Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- April Greek Capital Flight €5 Billion; Eurozone Liabilities Hit €115 Billion
- Swede Has Had Enough
- "Bond Girl" on Chicago and the Quality of Credit Analysis in the Municipal Bond Market
April Greek Capital Flight €5 Billion; Eurozone Liabilities Hit €115 Billion Posted: 28 May 2015 12:26 PM PDT Chalk up another €5 billion in capital flight from Greece in April. Total eurozone exposure to Greek currency liabilities now sits at €115 Billion, not counting accelerated capital flight in recent weeks. The following two charts produced with data from EuroCrisis Monitor. Greece Target2 Imbalance Since February 2008 Greece Target2 Imbalance Detail Since June 2014 The chart shows a rise of €2 billion but that does not count cash. Target2 Explanation For a refresher course on Target2, please see Reader From Europe Asks "Can You Please Explain Target2?" Intra-Eurosystem Liabilities The latest Intra-Eurosystem Liabilities from the Bank of Greece are €114.95 billion as shown below. Change From Last Month Last month, eurozone exposure to Greek liabilities was €96.427 billion of Target2 imbalances plus another €14.028 billion net liabilities related to the allocation of euro banknotes. "The past week in May was more challenging compared to the previous ones in the month, with daily outflows of 200 to 300 million euros in the last few days," a senior Greek banker said yesterday. In the last week alone, it seems likely another €2 billion was pulled from Greek banks. The total May drain will not be reported until June 10. The ECB is attempting to stem the flow by not upping emergency liquidity assistance (ELA) as noted yesterday in Run on Greek Banks Accelerates; ECB Halts Emergency Funding Hike; Untangling the Lies Everyone Prepared? When the ECB and Germany say they are prepared for Grexit, do they include taxpayers who will have to foot the bill for default? My friend Lars from Norway pinged me with this observation today... Greek GDP is about €180 billion. Public sector is 60% of the total. That makes the private sector contribution to GDP about €72 billion.Since June of 2014, Greek banks shed about €70 billion in deposits, an amount roughly equivalent to Greek private GDP. Not to worry, everything is clearly under control. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Posted: 28 May 2015 10:11 AM PDT A Swedish man reached the absolute end of what he can take anymore and profanely complains about Swedish politicians. The man is the founder of a new political party called Riksdemokraterna. Warning: graphic language. Link if video does not play: Swede Has Had Enough My comment: Beggar-thy-neighbor policies, deflationary conditions, and the rise of extremist political parties all go hand in hand. Discontent is spreading in spite of the alleged recovery. What happens when the next recession hits? Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
"Bond Girl" on Chicago and the Quality of Credit Analysis in the Municipal Bond Market Posted: 28 May 2015 12:31 AM PDT On May 13, Moody's shocked the municipal bond market by downgrading Chicago to junk. At that time S&P rated Chicago five notches higher, the widest spread between bond raters in history. Kristi Culpepper, AKA "Bond Girl" comments on the event in What Chicago's Fiscal Emergency says about the Quality of Credit Analysis in the Municipal Bond Market. In a sense, Moody's was only validating the bond market's opinion of the city's creditworthiness — the bonds had already been trading at junk levels for several months. This should have been a straightforward event for the chattering class to process intellectually. Rating actions tend to lag the market rather than lead it.Damning Report There is much more in Culpepper's report, and all of it damning. Chicago is on the verge of shrinking. Meanwhile, Illinois is already losing jobs to Indiana, Texas, and Wisconsin. A number of Illinois cities are on the verge of bankruptcy (more on that point in a subsequent post). And what does Illinois have to show for all this? Nothing! Bankruptcy is the only sensible answer. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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