Europe
And America Morally And Financially Bankrupt
Writers Articles And Opinions
18 May 2010
By Bob
Chapman
Greece Bailed out, 19 more nations to go, Greeks not
ready to submit to austerity, Gold is the antithesis
of Fiat money, fals hope for jobs, Goldman Sachs under
investigation, but they make money every quarter
regardless... Greece has its immediate financing. Now
the question is can they follow the prescription? In
all likelihood the answer is no. the bond markets are
reflecting that via a lack of confidence. In fact,
some bond markets are falling apart and there is no
end in sight. We have bond rating firms lowering
ratings, as the rating services themselves are under
serious fire and we do not believe they will be around
long. The big question is why did it take two years
and 10 months to react?
There are 19 nations with serious sovereign debt
problems and there is really no way back for them.
They may as well all default, because the austerity
programs they’d have to follow and at the same time to
satisfy creditors, not only is impossible but it
signals years of stunted growth and perhaps in many
cases the possibility of revolution. Greece certainly
fills that bill. We see the eurozone rules may soon be
changed, so that eurozone participants can assist one
another. That means in time they will all collapse
together. As many as five members could need
assistance of the 16 in the zone. Our guess is
permanent bailouts will go forward and the ECB rules
will be changed to allow the ECB to function like the
Fed. Greece and many others are trapped and they will
burden the healthy nations and neutralize them. This
approach is the ECB nuclear option. It will destroy
the zone eventually. This will destroy the euro and
end the option of the euro becoming the world reserve
currency. The zone would have adopted the same
approach as the US and UK in destroying their
currencies. How can you have a union with one interest
rate, where the ECB controls the monetary policy, but
cannot control the budget deficits, borrowing and
spending activities of its members?
The Keynesian dictum of borrowing and spending has led
the eurozone into a black hole. What will emerge from
that black hole will be something similar to the
Federal Reserve. The psychology behind all this is a
move to make the US dollar again preeminent as a world
reserve currency. In the meantime the day of reckoning
is shoved forward, a diversion from these economic
policies are failed terrorist bomb plantings in NYC
and the destruction of offshore oil platforms. As we
said in an earlier issue Greece is the poster child –
the goat. Greece has done no more or less than the
other 18 insolvent countries and many more. One asked,
how can the dollar be a strong currency, when they
themselves are broke. They talk of fiscal stability
and reform, such as higher taxes and the reduction of
entitlement programs, but you will see little of that
and lots of bait and switch tactics. We are also
seeing in US Treasury auctions not only massive
offerings, but also a new crop of direct bidders
accounting for 13% of sales vs. 1%. The indirects, or
foreign central banks, have fallen from 37% to 23%. In
our mind there is no question that the directs are
really the Fed. That means to us that the US was
behind the forced downgrading of Greek and other debt.
That was to bolster the position of the dollar and
lower the value of the euro and other currencies,
making their exports far more competitive and
profitable.
Thus here we have a calculated lowering of the euro
and other currencies, a stronger dollar to attract
more funds to US bond auctions. We also have rating
agencies assisting in the operation. Incidentally,
Moody’s received a Wells notice in March and never
announced it. We are sure we will find out soon that
Warren Buffett has sold his Moody’s position. While
this transpired the Greeks experienced another rating
fall and at the US auction the indirects took 28% of
the offering. The directs were there but as usual and
as usual it was a secret as to who they were. Again,
the direct bidders are the Fed. That is called
quantitative easing and that is very inflationary.
As of this past weekend we find we have another
all-inclusive ECB bailout package for those who
haven’t asked for it yet, but will need it. This is
the European version of quantitative easing. This
method of saving the international banking system is
to essentially nationalize it. The bottom line is this
stopgap measure will eventually cause the dollar more
harm than good. Once investors realize what the US and
European nations have done to gain time they will be
horrified and the ensuing fallout will be devastating
for the dollar.
Europe’s response has been atypical. Take from the
industrious and give to those who cannot or won’t run
their economies effectively. This is what socialism is
all about including public guarantees against loss for
mega transnational conglomerates. Europe’s elitists
and America’s as well are morally and financially
bankrupt. Goldman and others are being called onto the
carpet with the rating firms. All of the players knew
$1 trillion isn’t going to do the job. They are again
buying time and creating more inflation. Debt may have
been backstopped by economic growth by bailouts, but
cannot be present in a mode of austerity. The
magicians are again creating illusions. The alchemists
will be wrong again as they have always been
throughout history.
You say who is going to be buying Greek bonds and
other bonds? European central banks of course. More
quantitative easing. This is significant. It surely is
because it reveals that both the European and US
financial systems are irretrievably bankrupt. Don’t
forget that the dreams of socialism and fascism are
being shown to be giant losers. This past week ushers
in another phase of the ongoing collapse – another
interlude – that stretches out the time horizon, but
it won’t affect the ultimate outcome.
These are pretensions that will go unfulfilled. You
saw the Greeks in the streets; do they look like
people who are about to submit to austerity
indefinitely? We hardly think so. We see the same
reaction from the rest of the basket cases. Of this $1
trillion European bailout, EU countries will pay $700
billion that they do not have. The British have
refused to participate and the US will via the IMF
will be about $65 billion. There is no guarantee that
these funds won’t be used up within a year. Then it’s
another TARP type of bailout, or the whole EU goes
under. Even though Europe and the US will have
hyperinflation as a result the end result is going to
be massive insolvency. This situation is far more
serious than the credit crisis of the past 20 months.
As a result the euro is headed for $1.20 and perhaps
lower. German President Mrs. Merkle was not re-elected
in a majority and pays for what Germans regard as a
sellout. As a result of these forced payments to bail
out erstwhile fellow EU members we could well see
rioting in countries forced to pay for the losers.
Europe could experience chaos from two different
points of view.
European elitists are willing to throw money at
Europe’s problems, but not one idea about how to fix
the problems of these nations, no necessary
restructuring. Just doing the same old socialist
thing. Something for nothing, and it has now been
discovered someone actually has to pay for. If you
stop for a minute and look at this picture it is
ludicrous that EU nations that are near bankruptcy are
bailing out other EU countries like themselves. The
question is what will the euro eventually be worth?
The euro, the eurozone and the EU are history. It is
now just a question of when it is over. Sovereign debt
is unserviceable and is to be serviced by more
unserviceable debt. That dear reader is truly
desperation.
The top 7 nations that are owed money by Portugal,
Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain aggregate almost $300
billion. There are a total of 22 nations owed money by
just these five nations. The major debtors are France
$911 billion; Germany $703 billion; England $416
billion; Holland $244 billion; the USA $186 billion;
Spain $150 billion and Japan $122 billion. This is
what interconnectivity brings you in a
socialist-fascist international.
Greece is the poster child of Europe’s failed system
called socialism. Greece is just the beginning of the
financial and economic collapse of Europe. Perhaps
with minor exceptions we have 27 morally and fiscally
bankrupt governments, aided and abetted by central
banks and financial institutions. Prosperity cannot be
created out of government debt. The only people who
gain are the bankers and the financial centers from
such shortsighted debt accumulation. Again, there is
little or no planning for sound investing to offset
such debt. It is called living for today and the heck
with tomorrow. Thus, the debt is being misallocated in
frivolous ways. It is called malinvestment. History
shows it manifests itself in failure and insolvency.
No country has ever spent itself out of debt in a fiat
money system. As a result of this degenerative system
the only safe money is gold, as has been the case for
centuries. It is the only true totally liquid
investment that protects one from the vicissitudes of
fiat money. The stage has already been set for the
second phase of gold domination. Gold is the
antithesis of the fraud known as fiat money and debt.
There is no logic or morality that allows central
banks to create money at will. How can people tolerate
such a system Is it any wonder that gold has gained
against every currency for the past seven years. In
the end only one currency will survive and that is
gold. The flight from currency has begun in ernst.
This in part is what Europe’s problem is all about. We
are the victims of a vast fraud in which government
promised a social welfare system they simply couldn’t
deliver. This will happen in America and has already
happened in Europe. Those in power behind the scenes
know the system is imploding and they are helpless to
stop it. Very shortly Greece’s problems will fade into
the background as major countries bite the dust. If
you own bonds of any kind or stocks, with the
exception of gold and silver shares, sell them now and
move to gold and silver related assets. All these debt
obligations are unpayable and are a fraud. If you have
assets we implore you to switch them to gold and
silver related assets, because soon the window of
opportunity will be closed. Please do not allow
yourself to be financially destroyed.
Last week the Dow fell 5.7%; S&P 6.4%; the Russell
2000 8.9% and the Nasdaq 100 7.6%. Banks fell 7.2%;
broker/dealers 7.3%; cyclicals 9.2%; transports 8%;
consumers 4.6%; utilities 4.1%; high tech 7.5%; semis
7.8%; Internets 7.8% and biotechs 12.6%. Gold bullion
surged $29.00; the HUI fell 2.6% and USDX, the dollar
index rose 3.2% to 84.45.
Two-year T-bill yields fell 14 bps to 0.74%; the
10-year notes fell 23 bps to 3.42% and the 10-year
German bunds fell 22 bps to 2.79%.
The Freddie Mac 30-year fixed rate mortgage fell 6 bps
to 5%; the 15’s fell 3 bps to 4.36% and one-year ARMs
fell 18 bps to 4.07%. The 30-year jumbos fell 4 bps to
5.78%.
Fed credit fell $1.5 billion to $2.311 trillion. Fed
foreign holdings of Treasury and Agency debt rose $4.9
billion to $3.075 trillion. Custody holdings for
foreign central banks have increased $106 billion
year-to-date and year-on-year 15.5%, or $410 billion.
M2, narrow money supply, rose $20 billion to $8.470
trillion. YTD it is off 1.5%, or $42 billion.
Total money market fund assets fell $19 billion to
$2.853 trillion. YTD they have fallen $440 billion and
YOY $934 billion, or 24.7%.
Total commercial paper outstanding rose $32.9 billion
to $1.102 trillion. CP has declined $61 billion, or
16% annualized, and YTD and down $314 billion or 22%,
YOY.
On Friday we were told that 290,000 jobs were created
in April. 66,000 jobs were new census workers, making
$25.00 an hour and 188,000 created by the birth/death
ratio, or out of thin air. In reality the economy only
added 36,000 jobs. U3 rose from 9.7% to 9.9%. U6 was
17.1%. If you take out the birth/death ratio real
unemployment is 22.4%.
"Friday's release of April's Jobs numbers were falsely
optimistic. The data was deceitful, okay even a lie.
Non-farm payroll jobs were reported to have increased
by 299,000, which is nonsense. Of that, 188,000 were
made up, fictitious make believe, guesstimate phantom
jobs called the CES Birth / Death adjustment. Another
66,000 were temporary government census jobs. Then
another 26,000 jobs were temporary jobs with Temp
Services. So the number was bogus. Pure hogwash. The
admitted Unemployment rate rose to 9.9 percent from
9.7 percent. Unemployment remains a serious problem in
the U.S. The net zero real jobs growth In April comes
in 150,000 short of what is needed to keep pace with
population growth."
Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the bank facing a fraud
lawsuit from the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission, is expecting further litigation related to
sales of collateralized debt obligations.
“We anticipate that additional putative shareholder
derivative actions and other litigation may be filed,
and regulatory and other investigations and actions
commenced against us with respect to offering of CDOs,”
the New York- based firm said in a quarterly filing
with the SEC today.
Goldman Sachs, which makes more money from trading
than any other Wall Street firm, also disclosed that
its traders generated $100 million or more on 35 days
during the first quarter and lost money on no days.
The firm set a record when it made $100 million or
more on 46 days in the second quarter.
Governments will only bring about an end to the credit
crisis through the blood, sweat and tears of cutting
the amount of public debt, “Black Swan” author Nassim
Taleb said.
The crisis came from debt and you don’t escape it with
more debt, Taleb said in an interview on Bloomberg
Radio’s “Bloomberg Surveillance” today. We’re in a
situation where we had a patient who we discovered had
cancer a year and a half ago and all we’ve been giving
the patient is painkillers. The tumor is getting worse
because we are transforming private debt into public
debt and public debt is not manageable.
Taleb, a professor at New York University who also
advises Universa Investments LP, a $6 billion fund
that bets on extreme market moves, said the financial
system faces risk from increased complexity, and
President Barack Obama should work with U.S. Treasury
Secretary Timothy Geithner and Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben S. Bernanke to cut debt.
My fear is if we don’t stop them now they’re going to
create hyperinflation, Taleb said. Nobody has
confidence in a guy like Bernanke.
Taleb is a professor of risk engineering at NYU and an
advisor to Santa Monica, California-based Universa,
which was opened in 2007 by Mark Spitznagel, Taleb’s
former trading partner. Rare and unforeseen events are
known in finance as ‘black swans, after Taleb’s 2007
book, ‘‘The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly
Improbable.
If I were a politician I’d say you need blood, sweat
and tears, Taleb said. The first thing you need to do,
Obama, is to transform debt to equity. I don’t
understand why your great, great grandchildren should
have to pay for it. That’s immoral.
The cost of protecting U.S. municipal bonds rose by
the most this year as investors bought insurance on
U.S. state obligations after global stocks tumbled and
Europe’s debt crisis worsened.
Five-year contracts on the Markit MCDX index, tied to
50 municipal issuers, increased by 31 percent last
week to 1.64 percentage points, the biggest jump since
early December. California five-year credit default
swaps gained 40 percent, the most since December 2008.
The price of the swaps reached $273,000 to protect $10
million of bonds, according to data compiled by
Bloomberg.
“The ultimate cause is a deepening of investor risk
aversion, but that deep risk aversion was really
brought on originally by concerns over European
sovereign credit quality,” said Guy Lebas, chief
fixed-income strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott LLC
in Philadelphia.
Ten-year U.S. Treasury yields had the biggest two-week
drop since December 2008 as concern that European
leaders will be unable to contain Greece’s debt crisis
drove investors to the safety of federal government
debt. Global stocks slid for a fourth day yesterday,
erasing 2010 gains for U.S. benchmark indexes, and the
bonds of debt-laden nations tumbled.
Investors are shedding risk in favor of Treasuries,
Peter Hayes, head of municipal bonds at New York-based
BlackRock Inc., the world’s largest asset manager,
said in an e-mail. In municipal debt, investors got
ahead of themselves as there was some evidence that
tax receipts were turning higher. We are seeing this
abate and as a result some are realizing that fiscal
problems will not be solved just yet.
April Revenue
Revenue in California, the biggest issuer of municipal
debt, trailed Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s
forecast by $3.6 billion in April, the state
controller said last week. In New Jersey, April
income-tax payments were 25 percent below budget
projections, preliminary reports showed last week.
California Treasurer Bill Lockyer has said he is
concerned that speculative trading of credit default
swaps, the buying and selling of the insurance
contracts by investors who don’t own the securities,
may boost borrowing costs. He said that may occur if
the transactions create an unjustifiably negative
perception of California’s risk of default.
“It’s hard to escape the conclusion that this whole
market is really a way for a bunch of rich people who
have no stake in California trying to get richer by
gambling with taxpayers’ interest,” said Tom Dresslar,
a spokesman for Lockyer. “The prices of California
credit default swaps have nothing to do with the
credit quality of our bonds.”
Lockyer has asked Bank of America Merrill Lynch,
Barclays Plc, Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group
Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley, all
underwriters of California bonds, whether they help
investors bet against the state with credit default
swaps. He has urged Congress to include in pending
financial-overhaul legislation a requirement that an
investor buying a credit default swap hold a position
on that security.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s traders made money every
single day of the first quarter, a feat the firm has
never accomplished before.
Daily trading net revenue was $25 million or higher in
all of the first quarter’s 63 trading days, New
York-based Goldman Sachs reported in a filing with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission today. The
firm reaped more than $100 million on 35 of the days,
or more than half the time.
Goldman Sachs, which is facing a fraud lawsuit from
the SEC related to the sale of a mortgage-linked
security in 2007, generated $9.74 billion in trading
revenue in the first quarter, exceeding all of its
Wall Street competitors. Trading accounted for 76
percent of first-quarter revenue. The lack of trading
losses could add to the perception that Goldman Sachs
has an unfair advantage in the markets, said one
shareholder.
“It will reinforce the heads we win, tails you lose
mentality that people think actually exists and
promotes the concept of an unfair advantage,” said
Douglas Ciocca, a managing director at Renaissance
Financial Corp. in Leawood, Kansas, which oversees
about $2 billion in assets including Goldman Sachs
shares. “It’s too politically charged not to, how is
that possible that they only make money?”
Record Earnings
The bank, which reported record earnings last year, is
contesting the SEC’s lawsuit and the firm’s executives
were interrogated at a Senate subcommittee hearing
last month. Goldman Sachs, which maintains that it did
nothing wrong, is also being investigated by federal
prosecutors, said people familiar with the matter.
“This is the first time we have reported zero trading
loss days in a quarter,” Samuel Robinson, a Goldman
Sachs spokesman, said in an e-mail. “We believe it
shows the strength of our customer franchise and risk
management.”
Ciocca echoed that view, saying he thinks the
performance proves the strength of the firm’s
risk-management models and its ability to make money
even in markets with low volatility. “The statistical
probability of going through what we did would never
favor them making money every day,” Ciocca said. “It
actually speaks very well of their capability to
manage through different types of markets.”
Reaching Out Ciocca said he’s had first-hand
experience of Goldman Sachs’s efforts to reach out to
clients in the wake of the SEC lawsuit to answer
questions about the matter. He said representatives
from Goldman Sachs’s asset-management division
contacted his firm during the last week of April even
though they hadn’t been in touch for a year before
that.
“It was tactical, it was appropriate, it wasn’t
patronizing, it was very sincere,” Ciocca said.
In its SEC filing today, Goldman Sachs said it is
expecting further litigation related to sales of
collateralized debt obligations.
“We anticipate that additional putative shareholder
derivative actions and other litigation may be filed,
and regulatory and other investigations and actions
commenced against us with respect to offering of CDOs,”
the bank said. The company also laid out in the filing
a worst-case scenario of what could happen if the firm
doesn’t resolve the SEC case and can’t obtain
appropriate waivers from relevant regulators.