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Category Archives: BIGPIGS

Short Economic Stories January 28 2012

In the US: •The Fed announced it plans to leave short term interest rates in the current 0 – 0.25% range until late in 2014. And an explicit 2% inflation target was set. •Bond markets are interpreting the news something along these lines: the economy is sufficiently weak and likely to remain that way for several years. So the Fed is going to commit […] Read the rest of this entry »

Short Economic Stories

Big Picture: The balance sheet recession continues here in the US, and in Japan and Europe. As Reinhart & Rogoff suggested in their book – This Time Is Different – we can expect recessions to come more frequently and economic growth to be more shallow than we’ve come to expect over the past several decades. The greedometer and mini greedometer are showing some very […] Read the rest of this entry »

Short Economic Stories

  (with thanks to the Financial Times for this) 2012 began with a bang. The first day of trading saw some of the largest gains for a first day of the year in decades. Too bad all those gains occurred before markets opened on Tuesday. Indeed the entire US stock market gain for the week happened before the 9:30am opening bell on Tuesday (no, of course this game is not […] Read the rest of this entry »

Year End Letter 2011 (& 2012 Forecast)

Strategic Indicator:  Greedometer Last week, the greedometer registered 5400 rpm, a respectable but not unexpected jump from the previous week 4800rpm. And with that, we have the end of the year-end rise in the greedometer.  The 2011 set of greedometer readings resemble that of 2007. Indeed, both years saw the last or second to last week finish with a 5400rpm reading. Uncanny.  And foreboding.   (the […] Read the rest of this entry »

The final European debt summit: V 9.0

Without question, last week’s biggest economic story was whether Europe would succeed in laying out a credible plan to (once and for all) solve their insolvency problem. In keeping with the bazooka-less incremental changes brought to bear over the past 2 years, last week produced more of the same. All 17 eurozone member countries plus 9 of the 10 European Union (non euro using […] Read the rest of this entry »

Short Economic Stories: Europe

We’re only a couple days from learning whether the Eurozone implodes or manages to stumble along for a few more months because of yet another hail Mary pass. There are several uniquely painful aspects to the eurozone financial crisis. The sheer breadth of it is top of the list. Trillions of euros are needed to plug the holes in the dam for the next few […] Read the rest of this entry »

The Italian Conundrum

Italy will need roughly $400B in the first 6 months of 2012. A comprehensive program to keep Italy on life support will be several times this because it will have to support Italy for 3 years and include recapitalizing its banks. And if you’re going to bailout Italy, you’re going to have to cover: Spain, Belgium, France, and Austria (probably in that order). The numbers boggle the […] Read the rest of this entry »

Europe needs a sucker. Pick up a mirror.

This is unreal. Early this morning central bankers made a surprise coordinated move to stop the banking system melt-down in Europe from worsening there, and from spreading beyond Europe. The debt-fueled financial system contagion has been slowly steam-rolling everything in its path. It had reached the point where banks in Europe could not stop it, were not lending to each other, and the ECB was unwilling/unable […] Read the rest of this entry »

Short Economic Stories: Europe

  Financial system contagion continues to spread and slowly spiral out of control. Interest rates demanded by bond buyers, and implied interest rates from credit default swaps (CDSs) are higher across the board. It doesn’t matter whether you’re a PIIGS country, BIGPIGS country, or anywhere else in the Eurozone.  The Brits must be downright gleeful they have access to cheaper money than Germany does […] Read the rest of this entry »

More Euro toast

Germany and most of northern Europe are highly industrious and productive, and they’re net creditors (are owed money). On average, southern Europe is 30% overpaid / less productive, and they’re the ones that owe money to the north.   Debt monetization is going to cause inflation across Europe and devalue the euro. It will make all debts & assets less valuable.  Obviously that’s what you […] Read the rest of this entry »