http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/18indicationseuropesuckinglifeofglobaleconomy.htm
Summer vacation is over and things
are about to get very interesting in Europe. Most Americans don't realize
this, but much of Europe shuts down for the entire month of August. I
wish we had something similar in the United States. But now millions of
Europeans are returning from their extended family vacations and the fun is
about to begin. During August economic conditions continued to degenerate
in Europe, but I figured that it wouldn't be until after August that the
European debt crisis would take center stage once again. And as I wrote
about last week, if there is going to be a financial panic, it typically
happens in the fall. The stock market has seen quite a
nice rally over the summer, and many investors are nervous that we could see a
significant "correction" very soon. The month of September has
been the absolute worst month for stock performance over the past 50 years, and
it has also been the absolute worst month for stock performance over the past 100 years as
well. Of course that does not guarantee that anything is going to happen
this year. But things in Europe continue to get worse. Unemployment
rates are spiking, manufacturing activity is slowing down, housing prices are
crashing and major financial institutions are failing. What is happening
in Europe right now appears to be an even worse version of what happened to the
United States back in 2008.
But
most Americans aren't too concerned about what is happening in Europe.
In
fact, most Americans don't believe that a European financial collapse would be
much of a problem for us.
Well,
just remember what happened back in 2008. When the U.S. financial system
started coming apart at the seams it sparked a devastating worldwide recession
which was felt in every corner of the globe.
If
the European financial system implodes, the consequences could be even worse.
Why?
Europe
has a larger population than the United States does.
Europe
has a larger economy than the United States does.
Europe
has a much, much larger banking system than the United States does.
If
Europe experiences a financial collapse, the entire globe will feel the pain.
And
considering how weak the U.S. economy already is, it would not take much to push us over the
edge.
What
is going on in Europe right now is a very, very big deal and people need to pay
attention.
The
following are 18 indications that Europe has become an economic black hole
which is going to suck the life out of the global economy....
#1 The unemployment
rate in France is up to 10 percent, and the French media is buzzing about the
fact that the number of unemployed French workers has now hit the 3 million mark.
#2 The French
government has just announced the
nationalization of its second largest mortgage lender. Additional
bailouts are likely on the way.
#3 French automaker
PSA Peugeot Citroen has announced that it will be cutting more than 10,000 jobs.
But of course major layoff announcements like this are coming out of Europe
almost every day now.
#4 Home prices in
France are falling rapidly and the recent election of a socialist president has
created a bit of a panic in the French
housing market....
British people with homes in
France were today warned that the property market is in 'free fall'.
A combination of factors including
the election of a tax-and-spend Socialist government means that prices are
tumbling.
It means an end to the boom years,
when thousands of Britons poured money into rental or retirement investments
across the Channel.
#5 A slow-motion bank
run is happening in Spain. The amount of money being pulled out of the
Spanish banking system is absolutely unprecedented. The following is from
a recent Zero Hedge article....
The central bank of Spain just released the net
capital outflow numbers and they are disastrous. During the
month of June alone $70.90 billion left the Spanish banks and in July it was
worse at $92.88 billion which is 4.7% of total bank deposits in Spain. For the
first seven months of the year the outflow adds up to $368.80 billion or 17.7%
of the total bank deposits of Spain and the trajectory of the outflow is
increasing dramatically. Reality is reality and Spain is experiencing a
full-fledged run on its banks whether anyone in Europe wants to admit it or
not.
If
this pace keeps up, more than 600 billion dollars will be pulled out of Spanish
banks by the end of the year.
Keep
in mind that the GDP of Spain for all of 2011 was just 1.49 trillion dollars.
So
by the end of this year we could see the equivalent of more than 40
percent of Spanish GDP pulled out of Spanish banks and sent out of the
country.
In
case you were wondering, yes, that is a nightmare scenario.
#6 The unemployment
rate in Spain is over 25 percent. The youth unemployment rate
in Spain is well over 50 percent.
Spain is a tinderbox that could be set ablaze at any moment.
#7 The yield on 10
year Spanish bonds is up to 6.85 percent. This is an unsustainable level,
and if rates don't come down on Spanish debt soon it is inevitable that Spain
will end up just like Greece.
#8 On Monday it was
announced that Spanish banking giant Bankia will be getting an emergency
"cash injection" of between 4 and 5
billion euros. Apparently "cash injection" sounds better to
the politicians than "a bailout" does.
#9 The housing crash
in Spain just continues to get worse. It is being reported that some
homes in Spain are being sold at a 70% discount from where they were at
the peak of the market back in 2006. At this point there are approximately 2 million
unsold homes in Spain.
#10 There are persistent
rumors that the government of Spain will soon be forced to officially ask
for a bailout from the rest of Europe. But who is going to bail them
out? Most of the other governments of the eurozone are on the verge of
bankruptcy themselves.
#11 Manufacturing
activity in Europe has contracted for 13 months in a row. The following
is from a recent Reuters report....
The downturn that began in the
smaller periphery members of the 17-nation bloc is now sweeping through Germany
and France and the situation remained dire in the region's third and fourth
biggest economies of Italy and Spain.
"Larger nations like France
and Germany remain in reverse gear... the (manufacturing) sector is on course
to act as a drag on gross domestic product in the third quarter," said Rob
Dobson, senior economist at data collator Markit.
Markit's final Purchasing
Managers' Index (PMI) for the manufacturing sector fell from an earlier flash
reading of 45.3 to 45.1, above July's three-year low of 44.0, but notching its
13th month below the 50 mark separating growth from contraction.
#12 Chinese exports
to the EU declined by 16.2 percent in July. U.S.
exports to Europe have been steadily falling as well.
#13 Slovenia and
Cyprus are two other eurozone members
that are in desperate need of bailout money. The dominoes just keep
falling and nobody seems to be able to come up with a plan to "fix"
Europe.
#14 Even the
"strong" economies in Europe are being dragged down now. For
example, unemployment in Germany has risen for five months in a row.
#15 According to one
recent poll, only about one-fourth of all Germans want Greece to
remain a part of the eurozone. The odds of a breakup of the euro seem to
rise with each passing day.
#16 It is now
estimated that bad loans make up approximately 20 percent
of all domestic loans in the Greek banking system at this point.
#17 The suicide rate
in Greece is more than 30 percent higher
than it was last year. People are becoming very desperate in Greece and
there is no end in sight to the economic depression that they are going
through.
#18 Large U.S.
companies have been rapidly getting prepared for a Greek exit from the
eurozone. The following is from a recent New York Times article....
Even as Greece desperately tries
to avoid defaulting on its debt, American companies are preparing for what was
once unthinkable: that Greece could soon be forced to leave the euro zone.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch has
looked into filling trucks with cash and sending them over the Greek border so
clients can continue to pay local employees and suppliers in the event money is
unavailable. Ford has configured its computer systems so they will be able to
immediately handle a new Greek currency.
Every
time European leaders get together they declare that they have "a
plan" that will solve the problems that Europe is experiencing, but as we
have seen things in Europe just continue to get worse with no end in sight.
A
key date is coming up in the middle of this month. On September 12th,
Germany's Constitutional Court will determine the fate of the recent fiscal
pact and the ESM. According to UniCredit
global chief economist Erik Nielsen, if the court rules against the fiscal
pact and the ESM the fallout will be catastrophic....
"If they were to surprise us
by striking down Germany's participation, I would think it'd be an utter
bloodbath in markets"
But
that is not the only thing that could set off a full-blown panic in the
financial markets.
The
truth is that Europe is teetering on the edge.
One
wrong move and it is going to be 1929 all over again.
As
I have maintained all along, the next wave of the economic collapse is rapidly
approaching, and this time the epicenter for the crisis is going to be in
Europe.
But
that does not mean that things are going to be easier for the United States
than last time. We have never even come close to
recovering from the last recession. Most Americans families are just
barely getting by. In fact, 77 percent of them are living
paycheck to paycheck at least part of the time.
Right
now there are millions of Americans that have lost their jobs
and their homes in recent years and that feel forsaken by society.
After
this next wave hits us there will be tens of millions of
Americans feeling the pain of economic desperation.
The
last wave of the economic collapse hurt us.
This
next wave is going to absolutely devastate us.
Watch
what is happening in Europe very carefully. What Greece, Spain, Italy and
France are experiencing right now is going to hit us soon enough.