Monday, September 12, 2011

Greece Announces New Tax as Unrest Flares



The Wall Street Journal
Property Levy Aims to Close Budget Gap
THESSALONIKI, Greece—The Greek government said Sunday it will impose a new property tax to cover a €2 billion ($2.7 billion) shortfall in budget targets this year, which it has promised its international creditors in exchange for receiving fresh aid.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Making Strength of Zone's Weakness



The Wall Street Journal
Common Euro Bond Issue, Opposed by Many Leaders, Could Create an Investor Haven
The world is short of secure destinations for investment funds, as shown by Switzerland's dramatic efforts this week to deter the floods of capital entering the Alpine safe haven. Here's a solution: euro-zone bonds, debt instruments issued collectively by euro-zone nations that could offer for the first time a real alternative to the U.S. Treasury market. They have another advantage: They could also save the euro zone.

Libyan interim leader Abdul Jalil flies to Tripol


11 September 2011 Last updated at 04:43 GMT
BBC

The head of Libya's interim government, Mustafa Abdul Jalil, has flown to Tripoli for the first time since anti-Gaddafi forces captured the capital.
Mr Abdul Jalil was greeted by hundreds of cheering, flag-waving supporters.
Until now he had remained in the eastern city of Benghazi. His presence in the capital is aimed at sending a message about his authority.

Germany Nominates Asmussen to Succeed Stark at ECB

The Wall Street Journal

By GEOFFREY T. SMITH
MARSEILLE, France—The German government has nominated Jörg Asmussen to succeed Jürgen Stark on the executive board of the European Central Bank, Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Saturday.
At a news conference after weekend meetings of the finance ministers and central-bank governors of the Group of Seven leading industrialized nations, Mr. Schaeuble said he hoped that Mr. Asmussen would be able to assume Mr. Stark's duties toward the end of the year.

Greek Leader Vows To Press Changes



The Wall Street Journal
By ALKMAN GRANITSAS
THESSALONIKI, Greece—Prime Minister George Papandreou vowed Saturday that the country would meet its budget targets and press ahead with difficult reforms, even as thousands demonstrated against those reforms on the streets of Greece's second largest city.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

ECB Lowers Growth Forecast


The Wall Street Journal
By TOM FAIRLESS
FRANKFURT—European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet warned Thursday that the euro zone's economy will grow more slowly than previously expected, and said risks to medium-term inflation have moderated.
But he stopped short of clearly signalling a change in the bank's interest-rate path.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Switzerland Caps Franc



The Wall Street Journal
By DEBORAH BALL
LONDON—The Swiss National Bank set a limit on how far it will let the Swiss franc rise against the euro, the bank's most aggressive attempt yet to rein in the soaring currency.

Turkey Suspends Defense Trade With Israel


The Wall Street Journal
By MARC CHAMPION
ISTANBUL—Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said Tuesday that his country was suspending defense trade with Israel and that Turkish naval vessels would be seen in the Eastern Mediterranean more often, as Ankara ratcheted up pressure in a rising dispute with its former ally.
Speaking to reporters in Ankara after giving a speech at the Ankara Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Erdogan repeated plans announced Friday to downgrade diplomatic relations with the Jewish state and suspend military agreements, specifying that the suspension would include trade in defense goods.

Roubini: Slowdown Brings Forward New Financial Crisis



Bloomberg
By Scott Hamilton - Sep 6, 2011 7:28 PM GMT+0300
Nouriel Roubini, co-founder and chairman of Roubini Global Economics LLC, said the current slowdown in the world economy has brought forward the timing of a new financial crisis.
“I thought a few months ago that the perfect storm would be 2013,” Roubini said in an interview in London today. “But now, the economic weakness in the U.S., euro zone and the U.K. is front loaded. So we’re going to double dip earlier. The climax of it could be 2013, or it could be already earlier. It depends on what policy tools are available.”

Wall St falls on euro zone debt fears



By Edward Krudy
NEW YORK | Tue Sep 6, 2011 2:07pm EDT
(Reuters) - Wall Street stocks tumbled for a third session on Tuesday on rising concerns about the euro zone's debt crisis and the outlook for the global economy.
Major U.S. banks were among the biggest decliners, with the KBW Bank index off nearly 2 percent on fears that lenders face a growing list of mortgage-related lawsuits.
Late on Friday, the Federal Housing Finance Agency sued 17 large U.S. banks over subprime mortgage-backed bonds.

The Worst-Case Euro Scenario



Each day the currency remains on life-support in its current form, the consequences of its eventual death become graver.
The Wall Street Journal
By SAJID JAVID
On the Continent, August is usually reserved for long vacations in the sun. Instead, European leaders spent the month working on increasingly desperate attempts to save the euro in its current form. There's only one prospect more frightening than what would happen if they fail: what would happen if they succeed.

Europe Signals Global Gloom



The Wall Street Journal
World Markets Fall as Continent's Debt Crisis Fuels Worries of Lengthy Slowdown
By BRIAN BLACKSTONE And LAURA STEVENS
FRANKFURT—International financial markets tumbled as a darkening global economic outlook and deepening fissures in Europe over its debt crisis fueled fears the world economy could slip into a period of prolonged malaise.
The Stoxx Europe 600 index fell 4.1% Monday, with banks hard hit. The euro slid below $1.42, its lowest in a month. The declines followed a slide in Asia, where stock indexes in China and Japan dropped by about 2% Monday. On Tuesday morning Asian markets again moved lower, with Japan shares falling 1.2% by late morning. During early Asian trading the 10-year U.S. Treasury yields hit as low as 1.911%, the lowest level in at least five decades, according to traders.

Monday, September 5, 2011

The end of Monnet



The Economist
The debt crisis is exposing problems in the basic design of the European Union
Sep 3rd 2011 | from the print edition
ALL it the curse of the euro. When politicians discuss the single currency’s crisis in Brussels, their actions are invariably seen by markets to be too little, too late. When they return home, they are accused of surrendering too much, too fast. So bond markets swoon and leaders become enfeebled. Such has been the fate of last July’s summit deal to save Greece for the second time and boost the embryonic European monetary fund. Government debt is dangerously wobbly in Italy and Spain, yet political approval of the deal has hit trouble in Germany and Finland.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Greek Central Banker Seeks Faster Effort From Athens



The Wall Street Journal
By ALKMAN GRANITSAS
ATHENS—Greece's top central banker called on the government to speed up efforts to close the budget gap amid growing concerns elsewhere in Europe that Athens can't pull itself out of its debt spiral.
Bank of Greece Governor George Provopoulos said that the lack of fiscal and other reforms were deepening Greece's recession.

Saturday, September 3, 2011

A make-or-break month for the euro zone



Reuters
By Kathleen Brooks. The opinions expressed are her own.
For over a year now people have been calling for the collapse of the euro zone. Either one of the bailed out nations would leave, or the more fiscally sound northern European states would form their own version of a union. Regardless of what the outcome would be, the harsh reality was that the Eurozone’s massive floor -  allowing countries like Greece to borrow for nearly a decade at German-style interest rates without some limit on spending or enforcement of fiscal rules – meant that it could not survive.

German Bunds Rise, Italy, Spain Government Bonds Slide, on Recession Signs



Bloomberg
By Emma Charlton and Keith Jenkins - Sep 3, 2011 9:30 AM GMT+0300
German bunds surged this week, pushing 10-year yields to a record low below 2 percent, as signs the U.S. economy may be headed toward recession boosted demand for the safest securities.
Italian bonds dropped for a 10th day, and Spain’s benchmark rates climbed to the highest level in three weeks on concern debt purchases by the European Central Bank won’t be enough to cap the two nations’ borrowing costs. A U.S. payrolls report yesterday showed no jobs were added in August, stoking speculation the Federal Reserve will consider additional stimulus measures to boost the economy. Greek two-year yields soared above 47 percent.

Talks on Greek Bailout Are Stalled



The Wall Street Journal
IMF, Commission and Central Bank Clash With Athens on Budget-Gap Fix
By ALKMAN GRANITSAS, STELIOS BOURAS and COSTAS PARIS
ATHENS—Talks over new bailout funds for Greece were suspended Friday amid disagreements over how to fill a government-deficit gap that once again is veering off track, raising doubts about the country's future access to finance and triggering renewed nervousness in financial markets across Europe.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Among the dinosaurs



The Economist
France’s Socialists have yet to come to terms with the modern world
BLISS is it in a financial crisis to be a socialist. Or so it ought to be. In speculators and ratings agencies, Europe’s left has a ready cast of villains and rogues. In simmering social discontent, it has an energising force. A recent issue of Paris-Matchinadvertently captured the mood: page after full-colour page on Britain’s rioting underclass were followed by gory visual detail of the bling yachts crowding into the bay near Saint-Tropez. Time, surely, to put social inclusion before defiant decadence.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Officials Warn Lenders On Greek-Debt Values



The Wall Street Journal
By MICHAEL RAPOPORT And DAVID ENRICH
In an unusual move, international accounting rule makers said some European banks haven't taken big-enough write-downs on the value of the distressed Greek government debt they hold.
Some banks are using their own models to value their Greek bonds and other distressed sovereign debt when accounting rules dictate that they should be using market prices to determine the securities' fair value, the International Accounting Standards Board said in a letter this month to the European Union's chief securities regulator.

BRICs Are No Cure for Global Economic Growth This Time



Bloomberg
By Michael Patterson and Simon Kennedy - Sep 1, 2011 8:39 AM GMT+0300
Stocks of international companies that depend most on emerging markets for sales show developing nations won’t be strong enough to buoy the global economy.