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Archive for the ‘Financial crisis’ Category

Europe freezes out Goldman Sachs

Posted by smeddum on July 21, 2010

Shocked by past deals with Italy and Greece, governments are excluding the Wall Street bank from sovereign bond sales


  • The Observer,
  • Sunday 18 July 2010
  • Lloyds Blankfein of Gldman Sachs Protestors jeer Goldman Sachs chairman Lloyd Blankfein as he prepares to face US Senators over the banking crisis. Photograph: Jim Young/REUTERS
    European governments are turning their backs on Goldman Sachs, the all-conquering investment bank that has suffered a series of blows to its reputation, capped by the biggest ever fine imposed on a Wall Street firm. Read the rest of this entry »

    Posted in Battle for Europe, Financial crisis | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

    A small “I-told-you-so” on bank stocks

    Posted by seumasach on July 21, 2010

    David Goldman

    18th July, 2010

    On July 13, when I posted my last note urging investors to avoid bank stocks, the BKX bank stock index closed just over 51; on Friday it fell to just over 46, a decline of almost 8%. Bank of America’s results showed just what the aggregate data should have made clear in advance: the collapsing loan books of banks makes them dependent on the thin gruel of the Treasury carry trade. With the collapse in yields during the past few weeks, the carry trade is harder and harder to bring off (58 basis points on 2-year Treasuries just doesn’t do very much). True, banks have shed bad loans, but they can’t find good ones, either. So the banks will continue their zombie existence indefinitely as the equivalent of public utilities, with occasional small crises to worry their shareholders. It’s just not worth being involved.

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    Peter Schiff: China and the dollar

    Posted by smeddum on July 20, 2010

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    US gripped with offshore economy. Max Keiser Interview with Paul Graig Roberts

    Posted by smeddum on July 20, 2010

    Sun, 18 Jul 2010
    Jobs are becoming scarcer and scarcer particularly in the United States. Is it cyclical or is it structural? Is it something that America has completely turned its back on in a way that could potentially be a factor for decades going forward?

    Max Keiser discusses this issue with Dr. Paul Craig Roberts who was in the Regan treasury, a former editor at the Wall Street Journal. He was inducted into the French legion honor. He is also an author; his latest book is How the economy was lost.

    The following is the transcript of the interview: Read the rest of this entry »

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    The dollar’s predicament

    Posted by seumasach on July 19, 2010

    Reuters on Friday quoted China’s Prime Minister Wen Jiabao: “I want to say that at this time, when some European countries are suffering sovereign debt crises, China has always held out a helping hand.”

    Clearly, it’s a major development that Chinese deep pockets have come to the eurozone’s aid. There are reasons for China’s policymakers to see it in their country’s best interest to purchase European debt. At the top of the list, euro weakness provided an opportunity to diversify some of its $2.45 trillion – and counting – of international reserves. The markets have been focused on European structural debt issues. But perhaps the Chinese, from a longer-term strategic point of view, see European investment as more favorable than accumulating additional US debt.

    Doug Noland

    Asia Times

    20th July, 2010

    According to the Federal Reserve’s Z.1 “flow of funds” data, Rest of World (ROW) holdings of US financial assetsended the 1980s at about US$1.9 trillion and closed the nineties at $5.6 trillion. By the end of 2009, ROW holdings had ballooned to $15.3 trillion. During the past decade, the world’s holdings of our financial assets surged to 108% of US GDP from 60%.

    Gigantic and unending US current account deficits were the major force behind the extraordinary foreign accumulation of our (largely debt) securities. This implies structural deficiencies in both the credit system and real economy. It would also be quite unusual for such a fundamental backdrop to support a strong currency.

    To better gauge the soundness of the dollar, one must attempt some necessarily subjective assessment of underlying US financial and economic structures. Over the past 20 years, total system credit rose from $12.830 trillion to $52.328 trillion – or from a historically very high 234% of GDP to an unprecedented 367%. The important question then becomes, did this historic increase in debt correspond with an expansion of production/wealth-producing investment? Does our economy have the wherewithal to pay back our foreign creditors? When will it matter in the marketplace?

    Read full article here

    Posted in Battle for Europe, Financial crisis | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

    Radio: interview with John Williams of Shadow Stats

    Posted by smeddum on July 19, 2010

    http://www.kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/Broadcast_Gold+/Entries/2010/7/17_John_Williams.html

    Posted in Financial crisis | Leave a Comment »

    US and UK credit rating downgraded by Chinese

    Posted by smeddum on July 18, 2010

    Markets fall; Hong Kong shares; stockmarket

    But after failure of Western credit rating agencies to foresee financial crisis, has Chinese upstart got a point?

    JULY 13, 2010

    While the European Union considers regulating the activities of the credit rating agencies Fitch, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s – and perhaps even setting up a new agency to supplant them – a Chinese body has attempted to revolutionise the whole sector by summarily downgrading the US and Britain. Read the rest of this entry »

    Posted in Financial crisis, UK economy, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

    UK public sector could have £4 trillion of hidden debts

    Posted by smeddum on July 18, 2010

    The UK’s public sector debt could be nearly £4 trillion higher than headline figures suggest, according to new research that highlights the scale of the economic challenges facing the Government.

    By Jonathan Sibun, Assistant City Editor
    14 Jul 2010

    Telegraph

    Clegg and Cameron outside the Treasury - UK public sector could  have £4 trillion of hidden debts 

    The economic hallenge facing the new Government could be even greater than feared Photo: Paul Grover

    The Office for National Statistics (ONS) released a study revealing that the public purse could be faced with £4.84 trillion of liabilities compared with the current public sector net debt figure of £903bn.

    David Hobbs of the ONS described the public sector balance sheet as an “open-ended concept” as he outlined liabilities that are considered to be “off-balance sheet” or not covered in official debt measures. Read the rest of this entry »

    Posted in Financial crisis, UK economy | Leave a Comment »

    Wall Street Is Laundering Drug Money and Getting Away with It

    Posted by smeddum on July 18, 2010

    Alternet

    16/7/10

    Wall Street has been caught laundering massive amounts of drug money. So why isn’t anybody being punished? July 16, 2010 |

    This piece originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future. It has been expanded for this publication.

    Too-big-to-fail is a much bigger problem than you thought. We’ve all read damning accounts of the government saving banks from their risky subprime bets, but it turns out that the Wall Street privilege problem is far more deeply ingrained in the U.S. legal system than the simple bailouts witnessed in 2008. America’s largest banks can engage in flagrantly criminal activity on a massive scale and emerge almost completely unscathed. The latest sickening example comes from Wachovia Bank: Accused of laundering $380 billion in Mexican drug cartel money, the financial behemoth is expected to emerge with nothing more than a slap on the wrist thanks to an official government policy which protects megabanks from criminal charges. Read the rest of this entry »

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    US regulators shut 8 more banks

    Posted by smeddum on July 17, 2010

    US regulators shut 8 more banks
    Sat, 17 Jul
    The number of bank failures in the US continues to climb as regulators have shut down eight more banks in the states of Florida, South Carolina and Michigan.

    The closed banks were holding $2 billion in combined assets. The latest closures bring the number of US bank closures so far this year to 96.

    US regulators closed a total of 140 banks in 2009. Now, experts say that figure will be surpassed this year. Read the rest of this entry »

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    The Truth About Bernanke’s Zero Percent Interest Rate Mind Game

    Posted by smeddum on July 16, 2010

    Jul. 16, 2010,

    People are nervous about the long term outlook, and they should be.”

    -Paul Volcker

    I had a great day of meetings in New York City yesterday. It’s always additive to get the City’s pulse on risk management matters. The biggest risk that I found myself talking about was one that I haven’t spent enough time writing about – the risk associated with the world’s largest current bubble imploding – short term US Treasuries.

    This morning, on the heels of a very disappointing earnings report out of one of America’s largest growth engines (Google), yields on 2-year US Treasuries are trading down to 0.58%. The inverse of this yield equates to the highest prices for short term US Treasury Debt EVER. Read the rest of this entry »

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