumpkin recipes" with a few of our Linkscape metrics (Google-US search engine; this is from an older data set and older index, but serves as a good illustration).

Pumpkin Recipes SERP result

As you can see, there is quite a spread among the different metrics illustrated, with some of the pages having a few links and others 1,000+ links. The Linking Root Domains are also spread from only 46 Linking Root Domains to 200,000+. The Page Authority model takes these link metrics as input (plus 36 other link metrics not shown) and predicts the SERP ordering. Since it only takes into account link metrics (and explicitly ignores any page or keyword content), but search engines take many ranking factors into consideration, the model cannot be 100% accurate. Indeed, in this SERP, the top result benefits from an exact domain match to the keyword and helps explain its #1 position despite its relatively low link metrics. However, since Page Authority only takes link metrics as input, it is a single aggregate score that explains how likely a page is to rank in search based only on links. Domain Authority is similar for domain wide ranking. The models are trained on a large collection of Google-US SERP results.

Despite restricting to only link metrics, the new Page and Domain Authority models do a good job of predicting SERP ordering and improve substantially over the existing models. This increased accuracy is due in part to the new model's ability to better separate pages with moderate Page Authority values into higher and lower scores.

This chart shows the distribution of the Page Authority values for the new and old models over a data set generated from 10,000+ SERPs that includes 200,000+ unique pages (similar to the one used in our Search Engine Ranking Factors). As you can see, the new model has "fatter tails" and moves some of the pages with moderate scores to higher and lower values resulting in better discriminating power. The average Page Authority for both sets is about the same, but the new model has a higher standard deviation, consistent with a larger spread. In addition to the smaller SERP data set, this larger spread is also present in our entire 40+ billion page index (plotted with the logarithm of page/domain count to see the details in the tails):

One interesting comparison is the change in Page Authority for the domains, subdomains and sub-folders PRO and Free Trial members are tracking in our campaign based tools.

The top left panel in the chart shows that the new model shifts the distribution of Page Authority for the active domains, subdomains and sub-folders to the right. The distribution of the change in Page Authority is included in the top right panel, and shows that most of the campaigns have a small increase in their scores (average increase is 3.7), with some sites increasing by 20 points or more. A scatter plot of the individual campaign changes is illustrated in the bottom panel, and shows that 82% of the active domains, subdomains and sub-folders will see an increase in their Page Authority (these are the dots above the gray line). It should be noted that these comparisons are based solely on changes in the model, and any additional links that these campaigns have acquired since the last index update will act to increase the scores (and conversely, any links that have been dropped will act to decrease scores).

The remainder of this post provides more detail about these metrics. To sum up this first part, the models underlying the Page and Domain Authority metrics will be updated with the next Linkscape index update. This will improve their ability to predict search position, due in part to the new model's better ability to separate pages based on their link profiles. Page Authority will remain the single highest correlated metric with search position that we have seen.

 


The rest of the post provides a deeper look at these models, and a lot of what follows is quite technical. Fortunately, none of this information is needed to actually use these Authority scores (just as understanding the details of Google's search algorithm is not necessary to use it). However, if you are curious about some of the details then read on.

The previous discussion has centered around distributions of Page Authority across a set of pages. To gain a better understanding of the models' characteristics, we need to explore its behavior on the inputs. However, the inputs are a 41 dimensional space and it's impossible (for me at least!) to visualize anything in 41 dimensions. As an alternative, we can attempt to reduce the dimensionality to something more manageable. The intuition here is that pages that have a lot of links probably have a lot of external links, followed links, a high mozRank, etc. Domains that have a lot of linking root domains probably have a lot of linking IPs, linking subdomains, a high domain mozRank, etc. One approach we could take is simply to select a subset of metrics (like the table in the "pumpkin recipes" SERP above) and examine those. However, this throws away the information from the other metrics and will inherently be more noisy then something that uses all of them. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) is an alternate approach that uses all of the data. Before diving into the PCA decomposition of the data, I'll take a step back and explain what PCA is with an example.

Principal Component Analysis is a technique that reduces dimensionality by projecting the data onto Principal Components (PC) that explain most of the variability in the original data.  This figure illustrates PCA on a small two dimensional data set:

This sample data looks roughly like an ellipse. PCA computes two principal components illustrated by the red lines and labeled in the graph that roughly align with the axes of the ellipse.& One representation of the data is the familiar (x, y) coordinates. A second, equivalent representation is the projection of this data onto the principal components illustrated by the labeled points. Take the upper point (7.5, 6). Given these two values, it's hard to determine where it is in the ellipse. However, if we project it onto the PCs we get (4.5, 1.2) which tells us that it is far to the right of the center along the main axis (the 4.5 value) and a little up along the second axis (the 1.2 value).

We can do the same thing with the link metrics, only instead of using two inputs we use all 41 inputs. After doing so, something remarkable happens:

Two principal components naturally emerge that collectively explain 88% of the covariance in the original data! Put another way, almost all of the data lies in some sort of strange ellipse in our 41 dimensional space. Moreover, these PCs have a very natural link to our intuition. The first PC, which I'll call the Domain/Subdomain PC projects strongly onto the domain and subdomain related metrics (upper panel, blue and red lines), and has a very small projection onto the page metric (upper panel green lines). The second PC has the opposite property and projects strongly onto page related metrics with a small projection onto Domain/Subdomain metrics.

Don't worry if you didn't follow all of that technical mumbo jumbo in the last few paragraphs. Here's the key point: instead of talking about number of links, followed external links to domains, linking root domains, etc. we can instead talk about just two things - an aggregate domain/subdomain link metric and an aggregate page link metric and recover most of the information in the original 41 metrics.

Armed with this new knowledge, we can revisit the 10K SERP data and analyze it in with these aggregate metrics.

This chart shows the joint distribution of the 10K SERP data projected onto these PCs, along with the marginal distribution of each on the top and right hand side. At the bottom left side of the chart are pages with low values for each PC signifying that the page doesn't have many links and they are on domains without many links. There aren't many of these in the SERP data since these are unlikely to rank in search results. In the upper right are heavily linked to pages on heavily linked to domains, the most popular pages on the internet. Again, there aren't many of these pages in the SERP data because there aren't many of them on the internet (e.g. twitter.com, google.com, etc.) Interestingly, most of the SERP data falls into one of two distinct clusters. By examining the follow figure we can identify these clusters:

This chart shows the average folder depth of each search result, where folder depth is defined as the number of slashes (/) after the home page (with 1 defined to be the home page). By comparing with the previous chart, we can identify the two distinct clusters as home pages and pages deep on heavily linked to domains.

To circle back to search position, we can plot the average search position:

We see a general trend toward higher search position as the aggregate page and domain metrics increase. This data set only collected the top 30 results for each keyword, so values of average search position greater than 16 are in the bottom half of our data set. Finally, we can visually confirm that our Page and Domain Authority models capture this behavior and gain further insight into the new vs old model differences:

This is a dense figure, but here are the most important pieces. First, Page Authority captures the overall behavior seen in the Average Search position plot, with higher scores for pages that rank higher and lower scores for pages that rank lower (top left). Second, comparing the old vs new models, we see that the new model predicts higher scores for the most heavily linked to pages and lower scores for the least heavily linked to pages, consistent with our previous observation that the new model does a better job discriminating among pages.


Do you like this post? Yes No

Thank a hero


The White House, Washington


Good morning,

Every Thanksgiving, Barack sits down to call some of our troops and thank them for their service.

When he tells me about these conversations, it always reminds me of how blessed we are to live in a country where men and women will stand up to protect our freedoms and preserve our way of life. And whenever I've had the chance to meet with these heroes and their families, I've always walked away inspired by their courage and in awe of their strength.

I can't think of any better way to spend Thanksgiving than letting our servicemembers know how grateful we are for everything that they do. So this year, we're making it easy to do just that.

We've partnered with the USO to create a program called Thanks From Everywhere. To get involved, simply visit JoiningForces.gov/Thanks and write a quick note that troops and veterans all over the world will be able to see.

Add your message to Thanks From Everywhere.

Send a message of thanks and watch the video

Your note will be added to a map with messages from people all over the country, showing our troops and their families just how much we appreciate their service and sacrifice.

If we all do our part, we'll help to build a wave of support to honor our veterans and their families -- and ensure they get the recognition they deserve this holiday season.

At a time when we are sitting down to share the blessings we've received this past year, please take a moment to be a part of this effort to thank America's heroes and their families.

Send a message to Thanks From Everywhere today:

http://www.JoiningForces.gov/Thanks

Happy Thanksgiving,

Michelle Obama




 
This email was sent to e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com.
Unsubscribe e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com | Privacy Policy

Please do not reply to this email. Contact the White House

The White House • 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW • Washington, DC 20500 • 202-456-1111


SEOptimise

SEOptimise


Behold Facebook’s New ‘Page Insights’ Dashboard

Posted: 23 Nov 2011 07:02 AM PST

In what seems to me to be a bid to prove to marketers that advertising with Facebook can produce great results, Facebook have rolled out a new 'Page Insights' dashboard which provide metrics on user engagement. They intend to delete all data from your old insights page on the 15th of February 2012 and will stop collecting data on the 15th of December 2011.

The new dashboard looks like this:

In addition to 'total likes', you can now view the number of friends that your fans have, thereby giving you an estimate of your total reach.

You probably would have seen the stats for the number of people 'talking about this' on Facebook pages for a while; this is now provided on the dashboard as well. This is quite an important statistic to gauge your engagement with your community, as shares, comments, likes, posts etc. are all taken into account.

Your weekly total reach gives you the number of people who have seen any content associated with your page, including 'ads' and 'sponsored stories' that send traffic to your page. This metric is quite unique as it is different to 'impressions', where you're provided with the number of unique people who have seen the ad. This metric in my opinion would be quite useful, especially when running a branding campaign.

Below the graph, you are provided with stats for all your page posts:

- Your 'Reach' (number of unique people who've seen your post),

- Your 'Engaged Users' (the number of unique people who have clicked on your post).

- Those who are 'Talking about this' (the number of unique people who have liked, commented or shared your post; or responds to your event; or answers a question you posted) and

- 'Virality' ('people talking about this' divided by 'reach' and multiplied by 100) – this is basically your viral thermometer.

What's cool about these stats is if you click on the figures, you are provided with even more statistics, such as how many of these posts were 'organic', 'paid' or actually 'viral' etc.

On the tree menu on your left, you can navigate to see your statistics about your 'likes'. This is quite similar to the old insights, but in addition to the gender, age and geographic locations of your community, you can also view 'where your likes came from'. This is quite useful to know whether people liked your page from their newsfeed, on your website, or after visiting your page; all this provided for you on a timeline. This will be especially useful to gauge which mediums of promotions are performing best, such as 'paid ads', special offers for the Facebook community and website content updates (do people like your page once they arrive at a new product page or a post etc.).

Under reach, again you're provided with demographic data, but what's even more interesting is the stats about 'how you reached people' and also your top referrers.

 

As I mentioned before, the 'Talking about this' section is probably the most important in terms of gauging your social media health. These graphs provide you with data about the number of 'unique people' who created a story about your page and also the number of 'unique people' who saw a story about your page published by their friend.

All this data and information is wonderful for an eMarketer, but how can you utilise this data in order to improve business performance and activity? Each business is unique and has different goals, which means that your social media strategy would also differ. However, one thing I believe will remain a constant, which is even more emphasised by all these metrics, is the consistent supply of unique and useful content and engagement with your community. Using the plethora of data provided by Facebook, you can now gauge what type of content resonates with your community and what doesn't.  This is by far the most generous Facebook has ever been in terms of providing data to page owners. Hopefully this will provide eMarketers with greater direction on their social media campaigns.

© SEOptimise - Download our free business guide to blogging whitepaper and sign-up for the SEOptimise monthly newsletter. Behold Facebook's New 'Page Insights' Dashboard

Related posts:

  1. Facebook Insights for Domains – Measuring Social Media Success
  2. How Important are Facebook Likes for Search? – Presentation from SMX London
  3. A Summary of Major F8 Facebook Updates

Seth's Blog : A great way to give thanks...

A great way to give thanks...

for the privileges we've got is to do important work.

Your job, your internet access, your education, your role in a civilized society... all of them are a platform, a chance to do art, a way for you to give back and to honor those that enabled you to get to this point.

For every person reading this there are a thousand people (literally a thousand) in underprivileged nations and situations that would love to have your slot. Don't waste it.

 

More Recent Articles

[You're getting this note because you subscribed to Seth Godin's blog.]

Don't want to get this email anymore? Click the link below to unsubscribe.




Your requested content delivery powered by FeedBlitz, LLC, 9 Thoreau Way, Sudbury, MA 01776, USA. +1.978.776.9498

 

miercuri, 23 noiembrie 2011

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Irish Prime Minister Begs EU for Debt Relief in Disgraceful Performance

Posted: 23 Nov 2011 08:11 PM PST

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard is back on track with Ireland demands debt relief, warns on EU treaties
The Irish government has suddenly complicated the picture by requesting debt relief from as a reward for upholding the integrity of the EU financial system after the Lehman crisis, though there is no explicit linkage between the two issues.

"We carried an undue burden for protecting the European banking system from contagion," said finance minister Michael Noonan.

"We are looking at ways to reduce the debt. We would like to see our European colleagues address this in a positive manner. Wherever there is a reckless borrower, there is also a reckless lender," he said, alluding to German, French, British and Dutch banks.

Mr Noonan hinted that Dublin is asking for some of interested relief on a €31bn EU promissory noted linked to the Anglo Irish fiasco, among other matters.

Mr Noonan said Ireland's public mood has turned very sour.

"We have indicated to Europe's authorities that it will be difficult to get the Irish public to pass a referendum on treaty change," he said.

Mr Noonan said the country will stay the course with unbending austerity, even though nominal gross national product (GNP) has already contracted by 22pc. Public wages have fallen 12pc on average under Ireland's "internal devaluation" policy to regain competitiveness within EMU. There are likely to be further wage cuts in the December budget.

"We have to face reality. There is no painless way, no soft option: we're going to cut spending drastically, but with social cohesion. We don't want situation we see in Greece with people on streets and the foundations of state under threat. We're not going that route."
Will, Not May

Pritchard summed up the entire situation quite nicely in his opening lead "Europe's plans for treaty changes to enforce fiscal discipline in the eurozone may fall foul of popular anger in Ireland unless the EU creditor states agree to share more of the pain."

My one quibble is with the word "may". The correct word is will.

I am quite disappointed that it took Ireland this long. Voters smashed the Fianna Fail (FF) party to smithereens in February (see Massive Rout in Irish Elections; Collision Course with the EU; Default the Best Option for Ireland), to teary-eyed outgoing politicians, only to see incoming party Fine Gael, led by incoming prime minister Enda Kenny, do the exact same thing FF would have done: bail out German and French banks at the expense of Irish taxpayers.

Quite frankly this is maddening. What the hell good are elections if the only choice by either party is to bail out the banks? Worse yet, in Ireland's situation, it is foreign banks that are bailed out.

Enda Kenny "Pleads" for Help

Actually, Kenny did not "demand" debt relief, he begged for it. Moreover he is willing to kiss ass to get it.

The Wall Street Journal reports Irish PM Kenny: Must Meet Targets To Win Back Economic Sovereignty
Ireland will have to meet the austerity budget targets set by its bailout lenders if the country is to get its economic sovereignty back, Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny said Tuesday.

He told the Irish parliament that looming budget measures will be as fair as possible to balance the requirements of its European Union and International Monetary Fund lenders while protecting the most vulnerable in Irish society.

"Clearly, if we are to have our economic sovereignty back we can't go on as we were," Kenny said.
If Kenny had any backbone at all he would have told the IMF and EU to "go to hell" just as Icelandic voters did and more importantly, just as Irish voters expected. Instead, Kenny wimped-out to the exact same demands from the IMF and EU that Fianna Fail would have done.

Public Mood Turns Sour

Mr Noonan, Ireland's finance minister said "Ireland's public mood has turned very sour".

Of course it has. Wimps like Kenny and Noonan have caved into every EU and IMF demand, at the expense of Irish taxpayers, in spite of an overwhelming election to do something different!

I repeat what I said earlier today in Eventually, Will Come a Time When ....

Eventually, there will come a time when a populist office-seeker will stand before the voters, hold up a copy of the EU treaty and (correctly) declare all the "bail out" debt foisted on their country to be null and void. That person will be elected.

Kenny did not do what he was elected to do. He should be kicked out of office on his ass and replaced by someone who will.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Eventually, Will Come a Time When ....

Posted: 23 Nov 2011 11:46 AM PST

Inquiring minds note that French presidential candidate Le Pen calls for France to quit euro
Marine Le Pen, the leader of France's far-right National Front, has made abandoning the euro one of the pillars of her presidential election campaign, launching a powerful attack on the ailing single currency as she seeks to bolster her already strong showing in the opinion polls.

Presenting her "presidential project", Ms Le Pen said Europe should give up the euro, which had "asphyxiated our economies, killed our industries and choked our jobs" for years, as well as causing France to accumulate "Himalayan" debts. In any case, she added, the country should prepare a planned exit from the currency union. "We need to anticipate the collapse of the euro rather than suffer from the collapse of the euro," she said in a television interview on Sunday.
Le Pen supports misguided policies on trade and numerous other issues. However, protectionists and isolationists will eventually win the way, on one issue and one issue alone.

Last April, in Finland, the "True Finn" party soared from obscurity based on one simple idea: stopping bailouts of euro-zone member states. The rest of the "True Finn" platform was cancerous, yet meaningless. Voters everywhere are fed up with bailouts.

My Point

Eventually, there will come a time when a populist office-seeker will stand before the voters, hold up a copy of the EU treaty and (correctly) declare all the "bail out" debt foisted on their country to be null and void. That person will be elected.

Le Pen may be too early, and France may not be that country, but the time will come.

Greece, Finland, Germany, Belgium, and even France are possibilities. All it will take, is for one charismatic person, timing social mood correctly, to say precisely one right thing at exactly the right time. It will happen.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Video: German Failed Bond Auction, 6 Billion Offered, 3.6 Billion Takers; Contagion Spreads From Periphery to Outer Core, Then from Outer Core to Inner Core

Posted: 23 Nov 2011 09:17 AM PST

No doubt emergency meets are underway in numerous countries right now following a failed German bond auction. Bond auctions have failed before, but not in Germany (at least by this much), and never at a worse time.



Link if above video does not play: German Bond Auction Disaster

Key Ideas Expressed in Video

"What people are saying is Germany is going to have to pay the bill. ... Just possibly, today is the day people may have decided German bonds are not the safe haven they thought they were. ... It's all about confidence isn't it?"

It's actually about solvency, not liquidity, not confidence. Solvency issues in Greece, Spain, and Portugal have now affected the core.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Understanding the Problem, Understanding the Solution, and Understanding Who is to Blame are Three Different Things

Posted: 23 Nov 2011 03:58 AM PST

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard speaks of the Self-serving myths of Europe's neo-Calvinists

In his article he chastises Germany for its role in the Eurozone mess, citing Germany's Wolfgang Schauble and the northern neo-Calvinists. Pritchard also praises a report by Simon Tilford and Philip Whyte on how stricter rules threaten the eurozone.

There is certainly much in the report that I agree with, primarily a description of the problem. Unfortunately, there is even more I disagree with, notably the solution.

Ideas I agree with:

  1. Creditor countries cannot be absolved of all blame.
  2. If the eurozone had been a fully-fledged fiscal union, it would not be in its current predicament. (Mish: It would be a different predicament, likely much worse)
  3. The current crisis is not simply a tale of fiscal irresponsibility and lost competitiveness in the eurozone's geographical periphery. It is also about the unsustainable macroeconomic imbalances to which the launch of the euro contributed (in creditor and debtor countries)
  4. The challenges presented by Greece were always going to be daunting, given the dysfunctional nature of its political economy.
  5. The medicine prescribed to Greece – which was partly motivated by an urge to punish it and to take a stand against moral hazard – was doomed to failure.
  6. A year's worth of punishing austerity and contracting activity has only succeeded in pushing Greece deeper into insolvency.
  7. The eurozone will not emerge from the debt crisis without economic growth.
  8. It is now clear that a currency shared by fiscally sovereign member states is more vulnerable to losses of confidence than a monetary union that is more fully integrated.
  9. A familiar pattern has now set in. Under market duress, leaders hold an emergency summit and announce an agreement designed to restore confidence once and for all.
  10. After an initial bout of euphoria, financial markets digest the contents of the agreement, conclude that it does not resolve the underlying problems, and the cycle starts all over again. Each agreement buys less time and the stakes become larger with every summit.

Hopefully we can all agree on those 10 points. The problem is the Euro was fatally flawed from the beginning.

No in Many Languages

No currency union has ever survived without there being a fiscal union at the same time. Is Germany to blame for this?

I say Nein, Non, Ochi, Iie, Nie, Nej, and of course No.

Who is to Blame?

The rules of the Maastricht Treaty were known by everyone at the outset and there were many architects of the Euro idea including Jean-Claude Trichet. In that regard it makes as much sense to blame France as it does Germany.

Moreover, countries could have accepted or rejected the treaty. Every country had a vote (or many votes - as politicians crammed the Euro down their citizens' throats whether they wanted it or not).

The UK chose wisely, other countries did not, including Germany. Every country stupid enough to enter this untenable arrangement can look in the mirror and blame themselves.

The Non-Solutions

Unfortunately, the rest of the report borders on the nonsensical, notably "All eurozone countries should therefore finance debt by issuing bonds which would be jointly guaranteed by all of them."

The authors then proceed to discuss all the inherent problems with the idea including "moral hazards", borrowing targets, etc, stating "A dogmatic target of budgetary balance four years hence, irrespective of a country's position in the economic cycle, would achieve little."

The authors then have to figure out a way around dogmatic targets, proposing "rules should be set with reference to the cyclically-adjusted fiscal position for each member state."

That of course creates another problem as to how to do that, coming to the conclusion that 17 votes is too many, and a creditor-dominated board would not work, but "A board of nine economists, from the big eurozone economies, the European Commission, the European Central Bank (ECB) and the OECD might form a good basis."

Good grief.

Wait, I am not done yet. The authors freely admit "the issuance of eurobonds will not prevent debt crises in the absence of steps to reduce trade imbalances within the eurozone" then attempt to dream up solutions to that problem.

That idea makes as much sense as attempting to solve a trade disparity between California and Indiana.

We are still not done yet. The authors see a need to "set up a jointly-funded, eurozone-wide deposit protection scheme."

Finally, the authors conclude "The ECB's mandate is too restrictive. The central bank must guard against excessive inflation. But its fear of inflation blinds it to the much more serious threats confronting the eurozone economy."

Apparently Europe needs a "mandate" but one that is meaningless, and allows the central bank to print at will.

Conclusion


The authors ramble on about various problems, real and imagined, then conclude with ...
Eurozone leaders now face a choice between two unpalatable alternatives. Either they accept that the eurozone is institutionally flawed and do what is necessary to turn it into a more stable arrangement. This will require some of them to go beyond what their voters seem prepared to allow, and to accept that a certain amount of 'rule-breaking' is necessary in the short term if the eurozone is to survive intact. Or they can stick to the fiction that confidence can be restored by the adoption (and enforcement) of tougher rules. This option will condemn the eurozone to self-defeating policies that hasten defaults, contagion and eventual break-up.
Indeed, Not

Pritchard, cited the above paragraph and finished with "Indeed. Read it all"

I did read it all and nearly threw up at the self-serving myth there are only two options.

  1. Break the rules
  2. Stick to self-defeating policies

There is a third option and Pritchard should know it well: Plan for a breakup of the Eurozone and make banks write down bad investments. Bondholders will take a hit, but they deserve to. It is time to stop bailing out banks at the expense of taxpayers.

The report by Simon Tilford and Philip Whyte with all their convoluted solutions culminating in the creation of a "fiscal nanny-zone" should be enough to convince anyone the Euro is not worth saving.

Countries that disagree can keep the damn thing. If France wants a fiscal nanny-state and unlimited printing by the ECB, fine. Let France have it.

True Solution

The best solution and the one I propose is for Germany to leave the Eurozone. I am quite sure other countries in Northern Europe would follow. The Euro will still survive in my proposal, and France can be king of the nanny-hill if it elects to stay in.

Yes this would be disruptive. However, it would give the Euro-fools what they want and Northern European voters (not politicians) what they want.

Michael Pettis outlined a compelling case why Germany exiting the Eurozone is the best option. Please see Eurozone Breakup Logistics (Never Believe Anything Until It's Officially Denied) for details.

The Euroskeptics Were Right

The Euroskeptics were right, straight from the beginning. Pritchard was among those skeptics. He was right then. He was also correct in a major way when he stated the German supreme court would not allow Eurobonds or ECB printing.

Please see Germany's Top Judge Throws Major Monkey Wrench Into Leveraged EFSF Machinery, Demands New Constitution and Popular Referendum for Further Powers for details.

Unfortunately he is wrong now. In more ways than one.

  1. Pritchard is wrong on who to blame
  2. Pritchard is wrong to perpetrate the myth the euro can be saved
  3. Pritchard is wrong about fearing deflation (a natural state of affairs actually, it is only fractional reserve lending and mountains of debt that bring upon such fears. The solution is to get rid of central bankers and end fractional reserve lending)
  4. Pritchard is wrong to not fear inflation in the scenario proposed by Tilford and Whyte.

Eurobond, Unlimited Printing Foolishness

I am not the only one who thinks the eurobond, unlimited printing idea is beyond foolish. John Hussman had an excellent writeup on Monday Why the ECB Won't (and Shouldn't) Just Print
Over the past week, we've heard all sorts of propositions that the European Central Bank (ECB) "must" begin printing money to bail out Italy and other countries, because "there is no other option." There are three basic difficulties with this idea.

The first is that ECB buying might help to address immediate liquidity issues of distressed European countries, but it would not address long-term solvency issues, and would in fact make them worse.

The second is that the ECB, under existing European treaties, has no such authority, and the prohibitions against it are very explicit. Changing that would be far more difficult than many market participants seem to believe, because it would require an explicit and unanimous change in the EU Treaties that AAA rated countries such as Germany and Finland vehemently oppose.

The third difficulty is that even if the ECB was to buy the debt of distressed European countries with printed money, the inflationary effects would likely be far more swift than anything we've seen in the United States. This would not "save" the euro, but would simply destroy it by other means.
Hussman builds an excellent case.

I will conclude the way Pritchard did: "Indeed. Read it all".

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Banks Make Plans for Euro-Zone Split

Posted: 23 Nov 2011 01:41 AM PST

A few weeks ago many thought a breakup up the eurozone was "unthinkable". Today, "disaster plans" are being made by numerous banks to allow for just that event.

The Wall Street Journal reports Banks Ponder Euro-Zone Split
A key part of the world's foreign-exchange trading infrastructure is bracing itself for the possibility of a breakup of the euro zone, the latest sign investor concerns about the Continent's debt crisis are on the rise.

CLS Bank International, which operates a platform in which banks settle most of their currency trades, is running "stress tests" to prepare for the possible dissolution of the euro, according to people familiar with the situation.

Some of the 63 banks that co-own CLS are making similar plans. "We always plan for contingencies," said a senior executive at one of the largest currency-dealing banks.

New York-based CLS is by far the biggest name in the currency market known to be making preparations for such a scenario. Analysts with Japanese bank Nomura Holdings said Friday that a euro breakup is a "very real risk," while HSBC Holdings analysts told clients on Tuesday that it's "not unimaginable" for countries to leave the euro zone.
This is the kind of discussion and action that is needed because a breakup appears inevitable.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


2-Year Italian Bond Yield Hits 7.27%, Yield Curve Inverts; Italy, Belgium, Spanish Bonds Smacked

Posted: 23 Nov 2011 12:20 AM PST

Sovereign debt yields and spreads are under renewed pressure today in Italy, Belgium, and Spain.

Sovereign Debt Table 10-Year Bonds
CountryChangeYieldSpread
Germany+.021.930.00
France+.043.571.64
Spain+.016.614.68
Italy+.066.884.95
Portugal-.0211.289.35
Belgium+.065.143.21
Ireland+.478.216.28

Sovereign Debt Table 2-Year Bonds
CountryChangeYieldSpread
Germany-.010.380.00
France+.061.781.40
Spain+.085.835.45
Italy+.077.066.68
Portugal-.3514.6314.25
Belgium+.104.394.01
Ireland+.028.388.00

Note the inverted yield curve for Italy and Belgium.

Italian 2-year bonds were smacked hard today, opening at 7.27% before calming down to 7.06%. The 10-year yield opened at 6.85 and surged to 6.98 before calming down to 6.88%. 2-year Italian bonds are not only above 7%, but also yield more than 10-year bonds.

Note: At 4:13 ET 2-Year Italian bonds are back up to 7.21%, and climbing way faster than 10-Yr bonds at 6.91%

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List