Germany: There will be no EU bail-outs

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/7095818/Funds-flee-Greece-as-Germany-warns-of-fatal-eurozone-crisis.html

Germany has triggered a near-panic flight from southern European debt markets by warning that there will be no EU bail-outs, even though it fears the region’s economic crisis has turned dangerous and could prove “fatal” for the entire eurozone.

The yield on 10-year Greek bonds blasted upwards by over 40 basis points to 7.15pc in a day of wild trading. Spreads over German Bunds reached almost four percentage points, by far the highest since Greece joined the euro, and close to levels that risk a self-feeding spiral. Contagion hit Portuguese, Spanish, Irish, and Italian bonds.

George Papandreou, the Greek premier, said in Davos that his country had been singled out as the weak link in a “attack on the eurozone” by speculators and political foes. “We are being targeted, particularly by those with an ulterior motive.”

Marc Ostwald, from Monument Securities, said the botched bond issue of €8bn (£6.9bn) of Greek debt earlier this week has made matters worse. Many of the investors were “hot money” funds that bought on rumours that China was emerging as a buyer, offering them a chance for quick profit. When the China story was denied by Beijing and Athens, these funds rushed for the exit.

However, a key trigger yesterday was testimony in Germany’s parliament by economy minister Rainer Brüderle, who said there would be “no bail-outs” for struggling debtors and no move to a “European economic government”.

“A few European nations are exhibiting dangerous weaknesses. That could have fatal consequences for all countries in the eurozone,” he said. Despite the warning, he said each country must solve its own problems.

“Germany is not in a mood to be the deep pocket for what they consider profligate, southern neighbours,” said hedge fund doyen George Soros.

Mr Brüderle’s hard line contradicts a report in Le Monde that Franco-German officials are discussing a rescue for Greece in order to keep the International Monetary Fund at bay.

The paper cited a source saying that EMU partners were ready to “help” Greece. “It is a question of credibility for the eurozone. The IMF might want to impose monetary conditions.”

Le Monde‘s story was shot down by Berlin and Paris, but there is little doubt that certain officials have been trying to build momentum for a rescue. It is clear that the EU family is split on the issue. Jean-Claude Juncker, head of the Eurogroup of finance ministers, backs “assistance”, with support of EU integrationists hoping to nudge the EU towards full fiscal union.

This is fiercely opposed by Berlin, and the German-led bloc at the European Central Bank. There are reports that Berlin is deliberately bringing the crisis to a head, hoping to lance the boil early and force the Club Med states to reform before it is too late. If so, this is a risky strategy. German banks have huge exposure to Greek, Spanish, and Portuguese debt.

Hans Redeker, currency chief at BNP Paribas, said Greece will face “great trouble” if it has to pay 7pc rates for long. Athens must raise €53bn this year, mostly in the first half. It has a been relying on cheap short-term debt to fund the budget deficit of 13pc of GDP, but this raises “roll-over risk”.

Tim Congdon, from International Monetary Research, said the danger is that wealthy Greeks may shift money to bank accounts abroad if they lose confidence (akin to Mexico’s Tequila Crisis in 1994-1995). This would set off a banking crisis and become self-fulfilling.

Greece has been financing current account deficits – 15pc of GDP in 2008 – through its banks, which have built up €110bn foreign liabilities. “If foreign creditors want their money back, defaults and/or a macroeconomic catastrophe appear inevitable,” Mr Congdon said.

Adding to worries, Moody’s has issued an alert on Portugal’s “adverse debt dynamics”, saying Lisbon needs a “credible plan” to reduce a structural deficit stuck at 7pc of GDP rather than “one-off measures”.

The deeper concern is Spain, where youth unemployment has reached 44pc and the housing bust has a long way to run. Nouriel Roubini – the economist known as ‘Dr Doom’ – said Spain is too big to contain. “If Greece goes under that’s a problem for the eurozone. If Spain goes under it’s a disaster,” he said.

Jose Luis Zapatero, Spain’s premier, replied wearily: “Spanish public debt (52pc of GDP) is 20pc lower than Europe’s average; our treasury spends 5pc of revenues on debt costs, less than France and Germany. Nobody is going to leave the euro,” he said.

———-

no bail out for any PIGS..i hope they arent putting themselves in a corner they cant get out of..

401

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~ by seeker401 on January 31, 2010.

7 Responses to “Germany: There will be no EU bail-outs”

  1. in the long run this will make the Euro very strong. 1920 u.s. economy, bigger than great depression, lasted only about one year, because the gov’t didn’t intervene. not only “no bailouts”, but if the gov’ts don’t do anything when this happens (and undoubtedly it will be terrible for awhile when this, if this, implodes), but as long as the gov’ts don’t do anything else, besides no bailouts, then these regions will come back strong. the investors will know which businesses are terrible, clarity will therefore be in the market, and it will be a consumers driven economy, meaning, capital can be shifted to the actual demand parts of the market and malinvestments that weaken economies and only drag it down can be purged. it undoubtedly will be a bad here to there senario but it will only be worse if gov’t artifically keep propping up the malinvests: those that would get bailouts remember because it’s not the actual good businesses that get gov’t help it’s only the terrible, bad businesses that do. And since gov’ts are propping up bad businesses by either diverting tax dollars or by printing money to bailout bad businesses that only weakens the over-all economy as the purchasing power of the currency weakens, ie. bad for the euro. This could be one of THE moves to strengthen one currency (the Euro) to pave the way for the U.S. dollar to be dumped on the world market. Cause at the moment all currencies are weak or weakening but some are simply worse than others and gives teh appearance that there are strong currencies out there because for instance the yen is weak against the dollar, so the dollar is strong – which is wrong historically speaking when it comes to actual purchasing power of the U.S. dollar (current u.s. dollar only worth 3 cents or so of the 1913 dollar). That’s what the central banks do currently. They try to maintain each individual currency stronger or weaker against another currency and they try to not let one fall too much compared to another currency or else that could weaken the world economy. So they try to keep the different currencies relatively close in value as a stablizing force on the overall global economy. This is speculation but imagine if the Euro gets real strong compared to the dollar, then the dollar could be driven from the world market with an oasis on the currency market, ie. Euro, for investors to flock to. Another speculation, but imagine a Europe that is allowed to purge out it’s malinvestments. Given a year or so the market would thrive back and stablize Europe for a long time and Europe would have a lot of capital to work with. It would make Europe economically speaking, very powerful in the long run.

  2. Did you know that George Soros gained his wealth through the international language Esperanto ?

    Born in Hungary in 1930 as Gyorgy Schwartz, the family changed its name in 1936 to Soros, which in Esperanto means “to soar.” The deliberate Esperanto name-change was an effort to protect the Jewish family from the rise of fascist rulers and the whole family spoke this language at home.

    George Soros used Esperanto to defect to the West in 1946, by attending an Esperanto youth meeting in Ipswich, England.

    Esperanto enabled Soros both to defect, and to become a multi-billionaire.

    Your readers may also be interested in http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=_YHALnLV9XU Professor Piron was a former translator with the United Nations

  3. well say it and thx Wilderness

  4. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Michael Ehline, Follow The Money. Follow The Money said: Germany: There will be no EU bail-outs http://bit.ly/c6i585 [...]

  5. Predatory Lending is a major contributor to the economic turmoil we are currently experiencing.

    Here is an example of what I am talking about:
    Scott Veerkamp / Predatory Lending (Franklin Township School Board Member.)

    Please review this information from U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley regarding deceptive lending practices:
    “Steering payments were made to brokers who enticed unsuspecting homeowners into deceptive and expensive mortgages. These secret bonus payments, often called Yield Spread Premiums, turned home mortgages into a SCAM.”

    The Center for Responsible Lending says YSP “steals equity from struggling families.”
    1. Scott collected nearly $10,000 on two separate mortgages using YSP and junk fees. 2. This is an average of $5,000 per loan. 3. The median value of the properties was $135,000. 4. Clearly, this type of lending represents a major ripoff for consumers.

    http://merkley.senate.gov/newsroom/press/release/?id=A09C6A80-537A-4EB1-83C5-31925F046B6F

    • well posted jmb..and one of the major reasons for the sub prime..lend to anyone..at any price for any amount..and collect a bonus as well

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