Death of the Euro by Darren Birkin
By Bob Chapman
September 24, 2011
The question plays
out on three fronts. England quietly is immersed in its own financial problems,
churning out their version of quantitative easing, as the US FOMC meeting rises
in the distance for two days this time.
Will we get the twist?
Of course we will.
If we do not the bottom will fall out.
That will signify the issuance of more funds plus what is needed
to purchase some 80% of Treasury securities, or about another $850 billion.
It is no secret that
the Fed, Bank of England, Bank of Japan and the Swiss national Banks are going
to provide dollars to European banks that are the victims of American lenders
who have pulled their funds out of Europe for fear of losing their investments.
They are phasing out an orderly fashion.
The commitments of
these central banks are doing three things putting their citizens at more
financial risk;
driving inflation higher;
aiding in the increase in gold prices
and following a path they already know is doomed to failure.
The players did not
want a replay of the Lehman Affair of just three years ago, or the ongoing
immediate consequences. Everyone wanted to look like they were in motion, that
they were doing something about the problem.
The underlying
problem is that banks in Europe cannot issue much more debt or they will look
like bigger fools than they already are.
Due to the banks’
poor choices in the past, these banks are on the edge of failure and were
Greece to default they’d get closer to the edge.
If all insolvent
nations were to default these banks would all go under. Thus, we see another
bank bailout engineered by the Fed and other central banks.
As this new crisis
unfolds the European and world economies are slowing down, which will compound
problems.
Under the best of
circumstances the European banks and sovereigns will lose half of their
investments in Greek bonds and loans. We stated two years ago the 100% default
is the only answer for Greece and the other five problem countries. The losses
would then be $4 to $6 trillion. Not only are many European banks already
insolvent, but also the future portends a bank wipeout.
The banks did
everything wrong, expecting as always, a taxpayer bailout. In addition, in this
process, these banks assumed leverage of about 30% in an attempt to raise
profits.
If these banks do
not go under they will be nationalized and again the public will be allowed to
assume again the banker’s losses. This crisis already in motion is going to be
worse than the one experienced three years ago and it’s mutating into an
ongoing crisis, because no one is willing to purge the system.
In the wings we see
the ECB, which already has made an illegal foray into the bond market to
purchase Italian and Spanish bonds. The big question there is who is going to
pay for their purchases?
We will find that
out on September 29th when the German Bundestag votes on German participation.
If they say “no” the European financial world will go upside down. If they vote
“yes” we could see anarchy in Germany.
As we have cited
often, European countries are a collection of different tribes that do not like
to be forced into anything. At this juncture we are told by our sources that
the funding bill will be passed.
If not passed, we
could see military action between Greece, Israel and Turkey, as a deliberate
diversion to force European countries to fund Greece and other bailouts. When
in doubt have another war.
The US Treasury
Secretary Mr. Geithner managed to make a fool of himself in Poland, but did
find support among other elitists regarding the regulation and full
implementation of banking federalization.
This supposedly is needed to mitigate the crisis and prevent future confusion, when in fact it is a move to remove the sovereignty of member states.
The Fed, that endless
source of swaps, money and credit, would supply recapitalization. Trillions of
dollars can easily be conjured up for just about anything and especially to
further a European Federal Reserve.
The upshot of this
move would be to give the ECB or another authority the ability to create money
and credit at will, which is totally opposed by the Germans. In total they do
not want anyone telling them what to do especially after the mess in part
created by the ECB.
This is a war the internationalists cannot win, but they will try anyway.
These attempts at
centralization and federalization are not what the Germans want. They want
something similar to the Bundesbank and they want direct control via
representation.
What has transpired
is another bailout for Europe via the Fed, BoJ, BoE and the SNB. That certainly
spells much more inflation as a consequence of this policy, which is something
Germany is dead set against.
.
.
The newest swap
facility is for 45 days, so that the ECB would convince US and other money
market funds and other large investors to repurchase the banks’, notes and
bills of EU banks and government, of course with the aid and pressure of the
Fed and the US Treasury.
There were strong
reasons for American lenders to pull out of euro zone short-term paper markets.
It is called risk-reward.
Higher yields are
desperately needed by money managers, but not at the risk of losing capital.
Just look at the correction in the US commercial paper market, nine-weeks of
rising yields and plunging participation.
In fact, such
policies are really a QE 3 in motion although concentrated on Europe. The
absence of such backdoor financing had to make players realize that funds were
needed quickly, because without them there would have been another European
banking crisis that would have spread into the UK and US markets.
The European
economies are slowing down and in the absence of such a move the downside would
have accelerated into a large recession or depression. The only way the Fed can
operate such a swap would be with freshly minted money, because if they buy
dollars in the Forex market they would drive the dollar higher and the euro
lower and they do not want that to happen.
The Fed is well
aware that some European banks and sovereigns are insolvent, as is the US system
and by using such policies they keep the whole structure functioning and buying
valuable time.
Default is on the
way and all the players know that. They want to be sure it is an orderly
default.
The same is true of
currencies. They want a big meeting where all currencies are revalued and
devalued simultaneously and where multilateral defaults go smoothly.
From a liquidity
viewpoint European banks have bought 45 days to November 5th. We do not think
that is enough time and that the swaps, QE 3, will be extended through the end
of the year.
While this goes on
the twist will take place in the US that is holding short-term rates static and
deliberately lowering long-term rates by manipulating the markets.
We are afraid that
will cause upward pressure on short-term rates. The resultant lower rates are
to encourage economic activity, investment, and revival in the real estate
market.
.
On the short end it
is not going to happen. Rates will rise and bank leverage will be neutralized.
All those months of riskless profits will end at least temporarily. Lower
mortgage rates are fine, but suppressing long-term yields is a mistake.
.
These moves are
inflationary and we now see that an official CPI of plus 3.8%. Real inflation
is 11.4%. They are the highest in two years and we predicted more than a year
ago real inflation will match that of three years ago of 14%.
We find it
astounding that people are dumb enough to buy a 10-year note yielding 1.83% in
an 11.4% inflationary environment and deliberately lose 9.4%. In 10-years
almost all your purchasing power is gone. It is a small wonder that people are
resorting to gold and silver coins, bullion and shares.
The bond market
continues to reach ridiculous levels as the twist gets underway. During that
process the dollar has rallied and the US 10-year note has begun trading at
1.83% yield. It is obvious that the Fed wants the 10 somewhere near 1%. That
would put the 30-year fixed rate mortgage at 3% and perhaps lower. This move
should boost official inflation from 3.8% to 5.5%, along with other factors to
5.5%. Unofficially that would put real inflation at 14%.
The higher bond
levels have the Chinese all excited and they want to liquidate US Treasuries,
but not dollars.
That presents quite
a problem for the Fed because worse yet they want to use those dollars to
gobble up American assets, and securities. This demand has come at a most
unfortunate juncture.
There is definitely
fear among bankers and central bankers who have no choice but to throw monetary
caution to the wind. Leading the pack believe it or not is the Swiss National
Bank, that great recent devaluer of currency.
Have they ever
opened a can of worms?
We wonder whether
the Japanese will get the go ahead from the Fed, as a reward for supplying
dollars to Europe, to further devalue its yen? We will just have to wait and
see. Will 45 days be enough for Europe? Of course not, and neither will 90 days
suffice.
The slide of the
European banking system won’t happen overnight. It will still take a year or
two.
The elitists will
do everything possible to extend the process.
You also have to
take note regarding how fast the swap line was set up. Intervention is the name
of the game, and everyone in the UK, US and Europe are in on it. All the
professionals have to know this is not going to work, but no one is saying
anything.
A conspiracy of silence. No one wants to say it but fascist Keynesianism is a failure. This is the foundation for future economic life for the New World Order and it is falling apart at the seams.You might say it is the end product of centuries of fraud, deceit and the looting of each successive civilization.The personification of what has been and is the evil within society.The monstrosity the Illuminists have created is in the process of collapsing and rightly so.
Irrespective of how
dollars are created they still make up about 60% of world Forex reserves and
oil producers are forced to accept the dollar for oil in exchange for
protection from the US and Britain. The dollars only challenge in a sea of fiat
currencies is gold, which we believe has become again the world’s only real
currency.
What we see in
Europe reminds us that the euro is a failed experiment. Trillions more dollars
have been and will be created to keep the current system functioning and each
time more dollars are created it strengthens the case for gold.
Under current
circumstances the dollar is not going to crash, although it will eventually. It
still is the only viable paper world reserve currency, even though foreign
central bank holdings have fallen from 72% to 60% in recent years. The closest
competitor, the euro, can’t come close to challenging the dollar, only gold
can.
In Europe September
29th is a big day.
On that day the
Bundestag will decide whether to approve another Greek bailout. Our sources say
they will approve it, although anything could happen. If this crisis passes
over the next three months there will be a rush to pass legislation to allow
the ECB to issue bonds. Once accomplished that would give the ECB the money and
credit creating powers of the Fed and that would allow the ECB to stretch the
problem out over a number of years.
These moves might
solve the current liquidity crisis, but they won’t solve the solvency crisis.
It is difficult to tell how long this sort of bailout will go on and how
difficult the problems will be.
One thing is for
sure inflation will rage and many nations will not want to subsidize others
indefinitely. This will be especially true in smaller nations.
The goal by the
ruling EU in Brussels will be to totally control the entire 27 nations
involved. Can this be accomplished? We do not know, but we do know it will be
very difficult to accomplish.
While Mrs. Merkel, German Chancellor, sees nothing suggesting a recession in Germany, the government is maneuvering behind the backs of its citizens to give unlimited power to the EFSF, the European Financial Stability Facility, which is not a legitimate entity, to support the hopelessly bankrupt euro system at the expense of German taxpayers and the common good.
This facility will
strip Germany and all other participants of their sovereignty in its process of
handling one facet of euro zone finance. The $500 billion in Swaps and the
eventual bond issuance will guarantee much higher inflation.
Europe’s present
problems are going to make the 2008 Lehman episode look like a walk in the
park. The pooling of the debt burden and a further easing of monetary policy
threatens to weaken the institutional framework of the EU.
German finance
minister Wolfgang Schäuble, who resides in the back pocket of the bankers has
proposed a doubling of funds to be made available to the bankrupt sovereigns of
just over $1 trillion. On September 29th the banker’s idea is to have the
Bundestag the EFSF carte blanche to carry out measures to save the euro, the
insolvent countries and banks.
If that were passed, all control passes to the EFSF and the ECB.
We believe that most Germans and selective others
are finally realizing that Brussels is the enemy.
The passage of
legislation by Germany, which in part has already been passed by the Bundesrat
(Senate) would leave Germany with no more say on the use or increase in funding
just to save the euro, Greece and the other five countries, which is an
impossible task at a cost of $4 to $6 trillion.
What the Bundestag
does on 9/29/11 will dictate the future of Germany as an industrial and social
nation far into the futures.
Will it be enslavement to the EFSF or freedom to run its own
affairs?
This amounts to a coup d'état.
Coming on the heels
of abject failure to solve the economic problems of the insolvent six
countries.
What is happening
in Europe, and particularly in Germany, is beyond belief ~ a plan to prop up
the hopelessly bankrupt financial states through deregulation of the financial
sector.
If legislation allows
all this to happen you could have revolution in Germany and other countries.
It is a frightful
situation.
No comments:
Post a Comment
If your comment is not posted, it was deemed offensive.