Tag Archives: eurozone

More playground dramatics, how pathetic



French President Nicolas Sarkozy has ridiculed Britain once again by saying that “the United Kingdom has no industry any more”, media reports said.

The recent spat was made during a prime time national TV broadcast, in which Sarkozy was trying to defend his decision to introduce an increase in the Value Added Tax (VAT) in an attempt to boost France’s failing economy.

By enforcing the 1.6 percent VAT rise, ordinary people will have to pay for social charges too.

The French President, who has admitted for the first time that he may lose upcoming elections in the Spring, also admitted that he was borrowing the measure from Germany, arguing that it had ‘helped to boost German competitiveness’ and had not led to a rise in prices.

But, when a journalist noted that Britain had experienced a rise in prices after increasing its VAT contributions, Sarkozy spat out the words: ‘The United Kingdom has no industry any more’.

His comments came as earlier in 2009, Sarkozy actually attacked a VAT rise in Britain, saying it had ‘absolutely failed’ to stimulate the economy.

Forget that Sarkozy is little more than a pint size Napoleon wannabe, or that Cameron thinks he is some kind of popular Churchillian masthead (not), these arrogant politicos actually believe that ‘the economy’ is what the government can screw out of the rest of us. Its takes no account of hard work and profits raised by the private sector, and is the keystone of Keynesian economics, i.e. that the State IS the economy.

Until all political parties realise and change their policy, that without private business, without the SME’s that drive growth, drive investment, drive employment and therefore tax revenues there will never, ever be any growth in the UK. The UK government must back off and give those private businesses the ability to thrive after more than 30 years of concerted effort by the EU to destroy every vestige of UK industry.

What we have today is diminishing capital, diminishing tax revenues and the ever tighter spiral of state employment and state interference. Until that changes things will only get worse.

The sooner we get rid of the EU and its communist ideology the better, the sooner we get rid of these UK politicians who believe all that East German political science they were taught in their PPE degree courses, the better off we will all be.























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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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The failed EU experiment is coming to an end

Tyler Durden over at Zero Hedge has posted that S&P’s mass downgrade FAQ may have just hobbled the European Sovereign Debt Market.

All your questions about the historic European downgrade should be answered after reading the following FAQ. Or so S&P believes. Ironically, it does an admirable job, because the following presentation successfully manages to negate years of endless lies and propaganda by Europe’s incompetent and corrupt klepocrarts, and lays out the true terrifying perspective currently splayed out before the eurozone better than most analyses we have seen to date.

Namely that the failed experiment is coming to an end.

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10 years after the creation of the Euro, the pain is set to increase



On first January 2012 the EU celebrated 10 years of its ‘Common Currency’.



“The euro is the beginning of a stronger European Union. We shall be the best in the world, the best in the world!”

promised Romano Prodi, the former European Commission president on 1st January 2002.

Whilst many predicted its failure, few could have imagined the enormity of Prodi’s promises, the EU has proven in those 10 short years that it is the best in the world, the best at creating a spiralling sovereign debt crisis, a winner at enabling credit downgrades, rising interest rates are going to be one of its future accolades, an absolute hit at creating tens of millions unemployed, forced budget cuts by illegitimate puppet governments and violent protests the like of which Europe has not seen since the end of WWII.

The efforts by European leaders to shoe-horn a range of diverse countries into a rigid financial cage are doomed to fail. But that’s all part of a long-term plan for a global super-currency which can only bring more hardship to ordinary working people, and without a dose of reality miraculously injected into the minds of the Eurocrats, that pain is set to increase.

So far Hungary is the only EU country to say No to this march of ever closer union by its actions, by changing its laws much to the chagrin of the Eurocrats rather than use a pretend veto that carries as much weight or significance as Chamberlains famous piece of paper.

Before Hungary goes the way of Italy and Greece and has its democratically elected government replaced by the polit buro that is the EU Commission and Goldman Sachs, we must join in its defiance, or the multi headed Hydra will keep reinventing itself.

We let Hungary down in 1956, we must not do so again. We must cut off all the heads of the Hydra in 2012, starve it of cash and finally destroy this beast, this bringer of pain and suffering.

This is the year that the EU must finally be destroyed.

























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Yes it is a nightmare, but you cannot wake up

The video explains the causal links between OTC derivatives, the financial crisis of 2008, Alan Greenspan, Robert Rubin, Larry Summers, Jon Corzine and MF Global.  All these people are now exceptionally wealthy and it must be difficult for the average American to accept that Alan Greenspan – one of those who is responsible for the crisis- is now an advisor to the US government.

There is a whole range of these videos explaining the financial crisis so do look them out, but strangely, or not… all roads always lead back to Goldman Sachs.

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Talk about kicking the can down the road.. the grand delusional plan

Well its out, the draft of the agreement that Cameron refused to sign. The not a treaty treaty because its called an International Agreement. 20111216eucodraft

Talk about kicking the can down the road, it is laden with burdensome regulation and unachievable targets all accompanied by, yes you got it, because I guessed it absolutely right, constitutional changes that would grant the EU supremacy. Not just statutes that a future government could back out of or reverse, but constitutional, because they are going for the EU State in this agreement.

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That meeting, the ESM and the Crown – why Cameron said NO

I would like to URGENTLY garner an opinion from you all out there on a theory that I have as to the full measure of the plan for the ESM, and that famous Cameron meeting last Friday.

I know that many of you who visit this site have looked deeply into our constitution, and are already aware that our State, the Crown, is not the Monarchy, but the Corporation of London.

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Fairy Stories and Tales of the Unexpected

Today I shall mainly be keeping a watching eye and reading the fairy stories coming out of the Euroland theme park.

Stories of the mythical beast the Merkozy, that stomps around Europe, ripping off heads of state and terrifying the natives, rumoured to be slain by our brave knight Sir Camerloon last week are quickly unravelling as little more than a boyish quest win the favours that he could display on his lance, to stop the eurosceptic hemorrhaging to UKIP. A quest that one of his fellow knights is now challenging, even after public self flagellation, perhaps we may even get to see an almighty duel as time develops as they fight over who gets the blue smarties as the sweeties run out.

In India, a country that builds space ships and nuclear weapons whilst taking aid from Britain, it seems that its power plant may have run out of steam. Its Industrial Production growth missed market expectations by a mile falling to levels only seen in the middle of the blogal economic shutdown in early 2009. It slowly splutters just as the British aid also runs out.

In the tiny Euro state of Latvia the parlous state of its economy is under pressure having had an SFI (shit fan interface). It is currently suffering from its second bank run in less than a month on rumours that the large Swedish bank Swedbank is about to collapse, whilst next door…

in Lithuania authorities are arresting the bankers. Prosecutors issued an arrest warrant for Vladimir Antonov and Raimondas Baranauskas who are former shareholders of Bankas Snoras AB. Both men are suspected of embezzlement and document forgery, the Prosecutor General said in a statement on its website today. Baranauskas is also suspected of accounting fraud and abuse of authority, it said." Perhaps those prosecutors would like to run a master class for the rest of us…

Meanwhile, as we wait for the markets to finish the job that Sir Cameloon failed to do, one suspects that the mythical Merkozy is already thinking of another cunning plan…













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Company bosses begin impact limitation fearing Euro breakup


The business world is planning for the end of the Euro. Companies as diverse as Car manufactures, tax & legal publishers, engineering to home improvement retailers right across the EU are all making contingency plans to minimise risks and in many cases already putting them into action.

According to Bloomberg:

Grupo Gowex (GOW), a Spanish provider of Wi-Fi wireless services, is moving funds to Germany because it expects Spain to exit the euro. German machinery maker GEA Group AG is setting maximum amounts held at any one bank.

“I don’t trust Spain will remain in the euro zone,” said Jenaro Garcia, founder and chief executive officer of Madrid- based Grupo Gowex, which provides Wi-Fi access in 15 countries. “We moved our cash and deposits to Germany because Spain will come back to the peseta.”

They go on to say, The Bundesbank, Germany’s central bank, registered capital inflows of 11.3 billion euros ($15 billion) from non-banks in September, according to the breakdown of its current account published Nov. 9. That helped transform a deficit of 47.3 billion euros in Germany’s balance of other capital flows in August to a surplus of 700 million euros in September.

Companies switched gears from preparing for a possible exit by Greece to some sort of currency breakdown after Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s government collapsed and 10-year Italian bond yields rose past 7 percent in November.

“We obviously have plans in place if something happens,” ABB Ltd. (ABBN) CEO Joe Hogan said in Zurich on Dec. 1. “They can never be as robust as you’d want them to be but we certainly are prepared if there is a crisis.”

The Swiss engineering company “updated what we would do” in the past few weeks, Hogan said. “We just keep updating and making our plan more and more detailed.’

Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, the world’s largest maker of luxury cars, has honed its plans developed following the 2009 financial crisis and is prepared to act if markets dive, Chief Financial Officer Friedrich Eichiner said in November.

The Munich-based carmaker’s response would include reducing production by as much as 30 percent and using its banking unit to directly tap central bank reserves. The company also has reduced its leasing portfolio to manage risks in case used car values decline.

Top of the list of concerns among companies is the collapse of one or more financial institutions in Europe. Executives say they’re already moving money around to avert that risk.

Kingfisher Plc (KGF), Europe’s largest home-improvement retailer, has considered plans for the possibility of a collapse of the euro region and will focus on cash generation to account for that possibility, Chief Executive Officer Ian Cheshire said.

Juan Jose Nieto, chairman of Service Point Solutions SA (SPS), a Barcelona-based document-management company, said he would move the company’s headquarters to the U.K. or Scandinavia in the event of a euro breakup.

K+S AG, Europe’s biggest potash supplier, said the company is assessing the counter-party risk of the banks it works with and, should they reach predetermined thresholds, stop the flow of any new funds into that institution.

“We spread our risk by defining maximum amounts that we allocate to individual bank or issuers of commercial paper and spread our funds broadly among many different parties,” said K+S spokesman Michael Wudonig.

Bloomberg notes that European companies spent billions preparing for the euro when it was introduced in 2000 by 11 countries. Contingency planning for an unravelling of the currency involves cutting investment, moving money to Germany, transferring headquarters to northern Europe from southern, and even going out of business, according to interviews with more than 20 executives.

When the contingency planning and capital flight is underway on such a massive scale, it seems that everyone except the unelected mafia in Brussels can see the writing on the wall.

May the French Banks be the first to go…… quickly followed by the quislings Euro pensions….









































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Holy Smoley – another super toxic layer to the banking crisis onion

I could not believe what I have just read over at Zero Hedge, although now it makes perfect sense why there is so much panic and urgency in the ranks of the unelected EU to get the authoritarian EUSSR political shit tied down.

It concludes:

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