3.7.12

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Nigel Farage: Here It Comes Your 19th Euro Breakdown

Posted: 03 Jul 2012 09:24 AM PDT

The always humorous Nigel Farage blasted European council president Herman Van Rompuy along with José Barroso in European parliament today, mocking the alleged "breakthrough".



Link if video does not play: Nigel Farage on Euro Breakdown

Select Quotes:

  • ESM is doomed before it starts
  • Legal Challenges in Ireland and Germany
  • Estonia Justice Says it will not fit their constitution
  • Finns and Dutch have broken agreement made in the middle of the night
  • Perhaps the little countries do not have a say at all anymore
  • Crisis is insolvable

Farage sarcastically commented to Herman Van Rompuy ...

"It's lovely to see you Mr. Rompuy. You've not been here for many months. It's delightful to have you back. Last time you were here, you told us we've turned the corner. The worst of the crisis was over. With every one of your predictions, it goes on getting worse. I am sorry sir. You don't have the presence, the credibility, or the standing for the international markets to believe you can provide a solution."

Obviously this calls for another musical tribute:



Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Finland, Netherlands Reject ESM Model; Finland Insists On Collateral for Loans to Spain

Posted: 03 Jul 2012 09:08 AM PDT

How long Finland and the Netherlands are willing to put up with not having a say in how the ESM (or anything else in the EMU runs) remains to be seen, but both countries expect collateral for any loans to Spain.

Bloomberg reports Finland Firm on Collateral as Spain Aid Terms Discussed
Finland underlined its determination to get collateral in exchange for loans to Spain's banks as the Nordic country targets similar terms to those won last year on its contribution to Greece's second bailout.

"We have the requirements of collateral on the loans that are from the temporary vehicle," Jukka Pekkarinen, director general at the Finnish Finance Ministry in Helsinki, said in an interview in Oslo yesterday. "The details are still open, but the principle standpoint is the same" as in the case of Greece, he said.

Collateral Demand

Finland, one of only four AAA rated nations left in the euro area, threatened to hamper efforts to agree on a second bailout for Greece by insisting on collateral last year. The Nordic country was the only nation to negotiate security in exchange for loans from the temporary fund, or the European Financial Stability Facility, because the vehicle doesn't give its creditors preferred status.

The Nordic country yesterday questioned the ability of the permanent rescue fund, the ESM, to purchase bonds through the secondary market. Finland, which opposes such purchases, argues the process would require unanimity inside the euro area to be possible.

There exists no unanimous agreement on the bond purchases because Finland and the Netherlands reject the model, the Finnish government said in a report dated June 29 and presented yesterday by Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen to the parliament's Grand Committee in Helsinki. The government reiterated its opposition today, citing the rescue funds' limited resources and the shown "ineffectiveness" of bond purchases.

Can't Block

Spain's Economy Minister Luis de Guindos said today that the two countries won't be able to block Spain from receiving aid via the euro region's permanent rescue fund.

"There is a fundamental point in the ESM and that is that decisions are taken with a qualified majority, not unanimously," de Guindos told journalists in Madrid. "I don't want to go into calculations but Holland and Finland won't have the capacity to block an agreement."

The rules of the ESM include an emergency voting procedure, which requires a qualified majority of 85 percent of the votes cast if the European Commission and the European Central Bank see a threat to the economic and financial sustainability of the euro area. Finland's parliament voted on June 21 to approve the permanent bailout fund and the Dutch upper house of parliament approved it today.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel declined to take sides in the dispute over sovereign-bond buying, saying "we have to respect" Finland's opposition to such aid. Conditions for emergency financial aid to euro countries will be decided case by case, she said in Berlin today.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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EU Summit Winner Was Merkel

Posted: 03 Jul 2012 12:13 AM PDT

In spite of all the headlines and chatter the real winner in the latest of 19 EU summits was none other than German Chancellor Angela Merkel. First lets take a look at numerous headlines that got the story wrong.

Merkel Big Loser

Reuters reports Merkel seen as big loser in euro zone showdown.
Newspapers in Spain, Italy and France on Saturday toasted the triumph of their leaders - Mario Monti, Mariano Rajoy and Francois Hollande - in pushing Merkel into a U-turn that would long have been unthinkable.

Even German newspapers said Merkel had been made to accept demands for the euro zone rescue fund to be able to inject aid directly into stricken banks from next year and intervene on bond markets to support troubled member states.

"There's no doubt about it - the chancellor was blindsided at the euro summit," wrote influential columnist Nikolaus Blome of Bild, a daily with 12 million readers.

"Merkel caves in - money for ailing banks," read the headline on Germany's left-leaning Sueddeutsche Zeitung.

Bild wrote: "Italy and Spain got what they wanted: It'll be easier to borrow excessively again... It was the first time in more than two crisis years that euro states didn't follow Germany's orders."
Hollande Big Winner

A Bloomberg video proclaims Hollande Emerges as Leader at EU Summit

Double Satisfaction For Italy

The Financial Times says Rajoy real winner despite Monti delight
"It is a double satisfaction for Italy," said Mario Monti, a reference to both Italy's victory over Germany in the European football championships and his outflanking of the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, forcing her to agree emergency measures she had for months said she would not accept.

But for all of Mr Monti's chest-beating, the real winner in the early-morning deal was not the courtly economist. It was his Spanish counterpart, Mariano Rajoy.

For the first time since the outbreak of the crisis two years ago, a huge and some would say inevitable bailout of Spain's teetering domestic banking sector, stuffed with bad real estate investments – will no longer be Madrid's responsibility.
No Winners or Losers

Getting closer to the truth (in an attempt to ruffle no feathers as opposed to careful analysis) EU President Herman Van Rompuy says No Winners or Losers in EU Summit Clash
Summit discussions between European Union and eurozone leaders ended with no winners or losers Friday, EU President Herman Van Rompuy insisted, after a clash was resolved between Italy and Spain on one side, and Germany on the other.

Madrid secured a change in the terms of an upcoming eurozone-funded bank rescue, while Rome obtained a "mechanism" to reduce the borrowing costs of countries that are cleaning up their economies, but still face market pressure.

"It was a tough negotiation, it took hours - certainly yesterday - and you can't summarize this in winners and losers," Van Rompuy said, referring to discussions that dragged until 4:30 am (0230 GMT) on Friday.
Real Victor is Merkel

I have read dozens of articles all proclaiming someone or other (or no one, or multiple people a winner).

Having read all those viewpoints, the best analysis of all of them is Financial Times columnist Wolfgang Münchau who says The real victor in Brussels was Merkel

Let's tune in.
Mario Monti faced down the German chancellor and won the battle. He will survive a few more weeks or months in politics. It was clever of him to threaten a veto on something Angela Merkel badly needed. He had her in the corner. It was an example of classic EU diplomacy.

But this was only the foreground spectacle. If you look behind the curtain, you will find that, for Italy at least, nothing has changed at all.

Mr Monti may have secured the right kind of deal politically but to solve the ESM's size problem he really should have insisted on a banking licence. With that, the ESM could have leveraged its lending ceiling to a more realistic level. It will not be able to do this now.

The deal on Spain was marginally better – on paper. But it, too, is not what it seems. I see three obstacles:

1. A mandate to inject equity into the banks will be conditional on a political agreement for joint banking supervision. This is where Ms Merkel can still exact her revenge. Do not expect this to proceed easily. A joint system of banking would be a very big deal, and I doubt that a sensible agreement can be agreed by October.

2. Direct bank recapitalisations may require a change in the ESM treaty. I know this point is disputed. EU officials say they can do it by diktat. But I cannot see how one can conceivably let the ESM inject equity into banks directly when the treaty says specifically that the ESM lends money to member states for that purpose. Would the treaty not have mentioned this important detail? The head of the Bundestag's budget committee also seems to think that a treaty change is now needed.

3. The new facility is still constrained by the same overall funding limits of the ESM as the bond purchases. I believe the Spanish banks will ultimately need a lot more than the €100bn earmarked for this programme once you take into account the effects of both the housing crash and the depression. The ESM is seriously overloaded.

The most important event last week was probably not the agreement at the summit anyway, but the statement by Ms Merkel that there will be no eurozone bonds "for as long as I live".

If Ms Merkel is right and there are no eurozone bonds in her lifetime, the eurozone will not survive. Without eurozone bonds or a change in ECB policy, Italy's and Spain's debt – and eurozone membership – is not sustainable. That was as true on Wednesday as it is today.
Brick Wall of Reality

I have criticized Münchau on numerous occasions but he has this nailed. I especially like his conclusion. My only quibble with the article is his statement "Monti should have insisted on a banking licence".

This is where ideology comes into play.

Münchau knows damn well that Merkel cannot give into such a demand without a German referendum, yet he keeps banging his wishes into the brick wall of reality because that is what he believes is best for Europe.

I disagree about what is best. The point is debatable. What is not debatable is Münchau and others keep ignoring real constraints on Merkel, expecting - sometimes demanding - she do something she cannot do.

Regardless, except for a single misguided sentence, Münchau made a sterling case for who really won in Brussels.

Merkel Plays Hollande, Monti, Media, Even Bloggers, Like a Fiddle

By purposely making antagonistic statements such as "no eurozone bonds in my lifetime", statements Merkel had to know would get trumped up in the media (and were), she set expectations for the summit, not at ground level, but rather 35 feet underground.

Expectations were so low that Hollande and Rajoy felt like winners coming out of the summit.

The irony is Monti won nothing at all while proclaiming "double satisfaction".

Rajoy at least got something, but numerous obstacles remain. Hollande was a sideshow at best.

Let's see what the bond market looks like a month from now, and six months from now before jumping to conclusions. Meanwhile, Merkel took a soft blow to her reputation at home.

Eventually these blows will matter, but this blow was the bare minimum anyone could have expected. The blow only looks significant because of purposeful media-manipulating statements ahead of the summit.

The real battles are still ahead because the summit solved virtually nothing.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


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