Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Spanish Finance Minister in Germany Pleads for Temporary Credit Line to Halt an "Imminent Financial Collapse"
- Austerity Hits Cisco Systems as 1,300 Layoffs Coming; Chipmaker Renesas Cuts 5,000 Jobs; Investigating Mass layoffs
- Social Media Panic in Italy: "Enough of this Agony; Give Us Back the Lira"
- Ten Major Italian Cities On Verge of Financial Collapse
- Full Spanish Bailout Coming Up; New Record High Yields on Spanish Bonds; Misguided Faith in Can-Kicking
Posted: 23 Jul 2012 08:22 PM PDT Spain faces a bond rollover of €28 Billion in October and is rightfully scared about 2-year bond rates of 6.5%. El Economista notes the Spanish economy minister is at a meeting in Berlin to discuss Government Request for a Credit Line to Save the Year and forestall an imminent financial collapse. This is a heavily Mish-modified translation from the article .... Luis de Guindos will meet with Wolfgang Schäuble to negotiate measures noting the ECB is already 19 weeks without buying debt.For starters, when it comes to these bailouts, there is no such thing as "temporary". Regardless, I believe Germany will reject the request, thereby forcing Spain into a full sovereign bailout. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 23 Jul 2012 07:04 PM PDT For the second consecutive year, Cisco Systems is in Austerity Mode, looking to shed 1,300 employees. Cisco Systems is to lay off around 1,300 workers, as part of the company's ongoing austerity programme aimed at saving $1bn a year.Chipmaker Renesas Cuts 5,000 Jobs The BBC also notes Chipmaker Renesas Cuts 5,000 Jobs Renesas Electronics, the world's fifth biggest chipmaker, has announced a restructuring plan that will lead to at least 5,000 job cuts.Investigating Mass layoffs According to BLS data, Mass layoffs, defined as termination of 50 or more employees simultaneously, have actually been declining and are at the lowest point since 2007. However, corporations did not exactly go on a hiring spree in the recovery and thus have been running lean. Should the economy go into a recession (I think we are back in one), companies may have to take it to the chin in profits or in layoffs. I suspect both. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Social Media Panic in Italy: "Enough of this Agony; Give Us Back the Lira" Posted: 23 Jul 2012 11:49 AM PDT Black Monday messages on Facebook and Twitter have gone viral in Italy as people have had enough of austerity, job losses, and uncertainty. La Stampa reports on Panic in the Network. What follows is a Mish-revised translation of select ideas and quotes from the article. My specific comments are in brackets. Black Monday breaks early in the morning on websites across the world and social networking spreads alarm. "Withdraw money from bank accounts" is the appeal of Andrew to Facebook friends.Schools May Not Reopen After Summer Break Please note that Italian provinces warn cuts may close schools Italian regional authorities may not be able to open schools after the summer break if spending cuts planned in the government's latest spending review are carried through, the head of the Union of Italian Provinces (UPI) said on Monday.More Panic in Brussels Than on Social Media In case you missed it, please consider Ten Major Italian Cities On Verge of Financial Collapse Also note a Time-Lapse Interactive Graph Shows Stunning Rise in Anti-Euro Sentiment in Italy. In terms of sheer panic, I bet eurocrats in Brussels are in a bigger state of panic than what you saw on Twitter. Here is a thought of mine that is worth repeating: Eventually, there will come a time when a populist office-seeker will stand before the voters, hold up a copy of the EU treaty and (correctly) declare all the "bail out" debt foisted on their country to be null and void. That person will be elected. Beppe Grillo may be just that person. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Ten Major Italian Cities On Verge of Financial Collapse Posted: 23 Jul 2012 08:40 AM PDT The economic situation in Italy has reached a critical phase as Ten major cities face risk of crash The word "crash" implies bankruptcy. Milan, Naples, and Turin are among the cities. The Association of Municipalities plans to demonstrate in Rome against new cuts, hoping to sends a clear message to prime minister Mario Monti that will "force his hand". What follows in blockquotes is an "as is" translation from La Stampa. There are ten major Italian cities with more than 50,000 inhabitants, who are a step away from the crash. Naples and Palermo at the top of the "black list", although a task force for weeks at Palazzo Chigi is doing everything possible to avoid the worst. Then Reggio Calabria, finished in red already in 2007-2008 and is now being investigated by the judiciary. And then so many other governments, large and small (like Milazzo), perhaps far virtuous, could be forced to ask for the "collapse", which means dissolution of the council, entrance of the Court of Auditors and prefectural commissioner.Eurointelligence sums up the article this way: Over 10 Italian big cities are on the verge of financial collapse. Debts, derivatives and mistakes: the Italian municipalities are in crisis. After the default of Alessandria, a big city in Piedmont (North-Western Italy), there are several risks for Turin, Milan, Napoli, Palermo, Reggio Calabria and other cities with over 50,000 inhabitants. "Too much debts, over 10 metropolitan cities should ask to Corte dei Conti (the Italian Court of Auditors) for an orderly default," Graziano Del Rio, chairman of Italian Association of Commons, said to La Stampa. In last week the Sicily has asked for a financial support and has claimed over €1bn of credits to Italian government.Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 23 Jul 2012 01:32 AM PDT Inquiring minds are watching the implosion of Spanish bonds. Spain 10-Year Government Bonds Spain 2-Year Government Bonds 5.76% was the previous close. Yield is currently up 44.5 basis points at 6.2%. The high yield was 6.255%, easily topping the previous high of 6.09%. Full Spanish Bailout Coming Up El Pais reports Full Spanish Bailout Increasingly Likely "The financial credibility of Spain is close to zero. Fiscal credibility is zero. The political credibility is zero. Investors have been sentenced to Spain. The Government has wasted no time in recent months has squandered the credit granting him an absolute majority, has lost some confidence in European institutions and the whole market with a succession of errors, many of them for a bad communication strategy is correct now without success. Too late? Can not say such things in public, but without a change of attitude are you doomed to a full recovery. "Misguided Faith in Can-Kicking As is typical, that translation is a bit choppy. However, one can surely get the gist of it. Also as usual, Wolfgang Münchau misdiagnoses the problem. Hiking taxes is a problem, but so is Keynesian claptrap. It is not feasible for governments to spend their way out of problems. Nor is it possible for monetary stimulus to solve the problem. If such proposed solutions actually worked, Japan would not be in dire straits today. Keynesian and monetary stimulus proposals are nothing more than gigantic can-kicking exercises. They only appear to work because experience shows the can will be kicked much further than anyone thought possible. The intermediate result is misguided faith in can-kicking. The final result however, is typically something that ends up like Greece or Japan, with can-kicking proponents like Münchau and Paul Krugman, screaming every step of the way for still more can-kicking as the solution. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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