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London Trader – Massive Physical Floor in the Gold Market
Sep 20th, 2011 14:17 by News

20-Sep (King World News) — With gold hovering near the $1,800 level, a trader out of London told King World News, “China is trading gold at a $17 premium today vs COMEX futures. Silver is trading at a premium of $2.48 vs futures price (COMEX). What this tells you is that these people in China are willing to pay the equivalent of roughly $12,500 more per contract than what silver is being traded for on the COMEX.”

London Trader continues:

“As soon as China closes trading each day, that is when the selling starts in the paper markets. These raids on the price are designed to get weaker players flushed out of the futures markets so they (commercials) can cover some of their short positions.

If there is that strong of a bid for gold out of the Eastern hemisphere, what that tells me is that all of the heavily leveraged paper manipulation in the West will not have much more downside impact. All the manipulators are doing at this point is compressing a spring, but at some point this market is eventually going to gap up incredibly hard against them.

…There are massive orders for tonnage of gold, incredible amounts between $1,715 and $1,760. This has the effect of putting a physical floor under the price of gold.

[source]

For debt-ridden U.S., Europe, best option is to welcome Chinese investments
Sep 20th, 2011 13:42 by News

20-Sep (Xinhua) — Three years after the outbreak of the global financial crisis, the world economy still grows at a painfully slow pace as both the United States and the European Union (EU) face unprecedented levels of public debt and heightened economic uncertainty.

During the darkest days of the financial crisis late 2008, China, together with other major developed and emerging economies, rolled out ambitious stimulus plans, helping to stabilize the global financial markets and successfully bring the world economy back from an unfathomable abyss.

However, stimulus measures in many countries are running out of steam and private sectors have failed to live up to the task of leading economic growth. These negative signs, coupled with unsustainable debt and deficit levels in many developed countries, mean the world economy now faces substantial downward pressure.

For the United States and Europe, the worst part of the ongoing economic mess is that they have little policy maneuvering room to boost their economies compared to three years ago.

[source]

PG View: Message from China seems to be, “Hey, our massive FX reserves may come in handy given the dire economic circumstances in the West. Shun us at your own peril.”

The Daily Market Report
Sep 20th, 2011 11:38 by News

Gold Range Bound, Awaiting FOMC Decision


20-Sep (USAGOLD) — Gold remains well contained within the recent range, awaiting the Fed’s decision tomorrow regarding further accommodations. The FOMC meeting that commenced today was expanded by an additional day to “allow for a fuller discussion,” which probably more accurately translates into chairman Bernanke needs more time to get dissenters, Fisher, Plosser and Kocherlakota, in-line behind new measures.

Getting the dissenters to at least concede that risks to growth have increased dramatically in recent weeks should be fairly easy, given the fact that no new jobs were added in August and confidence has plunged. Even the Fed itself has negatively revised its growth outlook and last week’s release of the Fed report on household balance sheets through Q2 showed some pretty devastating declines in net worth that are expected to continue through Q3. Today’s negative revisions by the IMF to both global an US growth forecasts for this year and next, tip-in the reality that everyone seems to already be aware of, that the US is slipping back toward recession. And that in turn, is weighing heavily on global growth prospects.

Bernanke might also argue that with the economic slowing, price risks have moderated. Additionally, further stimulus on the fiscal side — in the form of President Obama’s jobs bill — has very little chance of advancing. It’s up to the Fed to act, or there will likely be a double-dip.

Undoubtedly, events unfolding on the other side of the pond are factoring heavily into the FOMC’s discussions as well. The Fed’s agreement last week to basically provide unlimited dollar liquidity to Europe is an ominous acknowledgement to the direness of the situation on the Continent. Market analyst John Mauldin wondered this week, what “is the Fed doing, giving essentially unlimited funds to European banks? What are they seeing that we do not?” His conclusion seems to be that the Fed, in conjunction with the ECB, SNB, BoE and BoJ, are seeking to build a firebreak against a catastrophic Lehman-type default. If the answer for Europe is more liquidity, the likely answer for US banks is to bolster liquidity here as well.

With short-term interest rates at 0% and the 10-year yield trading below 2.0%, the Fed really has limited options at their disposal. They can pump the liquidity domestically via the traditional means of quantitative easing, buying shorter-dated securities, confirming their commitment to keep short-term rates exceptionally low into mid-2013. However, after the previous QE1, QE-lite, QE2 and the ongoing QE2.5 operations, that strategy has proven to be largely ineffective. That leaves an attack on the long-end of the curve as a new potential ‘twist’ to QE; selling their shorter-dated holdings and buying 7- to 10-year notes to twist the yield curve and bring down longer-term rates. While this would arguably drive down rates on longer-term business loans and mortgages, there’s still a huge problem with getting businesses and people qualified for these loans.

There is additionally the chance for even more explicit guidance than the “mid-2013″ offered up last month. They could also stop paying the admittedly paltry 0.25% rate that they are currently giving on reserves, in the hope that it might force some of those funds into circulation. The latter strikes me as having limited value.

The most likely scenario is that the Fed will announce some plan along the lines of Operation Twist to extend the maturities on their balance sheet. That is largely baked into the cake at this point, so if the Fed meets expectations, I wouldn’t expect any kind of big market reaction. But, I would also say that it wouldn’t be detrimental to gold’s long-term uptrend. On the other hand, if there is additional guidance, or something even more accommodative comes out of the meeting, the dominant uptrend in gold would likely start to re-exert itself.

Gold Rises on European-Debt Concerns, Bets Fed Will Add to U.S. Stimulus
Sep 20th, 2011 09:04 by News

20-Sep (Bloomberg) — Gold futures rose as European debt concerns and prospects for more steps by the Federal Reserve to bolster the U.S. economy spurred demand for the precious metal as an alternative investment.

Standard & Poor’s cut Italy’s credit rating yesterday, adding to concern that Europe’s fiscal crisis will raise borrowing costs for countries in the region. Fed officials begin a two-day meeting today and may decide to replace some of the short-term Treasuries in its $1.65 trillion portfolio with longer-maturity debt in a bid to lower borrowing costs, according to economists.

“The Fed may announce some stimulus measures today,” Graham Leighton, a director of metals at Newedge USA LLC in New York, said in a telephone interview. “The long-term bullish story for gold remains intact.”

[source]

PG View: The FOMC statement actually won’t come out until tomorrow as the meeting was expanded to an extra day.

Morning Snapshot
Sep 20th, 2011 08:32 by News

20-Sep (USAGOLD) — Gold has regained the $1800 level once again, following yesterday’s late downgrade of Italy by S&P. The only surprise there was that it was S&P, rather than Moody’s, that issued the downgrade. It was widely anticipated that Moody’s would downgrade Italy late last week when their normal 90-day review period lapsed. They have yet to do so, as the review apparently continues. The euro pretty readily absorbed the news, dipping briefly back below 1.3600, but it didn’t stay down for long.

The IMF slashed both global and US growth expectations this morning: The IMF now believes the global economy will grow just 4% this year and next, a negative revision from their June estimates of 4.3% for 2011 and 4.5% next year. IMF cut its US growth forecasts to 1.5% for this year, versus 2.5% previously and 1.8% for 2012, versus 2.7% previously. The IMF’s confirmation of growth risks intensifies expectations that the Fed will be forced to offer additional accommodations when the 2-day FOMC meeting concludes tomorrow.

• US housing starts -5.0% to 571k pace in Aug, well below market expectations of 593k, vs negative revised 601k in Jul.
• Canada leading indicator flat in Aug, above market expectations of -0.1%, vs +0.1% in Jul.
• Canada wholesale trade +0.8% in Jul, just above expectations, vs flat in Jun.
• Switzerland trade balance CHF0.8 bln in Aug, vs 2.825 bln in Jul.
• Sweden GDP – Final (sa) revised down to 0.9% in Q2, just below market expectations, vs 1.0% previously.
• Italy industrial orders (sa) +1.8% m/m in Jul, vs 4.1% in Jun; 6.5% y/y.
• Germany PPI -0.3% m/m in Aug, below market expectations of 0.2%, vs 0.7% in Jul; 5.5% y/y.
• Germany ZEW economic sentiment falls to -43.3 in Sep, below market expectations, vs -37.6 in Jul; Current situation drops to 43.6 from 53.5.
• Japan leading index (revised) 2.6 m/m in Jul, vs 2.7 previously.

Chavez Decrees Nationalization of Gold Industry Amid Surging Bullion Price
Sep 20th, 2011 07:39 by News

19-Sep (Bloomberg) — Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez ordered the nationalization of the gold industry and gave companies 90 days to form joint ventures with the state as he seeks to boost control over the nation’s metals producers.

The government will hold at least 55 percent of any joint ventures, according to a decree in today’s Official Gazette. The decree sets a royalty rate of 10 percent to 13 percent and says that all Venezuelan gold production will be sold to the state.

Chavez first announced the nationalization of the industry and plans to repatriate Venezuela’s foreign gold reserves on Aug. 17.

[source]

IMF lowers economic outlook, warns of danger ahead
Sep 20th, 2011 07:19 by News

20-Sep (CNNMoney) — The International Monetary Fund lowered its global growth outlook, warning that “the global economy is in a dangerous new phase.”

The IMF, a global financial institution comprising 187 nations, released excerpts from the latest edition of its World Economic Outlook Tuesday, ahead of its fall meeting in Washington this weekend.

It now expects the world’s economic output to increase 4% in both 2011 and 2012, compared with growth of 5.1% in 2010. In June, the IMF had forecasted slightly more robust growth rates of 4.3% for this year.

The IMF also sharply reduced its forecast for economic growth in the United States this year to 1.5%, down from 2.5% in June. It also lowered its expectations for growth in 2012 to 1.8% from 2.7%.

[source]

S&P downgrades Italy’s credit rating
Sep 20th, 2011 06:33 by News

20-Sep (Financial Times) — Standard & Poor’s has cut Italy’s credit rating in a move that buffeted stock markets and the euro, and underlined how the eurozone’s third-largest economy is being sucked deeper into the sovereign debt crisis.

S&P on Monday downgraded Italy by one notch to A with a negative outlook, meaning further downgrades are possible. The move – S&P’s first downgrade of Italy since 2006 – places S&P’s rating on Italy three notches below that of Moody’s, the rating agency that many had expected to cut first. Moody’s on Friday said it was extending its review of Italy’s finances.

[source]

Gold better at 1787.44 (+6.24). Silver 39.317 (-0.223). Dollar lower. Euro firms. Stocks called higher. Treasuries mixed.
Sep 20th, 2011 06:30 by News
Greece should default and abandon the euro
Sep 19th, 2011 10:39 by News

by Nouriel Roubini
19-Sep (Financial Times) — Greece is stuck in a vicious cycle of insolvency, low competitiveness and ever-deepening depression. Exacerbated by a draconian fiscal austerity, its public debt is heading towards 200 per cent of gross domestic product. To escape, Greece must now begin an orderly default, voluntarily exit the eurozone and return to the drachma.

The recent debt exchange deal Europe offered Greece was a rip-off, providing much less debt relief than the country needed. If you pick apart the figures, and take into account the large sweeteners the plan gave to creditors, the true debt relief is actually close to zero. The country’s best current option would be to reject this agreement and, under threat of default, renegotiate a better one.

[source]

New York Fed re-monetized $0.830 billion in Treasury coupons in today’s QE2.5 operation.
Sep 19th, 2011 09:32 by News
Austria restricts gold purchase by individuals
Sep 19th, 2011 09:30 by News

13-Sep (CommodityOnline) — A newly enacted Gold policy in Austria that restricts the free purchase of gold by individuals may just be the start of a European policy shift that might border on infringing an individual’s financial freedom.

As per the new Austrian policies, individuals who wish to purchase gold will be restricted to purchase only 15000 Euros worth of gold at a time making gold an officially “restricted” commodity.

[source]

PG View: The new restriction limits individual purchases to about 11 ounces of gold.

ETFs have potential to become the next toxic scandal
Sep 19th, 2011 09:15 by News

17-Sep (The Telegraph) — Back in April, the Financial Stability Board (FSB), an international super-regulator, wrote a prescient if less than catchily-titled paper “Potential financial stability issues arising from recent trends in Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs)”.

Its central warning – that ETFs are not the cheap and transparent vehicles the marketers would have us believe – was spot on. When UBS’s $2bn black hole hit the screens on Thursday, no one who read the FSB report was surprised to see the words ETF and rogue trader in the same sentence.

…around half of the ETFs in Europe today do not match the index they are designed to track by holding all of its constituent shares. Unlike the plain vanilla “full replication” ETFs which do, 45pc of the market is in the form of so-called “swap-based” ETFs which instead use derivative agreements, often with investment banks, to simulate the performance of the underlying assets.

Derivative trades add a second layer of uncertainty to the unavoidable ups and downs of the market, the counterparty risk that the organisation on the other side of the contract might go bust. Even worse, the provider of the ETF might sometimes be a part of the same organisation as the derivatives desk carrying out the swap.

…For reasons which I’m not sure I could explain even if I had the space, it is possible for the number of shares sold short in an ETF to massively exceed the actual number of shares available.

[source]

Central banks return as gold buyers
Sep 19th, 2011 08:33 by News

19-Sep (Financial Times) — European central banks have become net buyers of gold for the first time in more than two decades, the latest sign of how the turbulence in the currency and debt markets has revolutionised the bullion market.

The purchases are minuscule compared with the size of the global gold market, but highlight a remarkable turnround from a wave of heavy selling by European central banks.

…The switch from large selling to buying has helped propel the gold price more than 25 per cent higher so far this year, hitting a nominal record of $1,920 a troy ounce this month. The shift in Europe comes as central banks in emerging markets are also loading up on gold.

…“We’re going back to a time when gold is seen very much as money,” Jonathan Spall, director of precious metals sales at Barclays Capital, told FT.com in a video interview. “It has been a complete reversal of the attitudes we saw during the 1990s.”

[source]

Bernanke Joins King Tolerating Inflation to Revive Economy
Sep 19th, 2011 08:29 by News

19-Sep (Bloomberg) — Inflation flashing red may be less of a green light for higher interest rates as global growth falters.

Some Federal Reserve policy makers favor keeping their benchmark rate close to zero until price increases reach a level Vincent Reinhart, a former top official, says could be 3 percent. The Bank of England has held its key rate at a record low even as U.K. inflation breached its 2 percent target for 21 months.

…“There’s a hint of desperation here,” said Kochan, who helps manage $216 billion in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin. “They’re clearly concerned that monetary policy to date hasn’t really accomplished what they expected it to.

[source]

Morning Snapshot
Sep 19th, 2011 08:11 by News

19-Sep (USAGOLD) — Gold has ticked back below the $1800 as the dollar is back on the rise. Resurgent worries about Greece have resulted in the euro retracing much of last week’s rebound into Friday’s meeting of European financial ministers in Poland. Despite the dire situation in Greece, not much came out of that meeting. In fact, the final decision on whether Greece will get their next tranche of bailout funds was forestalled until October.

As we noted on Friday, there is either no sense of urgency on Greece, or their is no consensus that they should get the additional funds. The former seems rather unlikely…

The lack of action on the part of the FinMins to avert a Greek default is weighing heavily on stocks once again. The DJIA is now down more than 200 points and every European index is lower as well. Funds coming out of stocks seem to initially be going into the dollar and low yielding bonds, such as US Treasuries and German bunds. We know from history, that such allocations tend not to be terribly sticky and that true safe-havens like gold tend to benefit in the long-run after initial bouts of deleveraging.

Quiet day data-wise today. Everyone is eagerly awaiting the results of the expanded 2-day FOMC meeting that commences tomorrow. Last month’s outlook downgrade and statement that Fed funds will be kept near 0% into mid-2013 has most analysts leaning toward the dovish side for Wednesday’s FOMC statement. Some version of Operation Twist, a flattening of the yield curve that would likely be accomplished by the Fed selling shorter-dated Treasuries and buying further out on the yield curve, seems to be the front-running expectation.

Stocks Sink as Greece Worries Grow
Sep 19th, 2011 07:53 by News

19-Sep (The Wall Street Journal) — U.S. stocks fell sharply in early trading Monday, following blue chips’ largest weekly gain in more than two months, as investors fretted that Greece’s debt crisis is coming to a head.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 172 points, or 1.5%, to 11337, with all 30 Dow components losing ground.

[source]

Hedge Fund Heavyweight Says Gold Bet Not Over
Sep 19th, 2011 07:48 by News

19-Sep (Bloomberg) — Gold, platinum and Brent oil will lead gains in commodities as investors seek to protect their assets and shortages emerge, according to Tony Hall, the hedge- fund manager who earned 33 percent for his clients this year.

Gold may climb 21 percent to a record $2,200 an ounce by the end of 2011, platinum may gain 10 percent and Brent could rise 25 percent to $140 a barrel in six months, said the London- based chief investment officer of Duet Commodities Fund Ltd., which manages more than $100 million of assets.

…“We still believe in the gold story. If you believe the world is in trouble or in further economic growth disruption, then gold is a good safe haven. If you believe that the world is going to come out okay, then it’s a good inflation hedge.”

[source]

Gold steady at 1811.25 (+0.15). Silver 40.10 (-0.515). Dollar higher as euro retreats again. Stocks called sharply lower. Treasuries steady to higher.
Sep 19th, 2011 06:25 by News
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]


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