Tag Archives: barroso

EFSF loses its AAA rating, downgraded to AA+


Poor Nicholas, poor poor Nicholas. He gambled his entire political being on the French economy.. and lost. Now as if to rub salt in his wounds, Standard & Poors have dashed his last hope of saving his troubled fiscal future.

On this news alone, I am now expecting in the short term Germany to announce that it is leaving the Eurozone and will be returning to the Deutchemark. What a mess these politicians have created for us, not them, but for us. We are the ones who pay whilst failures like Barosso get awards. Truly sickening.

http://youtu.be/rWFHZupO1wY


From S&P:

European Financial Stability Facility Long-Term Ratings Cut To ‘AA+’; Short-Term Ratings Affirmed; Outlook Developing

Overview

  • On Jan. 13, 2012, we lowered to ‘AA+’ the long-term sovereign credit ratings on two of the European Financial Stability Facility’s (EFSF’s) previously ‘AAA’ rated guarantor member states, France and Austria.
  • The EFSF’s obligations are no longer fully supported either by guarantees from EFSF members rated ‘AAA’ by Standard & Poor’s, or by ‘AAA’ rated securities. We consider that credit enhancements sufficient to offset what we view as the reduced creditworthiness of guarantors are currently not in place.
  • We are therefore lowering our long-term issuer credit rating on the EFSF to ‘AA+’ from ‘AAA’. We are also affirming the ‘A-1+’ short-term rating on EFSF.
  • The outlook is developing, which reflects that we could raise the EFSF’s long-term rating to ‘AAA’ if we see that additional credit enhancements are put in place, but also the likelihood that we could lower the rating further if we conclude that the creditworthiness of the EFSF’s members will likely be further reduced over the next two years.

Rating Action

On Jan. 16, 2012, Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services lowered the ‘AAA’ long-term issuer credit rating on the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) to ‘AA+’ from ‘AAA’ and affirmed the short-term issuer credit rating at ‘A-1+’. We removed the ratings from CreditWatch, where they had been placed with negative implications on Dec. 6, 2011. The outlook is developing.

Rationale

When we announced the placement of the ratings on the EFSF on CreditWatch on Dec. 6, 2011, we said that, depending on the outcome of our review of the ratings of the EFSF’s guarantor member sovereigns, we would likely align the issue and issuer credit ratings on the EFSF with those of the lowest issuer rating we assigned to the EFSF members we rated ‘AAA’ (as of Dec. 6, 2011), unless we saw that sufficient credit enhancements were in place to maintain the EFSF rating at ‘AAA’ (see "European Financial Stability Facility Long-Term ‘AAA’ Rating Placed On CreditWatch Negative," published Dec. 6, 2011).

On Jan. 13, 2012, we announced rating actions on 16 members of the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU or eurozone; see "Standard & Poor’s Takes Various Rating Actions On 16 Eurozone Sovereign Governments," Jan. 13, 2012). We lowered to ‘AA+’ the long-term ratings on two of the EFSF’s previously ‘AAA’ rated guarantor members, France and Austria. The outlook on the long-term ratings on France and Austria is negative, indicating that we believe that there is at least a one-in-three chance that we will lower the ratings again in 2012 or 2013. We affirmed the ratings on the other ‘AAA’ rated EFSF members: Finland, Germany, Luxembourg, and The Netherlands.

Following the lowering of the ratings on France and Austria, the rated long-term debt instruments already issued by the EFSF are no longer fully
supported by guarantees from the EFSF guarantor members rated ‘AAA’ by Standard & Poor’s, or ‘AAA’ rated liquid securities. Instead, they are now covered by guarantees from guarantor members or securities rated ‘AAA’ or ‘AA+’.

We consider that credit enhancements that would offset what we view as the now-reduced creditworthiness of the EFSF’s guarantors and securities backing the EFSF’s issues are currently not in place. We have therefore lowered to ‘AA+’ the issuer credit rating of the EFSF, as well as the issue ratings on its long-term debt securities.

Outlook

The developing outlook on the long-term rating reflects the likelihood we currently see that we may either raise or lower the ratings over the next two years.

We understand that EFSF member states may currently be exploring credit-enhancement options. If the EFSF adopts credit enhancements that in our view are sufficient to offset its now-reduced creditworthiness, in particular if we see that once again the EFSF’s long-term obligations are fully supported by guarantees from EFSF member-guarantors rated ‘AAA’ or by securities rated ‘AAA’, we would likely raise the EFSF’s long-term ratings to ‘AAA’.

Conversely, if we were to conclude that sufficient offsetting credit enhancements are, in our opinion, not likely to be forthcoming, we would likely change the outlook to negative to mirror the negative outlooks of France and Austria. Under those circumstances we would expect to lower the ratings on the EFSF if we lowered the long-term sovereign credit ratings on the EFSF’s ‘AAA’ or ‘AA+’ rated members to below ‘AA+’.











































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EU speaks with forked tongue

Does the left hand know what the right hand is doing? Oh I am sure they know exactly what their doing.. but you be the judge.

This first element comes from the EU Parliament;

A freeze on the 2014-2020 budget will not be possible unless agreed policies are slashed, the European Parliament said in a vote yesterday (8 June), challenging countries that want to freeze the EU’s long-term spending to reflect austerity at home.

A minimum increase of 5% in the EU budget is needed if the bloc is to complete all its agreed objectives, such as putting in place a common diplomatic service and boosting its economy, the Parliament said. (source)

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Barroso lives it up on your tax

Everytime I read something like this it makes my blood boil. The unelected ‘President’ of an organisation whose only role in life is telling you how to live your life in excruciating detail whilst spending your tax money like water, an open tap with a broken washer.

So where do I find this kind of information, the BBC? The Times? The Telegraph? or perhaps The Sun… no, they don’t rock the boat, they rarely tell you how much of your hard earned is being pissed up the wall by these unelected authoritarian nobody’s. The details were uncovered in research by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, so it rules out the cut & paste propaganda publications above anyway.

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‘I am elected’ protests flustered Barroso

The one thing that we can always bank on, is that Nigel Farage will say it as it is, without all the political nicely nicely double speak that pervades the parliaments in the EU and Westminster.

Here he speaks against a direct EU taxation system, reaffirms the premise of ‘no taxation without representation’ especially by the unelected EU Commission.

Watch for the Barroso response, a Maoist who still believes that the Soviet system of leadership (single candidate selection, rubber stamp approval and appointment) makes him an elected official.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rKoEm1uWY7s&fs=1&hl=en_GB]

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Tory Conference agenda – an insight

So here we are again, the Tory conference. As my friend WfW has already posted this morning, the agenda has been announced.

The agenda for the Conservative Party conference has now been published and can be viewed here, courtesy of their website.

One omission that is immediately noticable is the subject of ‘Europe’ and EU membership. One doubts whether it will even get a mention – maybe one sentence? – during the Defence and Foreign Affairs debate on Wednesday morning.

Oh, there is plenty of discussion about the Big Society, the Environment & Climate Change, Devolved Nations and New Politics and People Power – but of Europe and the EU: Zilch, Nada, Nothing, F’All!

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Chief Scientific Advisor – EU

In these harsh economic times, there are just some things that no longer seem essential, if indeed they ever were essential.

The President of the European Commission, the portuguese Maoist, José Manuel Barroso announced plans in March to recruit a top scientist to offer advice on controversial issues including climate change and genetically-modified food, a role that so far is thankfully still waiting to be filled.

The role would not be an independent one, and like the UK Labour Party, Barroso would be following the credo of policy driven science rather than scientific driven policy. The incumbent, if and when they are chosen and appointed, will be given an office in the Commission’s Berlaymont building and will slot into the Bureau of European Policy Advisors (BEPA), reporting directly to Barroso.

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EU Commission sponsors Global Governance Programme

At 11.30 a.m. on 18 June, President José Manuel Durao Barroso will deliver a speech at the Badia Fiesolana near Florence, entitled “European Union and Multilateral Global Governance”.

This is the Inaugural Lecture of the new Global Governance Programme at the European University Institute.

I await with interest what this unelected Maoist Barroso has to say next week about why our tax money is being spent training our youth in the dark art of Global Governance.

This is what the European University Institute has to say about this course.

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