Angela Merkel Will NOT Lose Germany’s AAA Status Before Her Re-election

August 2, 2012 By gpc1981

 

http://albertpeia.com/merkelholdsspainfolds.htm

‘Here’s a story you might not have heard… In some areas of Germany, you can once again use Deutsche Marks as legal tender:

Who Needs the Euro When You Can Pay With Deutsche Marks?

Shopping for pain reliever here on a recent sunny morning, Ulrike Berger giddily counted her coins and approached the pharmacy counter. She had just enough to make the purchase: 31.09 deutsche marks.

They just feel nice to hold again,” the 55-year-old preschool teacher marveled, cupping the grubby coins fished from the crevices of her castaway living room sofa. “And they’re still worth something.”

Behind the counter of Rolf-Dieter Schaetzle’s pharmacy in this southern German village lay a tray full of deutsche mark notes and coins—a month’s worth of sales.

Germans have yet to give up on the euro. But as Europe’s debt crisis rages on, many are indulging their nostalgia for the abandoned mark by shopping with it again—and retailers are happily going along.

As defunct currencies go, “die gute alte D-mark,” or “the good old D-mark,” as it is still affectionately called, is far from dead. Germans officially traded in the currency for euro bills and coins on Jan. 1, 2002, and the mark immediately ceased to be legal tender. But 13.2 billion marks—worth €6.75 billion ($8.3 billion)—remain tucked in mattresses, old prayer books, coat pockets or otherwise in circulation, according to the Bundesbank, more lucre than the euro bloc’s 16 other ex-currencies combined.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304373804577520930784840596.html?mod=rss_markets_main

My question to investors today is…why would Germany start allowing Deutsche Marks to be used again? Moreover, if Spain and Greece are on the brink, why has Germany refused to increase the funding of the EFSF and ESM bailout funds AND tied up its ratification of the ESM in legal proceedings that won’t even begin until September?

The answer is simple: Germany knows that the game is up. Its best bet is to put off the implementation of various bailout funds (for legal reasons) while looking as though it wants to help… and let the EU crash and burn around it.

Consider the following stories:

            Top German court to announce ESM ruling Sept. 12

Germany’s Federal Constitutional Court will announce a decision on lawsuits challenging the country’s participation in the permanent euro-zone rescue fund, the European Stability Mechanism, and the fiscal pact on Sept. 12, the court said Monday in a statement on its website. The court held a public hearing earlier this month to examine complaints that participation in the fund and the fiscal pact violated German law by taking some authority over the national budget away from parliament.

http://articles.marketwatch.com/2012-07-16/economy/32688803_1_top-german-court-fiscal-pact-german-law

German court dumps election law that favored Merkel

Indeed, if we read between the lines of the political proceedings coming out of Germany

Germany’s top court ruled on Wednesday that the country’s election law is unconstitutional, leaving Europe’s biggest economy with no valid rules on how to distribute seats in the Bundestag lower house just over a year before the next vote.

The Karlsruhe-based Constitutional Court upheld a case brought by the opposition Social Democrats (SPD), the Greens and more than over 3,000 citizens against the law, which was altered by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right coalition last year.

Germany’s complex system, which can end up creating extra or “overhang” parliamentary seats that benefit the bigger parties, breaches citizens’ rights to take part in direct, free and equal elections as enshrined in the constitution, the court said.

Merkel’s government, preoccupied with trying to stem the euro zone debt crisis, now has to come up with a new law by autumn 2013, when the next federal election is due.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns-rt-us-germany-election-courtbre86o0w8-20120725,0,2079941.story

Europe is imploding and Spain is so desperate for cash that its Finance Minster flew to Germany to meet in private with German officials, begging for €300 billion… and Germany won’t vote to even ratify the ESM, let alone raise capital for it until September 12!?!?

On top of this, Germany suddenly decided that its election process is unconstitutional and needs to be revised? Why now? Aren’t there more pressing issues such as the implosion of the European banking system? (remember, Germany has already created a firewall around its own banks… read the former issue titled, Germany: The Smoking Gun)

To me the message is clear, Germany is going to do all it can to appear ready to help, but it will forestall any actual helping, especially if it involves increasing Germany’s exposure to the PIIGS (note: Merkel stated that there would never be Euro-bonds for as long as she lived).

This is not political posturing. Germany has already brought its own solvency into question (see the Moody’s warning) by propping up the EU. Angela Merkel is not going to lose Germany’s AAA status the year before she’s up for re-election.

So don’t count on Germany to come to save the day. Look at the country’s actions, not what its leaders are saying. The writing is clear here.

This is the kind of “unquantifiable” research that we specialize in at Phoenix Capital Research: finding the insights and data that lurk between the financial statements and press releases… the insights that will really move the markets…’

 

Let’s Stop Kidding Ourselves and Look at the REAL Math Behind Spain

August 1, 2012 By gpc1981

‘As you know by now, I keep stating that Spain is going to be the straw that breaks the EU’s back. The country is facing a regional, banking, and soon to be sovereign crisis all at once.

Spain’s Catalonia suspends social service payments

Catalonia, Spain’s most indebted region, said Tuesday it could not pay subsidies in July to hospitals, old age homes and other social services already reeling from sharp budget cuts.

http://news.xin.msn.com/en/business/spains-catalonia-suspends-social-service-payments-2

Catalonia is one of SIX Spanish regions that are facing budgetary crises (there are 17 Spanish regions in total). Given that the Government of Spain itself is bankrupt (the Government bailout fund had less than  €5 billion in it when Bankia collapsed back in May), the possibility of a Federal bailout here is nil.

On top of this, the Spanish banking system is on the verge of systemic failure. Spanish banks draw on average, more than €300 billion from the ECB on a monthly basis to meet liquidity needs.

To put this number into perspective, the entire Spanish banking system is roughly €3 trillion in size. So Spanish bank liquidity needs alone amount to roughly 10% of total assets.

This would be akin to US banks drawing $1.2 trillion from the Fed for liquidity purposes on a monthly basis. If the headlines in the US read that, there would be full-scale panic (a la 2008).

Small wonder then that investors, savers, and corporations are pulling their money out of Spain en masse:

Capital outflows from Spain more than quadrupled in May to €41.3 billion ($50.7 billion) compared with May 2011, according to figures released on Tuesday by the Spanish central bank.

In the first five months of 2012, a total of €163 billion left the country, the figures indicate. During the same period a year earlier, Spain recorded a net inflow of €14.6 billion.

The outflow has resulted from domestic banks sending money abroad, foreign lenders pulling out cash and mostly non-resident investors dumping Spanish assets. The steep rise was likely due to Bankia, the banking conglomerate, having requested a bailout in May.

Over the last 11 months, funds equivalent to 26 percent of gross domestic product exited the country, Tuesday’s data from the Bank of Spain showed.

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/spain-capital-outflows-reach-record-levels-in-euro-crisis-a-847466.html#ref=rss?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

Spain’s response to this is to punish those who are smart enough to get their money out of the country. The country has imposed the following fines/ capital restrictions in the last month:

*        A minimum fine of  €10,000 for taxpayers who do not report their foreign accounts.

*        Secondary fines of  €5,000 for each additional account

*        No cash transactions greater than €2,500

*        Cash transaction restrictions apply to individuals and businesses

So, we have a €3 trillion banking system, from which €163 in deposits has left in the last 11 months, and which is drawing over €300 billion from the ECB on a monthly basis.

If this doesn’t make it clear that the Spanish banking system is ready to implode, perhaps the private text message Spain’s Prime Minister sent to his Finance Minister stating that Spain would need €500 billion will (emphasis added):

Aguanta [Finance Minister], we are the fourth European power. Spain is not UgandaIf they want to force the rescue of Spain, they need to start getting ready €500 billion and another €750 billion for Italy, which will have to be rescued afterwards.”

Which brings us to the Spanish “bailout” of €100 billion. Setting aside the fact that this bailout is nothing compared to what Spanish banks are drawing from the ECB (as well as the amount Spain’s Prime Minister hinted at in his text message), there’s the legal problem if just where the money will come from.

Germany, which is the REAL backstop for the EU (Spain sent its Finance Minister to Germany, NOT the ECB when it made a plea for an additional €300 billion), has stated explicitly that neither the EFSF nor the ESM bailout funds should be given banking licenses (which means they cannot buy bank debt).

So who is going to prop up the Spanish banking system? If the ECB does it, Germany will be furious (they’ve stated explicitly that the ECB should focus on price stability). Germany won’t do it. And the IMF doesn’t have the fire power.

And finally… let’s be serious about the EFSF and ESM. The EFSF doesn’t have the funds to prop up Spain (remember this is the bailout fund that needed aid just to complete bond auctions). As for the ESM… well, Spain and Italy account for 30% of its funding.

So if the ESM were to “bailout” Spain, it would essentially be Spain and Italy bailing out Spain. You literally couldn’t make this stuff up if you tried!

Finally, Germany hasn’t even RATIFIED the ESM yet. That’s right, Germany, the country that is the true backstop of the EU, which will account for nearly 30% of ESM funding by itself, won’t agree on whether or not it wants to fund the ESM until September.

Oh and as a closing note, Germany has already pushed its Debt to GDP up to 90% via its various EU bailouts… which is why Moody’s has put the county on negative watch. What happens if Germany loses its AAA credit rating as France did last year?

By now I hope you realize that the situation for Spain is hopeless. I’m sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but this is reality. Those who are investing as though there will be some magical solution to this mess are the same people who bought the S&P 500 in July 2008, hoping that Hank Paulson’s “bazooka” would stop the Crash.

We all know how that turned out.

With that in mind, I view this current rally in the markets as a gift from the market Gods to prepare for what’s coming.

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