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U.S. Household Worth Declines by $149 Billion
Sep 16th, 2011 14:32 by News

16-Sep (Bloomberg) — Household wealth in the U.S. dropped in the second quarter for the first time in a year, hurt by falling share prices and declining home values.

Net worth for households and non-profit groups decreased by $149 billion, a 1 percent drop at an annual pace, to $58.5 trillion, the Federal Reserve said today in its flow of funds report from Washington. It rose at a 7.4 percent rate in the previous three months. Housing wealth decreased for a fourth consecutive quarter from April to June.

[source]

CHART OF THE DAY: FINALLY, Investment Advisors Are Capitulating And Buying Gold
Sep 16th, 2011 14:19 by News

16-Sep (BusinessInsider) — Here’s a fascinating little nugget.

A recent Schwab survey of 911 registered investment advisors (RIAs) asked respondents what asset class they were likely to allocate more money to going forward.

As you can see, there’s almost no increase in enthusiasm for any area except… gold.

[source]

PG View: This is a trend that we here at Centennial Precious Metals have been witnessing first hand. We have a marked increase in the number of inquiries from investment advisers and wealth managers that are looking to offer physical gold to their clients. The smart ones are looking to get out in front of the rising demand for physical metal, but for many that demand has already materialized and they are scrambling to react.

Yet still only 10% of survey respondents said they would likely allocate more to gold. Is that even remotely reflective of a bubble? I think not.

US taxpayers could be on hook for Europe bailout
Sep 16th, 2011 13:01 by News

16-Sep (MSNBC) — The U.S. is coming to Europe’s financial rescue.

So far, America’s role is fairly limited. But if the crisis continues to grow and the U.S. takes on a wider role, U.S. consumers and taxpayers could feel a bigger impact. The biggest exposure could come from America’s status as the single largest source of money for the International Monetary Fund.

The latest round of American financial assistance came Thursday with a promise by the Federal Reserve to swap as many dollars for euros as European bankers need. In the short run, those transactions won’t have much impact because the central banks are simply swapping currencies of equal value. If the move helps avert a wider crisis, it could help spare the global economy from another recession.

But over the long term, consumers could feel the impact of central bankers flooding the financial system with cash, according to John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics.

[source]

A Band-Aid for a cancer patient
Sep 16th, 2011 12:48 by News

16-Sep (papermoneycollapse.com) — This was another hectic week for financial markets, and nerves were calmed somewhat over the past 24 hours with another liquidity injection from the central banks – this time the provision of dollars from the U.S. Fed channelled through a few other central banks, most importantly the ECB. This is certainly not a solution but again the doctoring of symptoms. Pumping ever more fiat money into the system to avoid – or rather postpone – a much needed recalibration will not solve the underlying malaise. Four years into the crisis the banks still need emergency funding. That is a damning indictment that financial structures are far from sustainable.

…A default of Greece now appears very likely. This is a positive development. Positive as it points toward shrinkage – toward smaller debt, toward a smaller Greek state, toward an important lesson for banks: Don’t think that lending to the state is without risk!

…The biggest risk to the euro is not a Greek default but the markets waking up to the bleak long-term outlook for the solvency of the core, Germany and France.

…Thus, we will get some liquidation (Greek debt) but also some re-liquefying (big banks). It will not be the end of the euro – but not the end of the financial crisis either.

[source]

PG View: I concur with this assessment. The contingency plan to protect the German banks is presumably in place. Liquidity lines have been established. Payment of the next bailout tranche for Greece has been forestalled until October. Seems like Greece is about to get pitched under the bus…

Consumer Hope for Future Hits Lowest Level Since 1980
Sep 16th, 2011 10:52 by News

16-Sep (CNBC) — Consumer sentiment inched up in early September, but Americans remained gloomy about the future with a gauge of expectations falling to the lowest level since 1980, a survey released Friday showed.

[source]

China to ‘liquidate’ US Treasuries, not dollars
Sep 16th, 2011 10:21 by News

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
16-Sep (The Telegraph) — The debt markets have been warned.

A key rate setter-for China’s central bank let slip – or was it a slip? – that Beijing aims to run down its portfolio of US debt as soon as safely possible.

“The incremental parts of our of our foreign reserve holdings should be invested in physical assets,” said Li Daokui at the World Economic Forum in the very rainy city of Dalian – former Port Arthur from Russian colonial days.

“We would like to buy stakes in Boeing, Intel, and Apple, and maybe we should invest in these types of companies in a proactive way.”

Once the US Treasury market stabilizes we can liquidate more of our holdings of Treasuries,” he said.

[source]

PG View: Out of US Treasuries and into more “physical assets.” Physical assets like gold perhaps?

Europe Ministers Rule Out Stimulus, Offer No Bank Aid
Sep 16th, 2011 09:49 by News

16-Sep (Bloomberg) — European finance ministers ruled out efforts to prop up the faltering economy and gave no indication of providing aid for lenders to go along with yesterday’s liquidity lifeline from the European Central Bank.

Clashing with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, finance chiefs from the euro region said the 18-month debt crisis leaves no room for tax cuts or extra spending to spur an economy on the brink of stagnation.

“We have slightly different views from time to time with our U.S. colleagues when it comes to fiscal stimulus packages,” Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker told reporters after chairing today’s trans-Atlantic finance meeting in Wroclaw, Poland. “We don’t see any room for maneuver in the euro area which could allow us to launch new fiscal stimulus packages. That will not be possible.”

[source]

PG View: Basically, another meeting with no substantive moves to alter the course that Europe is on. There will be no fiscal stimulus. We’re going to defer any decision on Greece until next month, when the country will be once again on the precipice of default.

Morning Snapshot
Sep 16th, 2011 09:10 by News

16-Sep (USAGOLD) — Gold extended modestly lower in overseas trading, as European FinMins met in Poland for the latest round of discussions on how to save the euro. Once again, nothing of real substance seems to have come out of the meeting, which has prompted the yellow metal to rebound back to the $1800 zone.

In fact, the attendees decided to put off until October the final call on whether Greece will get the next tranche of their bailout, all but assuring that Greece will be taken right to the edge of the precipice once again and the market will be on tenterhooks for the next couple of weeks. You can deduce from this decision that the FinMins simply have no sense of urgency with regard to Greece, or there is no consensus that the next tranche will or should be forthcoming. As I think the markets have made it pretty clear that the Greek situation is urgent — the upcoming dollar liquidity wave notwithstanding — it’s pretty clear what the probable reason for the delay is…

This renewed sense of concern has tempered risk appetite, which was boosted earlier in the week by more jawboning that France and Germany are prepared to do whatever is necessary to save Greece and the EU; along with a coordinated agreement by major central banks to flood the eurozone with dollars the staunch the developing liquidity crisis that is a byproduct of an anticipated Greek default.

• University of Michigan sentiment (prelim) rose to 57.8 in Sep, above market expectations, vs 55.7 Aug.
• US TIC net inflows $9.5 bln (ex-swap) in Jul, up from $3.4 bln Jun; Trsys +$16.2 bln.
• Eurozone current account (sa) -€12.9 bln in Jul, vs -€7.1 bln in Jun.
• Italy trade balance – Total €1.4 bln in Jul, vs -€1.8 bln in Jun.
• Eurozone trade balance (sa) -€2.5 bln in Jul, vs -€2.5 bln in Jun.

Geithner presses euro zone to leverage bailout fund
Sep 16th, 2011 07:57 by News

16-Sep (Reuters) — U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner holds talks with European finance ministers on Friday on the possibility of leveraging the euro zone’s bailout fund to help resolve the debt crisis.

Washington set up an emergency fund to support U.S. lenders during the global credit crisis. With signs of stress in Europe now, the European Central Bank and those of Britain, Japan and Switzerland joined forces on Thursday to reintroduce three-month dollar liquidity operations in the fourth quarter.

[source]

PG View: More leverage? Really?! Excess leverage and mispriced risk pretty much caused the crisis. So by all means let’s gear-up and try and drive yields lower.

Europeans Struggle to Clear Hurdles to Latest Euro Rescue Plan
Sep 16th, 2011 07:47 by News

16-Sep (The New York Times) — European finance ministers struggled Friday to resolve hurdles that are holding up their latest rescue plan for the euro, as the United States Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner warned that failure to act could leave “the fate of Europe” to outsiders.

The meeting comes at a time of continued anxiety in the financial markets, and ahead of a looming deadline for Greece’s foreign creditors to decide whether to release the next installment of its original bailout. If Greece does not get the €8 billion, or $11 billion, tranche, in October, it could be forced to default on its debts, with potentially catastrophic repercussions for global growth.

[source]

Dollar deluge shores up banks
Sep 16th, 2011 07:34 by News

15-Sep (Financial Times) — The promise of unlimited dollars from central banks has buoyed shares in Europe’s banks. However, as James Mackintosh, investment editor, warns, the liquidity worry may offer relief but the underlying solvency threat of sovereign default remains.

[video]

Eurozone ministers defer Greek loan decision
Sep 16th, 2011 07:24 by News

16-Sep (Financial Times) — Eurozone finance ministers have put off until October a decision on whether to grant Greece an €8bn tranche of loans the country is relying on to pay its bills.

The decision sets up another nail-biting scenario in which Athens will be scrambling to convince fellow eurozone governments, as well as the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank, to release the loans before it runs out of cash in the middle of next month to pay the salaries of civil servants and other basic obligations.

[source]

Gold modestly higher at 1790.00 (+4.40). Silver 40.152 (+0.484). Dollar better on euro softness. Stocks called lower. Treasuries steady to higher.
Sep 16th, 2011 06:59 by News
Morning Snapshot
Sep 15th, 2011 09:24 by News

15-Sep (USAGOLD) — Gold has dipped back below the $1800 level on fresh reassurances from France and Germany that Greece will get the next tranche of bailout funds. For good measure, the ECB announced coordinated central bank dollar liquidity measures in an effort to quell the mounting liquidity crisis that has sprung from the European sovereign debt crisis.

The euro has rebounded to regain the 1.39 handle and European banking shares have gotten some relief on the news that the ECB, Fed, SNB, BoE and BoJ will all be pumping dollars into the system in three separate operations on 12-Oct, 09-Nov, and 07-Dec. The anticipated flood of dollars has heightened risk appetite once again, and while weighing on gold initially, the relentless expansion of ‘paper’ liquidity is a primary long-term driver of gold price appreciation relative to that paper.

• US Philly Fed index rose to -17.5 in Sep, below market expectations of -15.0, vs -30.7 in Aug.
• US industrial production +0.2% in Aug, in-line with expectations; cap use 77.4%.
• ECB will offer 3-mth dollar liquidity operations in conjunction with Fed, SNB, BoE, BoJ.
• US CPI +0.4% in Aug, above market expectations of +0.2%, vs +0.5% in Jul. Core +0.2%, in-line with expectations.
• US current account gap narrowed to -$118.0 bln in Q2, on top of market expectations, vs -$119.5 bln in Q1.
• US NY Empire State Index sank to -8.82 in Sep, well below market expectations of -2.3, vs -7.7 in Aug.
• US initial jobless claims surged 11k to 428k in week ended 10-Sep, well above market expectations of 412k. Prev week revised higher to 417k.
• SNB reaffirms it will buy unlimited amounts of currency to defend EUR-CHF peg, citing deflation risks; sees inflation at just 0.4% this year.
• SNB holds steady on monetary policy. 3-month Libor target rate 0.00%.
• UK retail sales -0.2% in Aug, above expectations, vs +0.2% in Jul; unch y/y.
• Eurozone CPI +0.2% in Aug, in-line with expectations, vs -0.6% in Jul; +2.5% y/y. Core 1.2% y/y.
• Singapore retail sales (nominal) 10.7% y/y in Jul, vs 10.9% in Jun.
• RBNZ holds steady on official cash rate at 2.50%, in-line with expectations.

US Philly Fed index rose to -17.5 in Sep, below market expectations of -15.0, vs -30.7 in Aug.
Sep 15th, 2011 08:36 by News
Central Banks Boost Dollar Liquidity
Sep 15th, 2011 08:21 by News

15-Sep (The Wall Street Journal) — Five major central banks moved in concert Thursday to pump dollars into the European banking system by arranging three new funding operations, an action aimed at stemming a new liquidity crisis.

The ECB said that it will be joined by U.S. Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan and the Swiss National Bank to conduct three U.S. dollar liquidity-providing operations.

The action addresses an acute shortage of dollar availability as U.S. lenders withheld funds out of concern that the European banking system is over-exposed to the region’s government debt crisis.

[source]

Italy Facing Another Test As Moody’s Rating Decision Looms
Sep 15th, 2011 08:17 by News

14-Sep (The Wall Street Journal) — As the expected end of Moody’s review to possibly downgrade Italy’s sovereign debt rating closes in, market participants are bracing for another hit to that country’s bond market.

Moody’s Investors Service says ratings decisions are historically made within 90 days of putting a country on review for possible downgrade. Italy’s 90-day period closes at the end of this week, as Moody’s warned it might downgrade the country June 17. Moody’s declined to comment on the status of the review.

A potential downgrade comes at a difficult time for Italy and potentially the entire euro zone. Italy, the euro zone’s third-largest economy, is already reeling from a disappointing debt auction earlier this week. And the overall region’s health continues to hinge on whether Italy and Spain will need bailouts similar to those of Greece, Portugal and Ireland.

[source]

Banks use gold to get dollar funds
Sep 15th, 2011 07:30 by News

14-Sep (Financial Times) — European banks are rushing to use their gold to access much-needed dollar funding, in the latest sign of the growing liquidity crunch for the continent’s financial institutions.

Gold dealers and analysts said that there had been a strong move to lend gold in the market in exchange for dollars in the past week, accelerating in recent days.

[source]

PG View: Maybe this morning’s announcement of a new coordinated central bank dollar liquidity scheme will end the European banks’ need to pledge their gold to get dollars.

ECB will offer 3-mth dollar liquidity operations in conjunction with Fed, SNB, BoE, BoJ.
Sep 15th, 2011 07:27 by News
World economy in danger zone: Zoellick
Sep 15th, 2011 07:12 by News

15-Sep (Reuters) — World Bank President Robert Zoellick said on Wednesday the world had entered a new economic danger zone and Europe, Japan and the United States all needed to make hard decisions to avoid dragging down the global economy.

“Unless Europe, Japan, and the United states can also face up to responsibilities they will drag down not only themselves, but the global economy,” Zoellick said in speech at George Washington University.

[source]

US CPI +0.4% in Aug, above market expectations of +0.2%, vs +0.5% in Jul. Core +0.2%, in-line with expectations.
Sep 15th, 2011 06:44 by News
US current account gap narrowed to -$118.0 bln in Q2, on top of market expectations, vs -$119.5 bln in Q1.
Sep 15th, 2011 06:43 by News
US NY Empire State Index sank to -8.82 in Sep, well below market expectations of -2.3, vs -7.7 in Aug.
Sep 15th, 2011 06:42 by News
US initial jobless claims surged 11k to 428k in week ended 10-Sep, well above market expectations of 412k. Prev week revised higher to 417k.
Sep 15th, 2011 06:41 by News
Germany, France Signal Support for Greece
Sep 15th, 2011 06:33 by News

15-Sep (Bloomberg) — Germany and France signaled they’re ready to keep supporting Greece as finance ministers prepare for a new round of crisis talks and Spain sold almost 4 billion euros ($5.5 billion) in bonds.

Global stocks rebounded after Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Nicolas Sarkozy said late yesterday that they’re “convinced” Greece will stay in the euro area. With global policy makers urging Europe to step up its crisis fight, officials meet in Wroclaw, Poland, tomorrow to discuss how they will implement the expansion of the euro region’s new bailout fund.

[source]

PG View: Just the latest in an endless stream of reassurances that all is going to be just fine with regard to Greece. Euro is higher along with stocks on revived risk appetite.

Gold lower at 1801.50 (-22.65). Silver 40.36 (-0.37). Dollar drops as euro back on the bid. Stocks called higher. Treasuries mostly lower.
Sep 15th, 2011 06:17 by News
The Daily Market Report
Sep 14th, 2011 13:05 by News

If There Was Any Doubt…


14-Sep (USAGOLD) — The yield on Greek 1-year money is trading in excess of 140% today; up dramatically from just a week ago when the 1-year yield was still below 100%. Clearly this is unsustainable and Greece is unquestionably on the verge of default, save for some massive infusion of funds that will negate Greece’s need to access global credit markets.

Nonetheless, EU leaders continue efforts to reassure the market. Today, French President Sarkozy echoed German chancellor Merkel in saying that France — like Germany — is prepared to do “everything possible to save Greece.” Yet the German constitutional court seems to have severely hamstrung at least Germany from participating in anything beyond what has already been approved. Without Germany, there will be no rescue for Greece and if Greece does indeed fail, the markets are rightfully concerned that haircuts on Greek debt will start toppling the dominoes.

Even US Treasury Secretary Geithner — who obviously has troubles of his own right here at home — took the time today to assure the world that there is “no chance” of European countries letting a major financial institution fall the way Lehman Brothers did three years ago this week. He went on to urge European leaders to act more forcefully to solve the continent’s escalating debt crisis. Glass houses Mr. Geithner…glass houses.

Today the Austrian parliament’s finance committee rejected a motion to fast-track a budget proposal to fund the country’s contribution to the expanded EFSF. Lawmakers in Austria apparently want more time to consider the implications. Time is not a luxury the EU can really afford; certainly not with respect to Greece.

China too seems to be retreating from recent pledges of support. President Wen Jiabao said today at the World Economic Forum in Dalian that “Countries should fulfill their responsibilities and put their own houses in order” before turning to China for further bailouts. The Greek house is about as “out of order” as a house can get, but they are most definitely not alone.

Not surprisingly, the latest news has intensified the pressure on European banking shares. Moody’s downgraded two of France’s largest banks, Societe Generale and Credit Agricole. The intensification of the liquidity crisis is evidenced by both the rise in Libor and the news that at least two banks tapped the ECB’s emergency dollar lending facility.

Despite the latest events, the euro remains underpinned, off its recent 7-month lows and gold remains consolidative within its recent range. The recent rise in the dollar, relative particularly to the euro, may be having a suppressive impact on the yellow metal; as perhaps has some deleveraging resulting from recent stock market losses. However, when push comes to shove, gold remains one of the last viable safe-haven assets remaining; and the trend remains unquestionably bullish.

Treasury Sec. Geithner: Europe Will Not Have A Lehman Brothers
Sep 14th, 2011 13:01 by News

14-Sep (Forbes) — Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner called for U.S. politicians to support America’s softening economic growth Wednesday, while also maintaining that the escalating debt crisis in Europe will not lead to a repeat of the 2008 meltdown.

There is “no chance” of European countries letting a major financial institution fall the way Lehman Brothers did three years ago this week, Geithner said at the CNBC Institutional Investor Delivering Alpha Conference in Manhattan Monday.

[source]

PG View: This is the same guy that assured us there was “no risk” of US credit downgrade back in April, just four months before the US was indeed downgraded by S&P.

Time for Germany to make its fateful choice
Sep 14th, 2011 10:42 by News

By Martin Wolf
13-Sep (Financial Times) — “Perhaps future historians will consider Maastricht a decisive step towards the emergence of a stable, European-wide power. Yet there is another, darker possibility … The effort to bind states together may lead, instead, to a huge increase in frictions among them. If so, the event would meet the classical definition of tragedy: hubris (arrogance), ate (folly); nemesis (destruction).”

I wrote the above in the Financial Times almost 20 years ago. My fears are coming true. This crisis has done more than demonstrate that the initial design of the eurozone was defective, as most intelligent analysts then knew; it has also revealed – and, in the process, exacerbated – a fundamental lack of trust, let alone sense of shared identity, among the peoples locked together in what has become a marriage of inconvenience.

…This is what I heard from an Italian policymaker: “We gave up the old safety valves of inflation and devaluation in return for lower interest rates, but now we do not even have the low interest rates.”

[source]

Geithner: Economy In “An Early Stage” Of Crisis
Sep 14th, 2011 08:47 by News

14-Sep (RealClearPolitics) — Jim Cramer, CNBC host: “Now let’s talk about the fact that you said the economy is weak. You put out a jobs plan. The New York Times today basically gives its obituary. ‘Tax plan for jobs bill.’ Familiar ring. Meaning the GOP will not back this. Is this dead on arrival?”

Tim Geithner, U.S. Secretary of Treasury: “Absolutely not. I think that there’s no reason now for the Congress of the United States not to act to help strengthen growth in the near term. It’s the conservative, prudent, responsible thing to do. You can think of it as protection against Europe.”

Cramer: “Okay.”

Geithner: “You can think of it as insurance against weaker growth going forward. And you got to think about the alternatives. If Congress or Washington is incapable of acting, then policy will be damaging to growth because what you’ll have is a deeper, steeper contraction in fiscal support than is prudent for an economy at this early stage of the crisis given the shocks we face. You know, life is about choices. Life is about alternatives.”

[source]

PG View: While this may be a significant admission on the part of the Treasury Secretary; in reality this may be the early stage of a crisis within the broader well-established crisis.


Author key: MK - Michael J. Kosares; GC - George Cooper; PG - Peter A. Grant; JK - Jonathan Kosares; RS - Randal Strauss. [see also 12 yrs of Discussion Archives]


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