Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Pettis: Spain Needs to Debate Leaving the Euro; Tooth Fairy Economics
- Congressman Proposes "Moat" Around White House, Secret Service Director Confirms "May Be Good Idea"
- Short Seller Doug Kass on Malinvestment, Permanent QE, the Global Economy
Pettis: Spain Needs to Debate Leaving the Euro; Tooth Fairy Economics Posted: 19 Nov 2014 12:26 PM PST Michael Pettis has a very interesting article on the Spanish news site ABC regarding a possible default of Spain and the eventual breakup of the eurozone. Pettis Three Ways
I used both translators in a verification process. What follows is my heavily modified translation of key portions of Pettis' article after reading both of the above translations. In the Panic of 1837, two-thirds of the US, including several of the richest states, suspended payment of external debt. The United States survived. If the European Union is to survive, it will have to find a solution to the European debt.Political Arrogance Of course there is a reason for this mess (just not a good one). The reason is political arrogance. Bureaucrats in every eurozone country committed to the project in spite of known flaws in the structure. Problem Paragraphs I struggled translating two paragraphs from the original article the Spanish . Here is the Google translation of the paragraphs in question. Emphasis mine. The first paragraph is especially convoluted. Even those who are against debt cancellation recognize that all he has done that Spain has been no suspension of payments has been the guarantee of Germany, shielded after the European Central Bank. They note that as the German banking system could not survive the bankruptcy of even one country, Berlin has no choice but to endorse the Spanish debt forever.Matter of Months In the first problem paragraph above, I wonder if "he" is Draghi. If so, what follows is still not at all clear. I bounced both paragraphs off reader "Bran" who lives in Spain. Bran replied "It is not clear in the original sentence if the ECB is shielding Germany with its related actions to the guarantee, or if it is shielding a guarantee offered by Germany, perhaps both. In other words, the ECB is using the perceived economic strength of Germany as a shield for its actions regarding Spain, simultaneously shielding Germany from Spanish default ." In the second problem paragraph, it is unclear if Pettis means a suspension of payments will happen "in a matter of months" (from now), or a matter of months following realization that ECB guarantees are useless. I presume the latter. So does reader "Bran". Translation Issues Translation issues are more difficult this time because the article on ABC was itself a translation and I cannot find the original source in English. The article on ABC may have come from an interview or perhaps something Pettis sent to ABC. I have an email in to Pettis seeking clarification and correction of anything I may have gotten wrong, as well as anything ABC may have gotten wrong. Target2 Imbalances Revisited When it comes to "suspension of foreign payments", I presume Pettis implies or incorporates Target2 Imbalances. I discussed Target2 imbalances recently in Eurozone Target2 Imbalances Rise Again, Led by Italy. Pater Tenebrarum at the Acting Man blog provides this easy to understand example. "Spain imports German goods, but no Spanish goods or capital have been acquired by any private party in Germany in return. The only thing that has been 'acquired' is an IOU issued by the Spanish commercial bank to the Bank of Spain in return for funding the payment." I have stated many times, Spain will never be able to pay back what it has borrowed from Germany. But that is not close to the full extent of the problem. Cascading Defaults Pettis believes Spain should discuss leaving the Euro. Let's investigate what happens if Spain does just that, starting with a look at the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF). The EFSF's mandate is to safeguard financial stability in Europe by providing financial assistance to euro area Member States within the framework of a macro-economic adjustment programme.Table of Responsibilities Wikipedia provides this assessment of the EFSF. The table below shows the current maximum level of guarantees for capital given by the Eurozone countries. The amounts are based on the European Central Bank capital key weightings.
Guarantees Questioned In the above table it's the percentages that I am most concerned about. The amounts may not be current. Notice that Greece, Portugal, and Ireland are responsible for percentages of guarantees even though they are recipients of the program. Should Greece or Portugal choose to leave the Euro, would Spain be able to pick up 12% of the tab? Well, what if Spain does what Pettis asks and then suspends payment on what it owes Germany? Could Italy and France pick up their share? Greece? Cascade of Defaults Should any country decide to exit the eurozone, expect a cascade of followers. Notice that the ECB and EU fools brought this upon themselves. Greece could have defaulted long ago, with arguably a minimum amount of damage. Now Greece is saddled with hundreds of billions of euro "bailouts" that Greece cannot and will not repay. One can only wonder how many trillions of dollars worth of derivatives would be immediately affected should a cascade occur. Of course, the ECB would "guarantee" the amounts. But How? The only conceivable answer is printing enough euros so that every Target2 imbalance can be met. That would violate ECB rules of course, but history shows central banks don't give a damn about rules in a crisis. Should a panic scenario play out that way, the euro would collapse. Alternative to Destructive Breakup The alternative to a cascading and destructive breakup of the eurozone would be for Germany to exit the Eurozone first. In that scenario, the euro would sink, the Deutschmark soar (at least initially), and trade would have some chance of balancing out. The collapse would have some semblance of order rather than total panic. But, Germany would be paid back in euros, not Deutschmarks. Thus, no matter which way it plays out, Germany is 100% guaranteed to suffer major losses going forward. So are all of the other Northern eurozone creditor countries. Thus, in spite of what anyone thinks, Germany cannot possibly avoid being hit, and hit hard. The only open question is whether the process is somewhat controlled, or eventual panic sets in. Unfortunately, politics is such that I strongly suspect the latter. Contingent Liabilities I bounced the above off Pater Tenebrarum at the Acting Man Blog before posting. He chimed in with with an interesting set of comments. Even the "strong" eurozone nations would be in truly dire straits if the contingent liabilities of the ESM were to come due.Tooth Fairy Economics Pater says "don't ask me why they have done this". Actually he knows. The answer is political arrogance in conjunction with unfading belief in the Tooth Fairy and Santa Claus. The Tooth Fairy is Monetarism (free money under the pillow). Santa Claus is Keynesian economics (free gifts to everyone). Not even Japan can convince economic fools of the stupidity of their programs. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Congressman Proposes "Moat" Around White House, Secret Service Director Confirms "May Be Good Idea" Posted: 19 Nov 2014 11:40 AM PST I am seldom astonished by ridiculous Congressional proposals to waste money, but here's an entirely new idea: Congressman Suggests Moat Around White House. Faced with an increasing number of White House intrusions that led to the resignation of a Secret Service director, a congressman on Wednesday suggested that maybe a moat should be erected around the president's home.MarketWatch provides this diagram. CSPAN Video At the 3:40 mark, acting secret service director Joseph Clancey responds to the Rep. Cohen's idea. I started the video at the correct spot. Link if video does not play: Secret Service Says Moat May Be Effective. Partial Transcript Rep. Steve Cohen: Would a moat, water, six feet around be kind of attractive and effective? Secret Service: Sir, it may be. Addendum Reader "Ivo" proposes the moat may be a good idea. He writes ... Hello MishMike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Short Seller Doug Kass on Malinvestment, Permanent QE, the Global Economy Posted: 19 Nov 2014 11:06 AM PST Aaron Task did a nice video interview of famed short seller Doug Kass on Yahoo! Finance. I am waiting to pull the trigger, says Kass. Kass's contrarian views are well known on Wall Street. Last December, he predicted that global economic growth would be subpar, even as much as 50% less than the consensus and that, as a result, bonds would outperform stocks and the 10 year yield would fall to around 2.5%. "Nobody thought that," says Kass.Click on the link above to see. The Kass interview is well worth a play. I typically do not link to, or even watch Yahoo!Finance anymore, because I absolutely cannot stand their auto-play videos. Auto-play videos are particularly maddening for those of us with lots of open windows and then our browser goes down. When Firefox restarts, multiple videos play at once and you have to go through every window to find them. I only linked to this Yahoo!Finance report because of the name Doug Kass. I liked what I saw. It would be nice if Yahoo!Finance turned off auto-play, or better yet, went to embeddable videos where we could put them right in our blogs. Addendum Aaron Task supplied the following video of Kass Thanks Aaron Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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