August 2, 2012 By gpc1981
http://albertpeia.com/merkelholdsspainfolds.htm
‘Here’s a story you might not have heard… In some areas of
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
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
The answer is simple:
Consider the following stories:
Top German court to announce ESM ruling Sept. 12
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
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.
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
On top of this,
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.
So don’t count on
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…’
August 1, 2012 By gpc1981
‘As you know by now, I keep stating that
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
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
Small wonder then that investors, savers, and corporations are
pulling their money out of
Capital outflows from
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,
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
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.
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.
So who is going
to prop up the Spanish banking system? If the ECB does it,
And finally… let’s be serious about the EFSF and ESM. The EFSF
doesn’t have the funds to prop up
So if the ESM were to “bailout”
Finally,
Oh and as a closing note,
By now I hope you realize that the situation for
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.
This is the kind of “unquantifiable” research that we specialize
in at Phoenix
Capital Research: finding the insights and data that lurk between
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