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Stephen Herrington: Swarm of the Black Swans

March 17, 2011

Moving to Southwest Washington State where I built a house on the beach with my hands and the skill and hands of a couple of excellent German expatriates, I was struck with the attitude of locals toward storm surge and possible tsunami. It had never happened the locals said, dismissively. Last week a tsunami happened, and, thankfully, we were spared. We weren’t so in 2007 when a hurricane force storm hit and denuded the surrounding tree farms of hundred year old trees and took 30 feet out of the barrier dunes. Luckily, it hit at low tide. They have no name classification for a storm like that in this place because there’s no cultural memory for it — it’s named by the date, December 7, 2007. Fortunately I built an octagon house to slip through the wind and to withstand it with integral shear walls, thick and wide earthquake foundation footers, hurricane rafter ties, a 140 mph roof and a backup generator. In the aftermath, my neighbors wandered around picking up parts of their houses and burning them for heat and light for five days until power was restored. All roads in or out were blocked by thousands of fallen 100′ fir trees. Record snows and flooding and record heat and drought stalk the land in the same year now. Call it climate change or an act of God or whatever you want. Tornadoes and wildfires in the winter? But I’m not here to argue climate change. Whether it’s manmade or not or whether it even exists. I’m here to argue that unexpected things happen to people who refuse to expect them. Nassim Nicholas Taleb coined the term Black Swan as a metaphor of something so unexpected in markets and finance that it was generally considered to be statistically impossible, like the birth of a black swan to snow white parent swans. His point was that if it were statistically so unlikely that it seemed it shouldn’t happen that would not mean that it couldn’t happen. What they try and stress in statistics theory is that likelihood is not preventative, not a shelter. Standing away from a tree during a lightening storm is preventative. Not betting you can fill an inside straight in draw poker is preventative. Probability is not an affirmative defense. Hedge funds were built on the unlikelihood of combinations of events ever happening. Hedge funds eventually evolved, by intentional design effort, insurance policies against unlikely things happening because of the actuarial unlikeliness of those things happening. The volumes in derivatives seems to indicate that everybody with a net worth of or operating expenses of $10 million bought them to hedge against unforeseeable disaster. Trouble was, the disaster that would follow was because the actuarial assumptions didn’t account for the unforeseeable, they accounted for the foreseeable and the statistical likelihood of the foreseeable. Disasters routinely smack actuarials in the face with a brick. A “hurricane” in the Pacific Northwest was foreseeable but it had been discounted by folk wisdom. A hurricane of the force and site of Katrina was foreseeable but had been statistically discounted in likelihood the way my neighbors had discounted the largest storm anyone had ever seen in their lifetimes. Hundred year floods and hundred year snows and hundred year heat waves and droughts had not happened in the Midwest and east for lifetimes, let alone in the same year. The oil rig with the best performance record in the fleet had the worst oil spill since drilling for oil became a practice of humans. A little extra pressure on the crew and management to meet a schedule in a difficult bore caused the accident that killed 11 and saturated a quarter of the Gulf with crude. That little extra performance pressure was not foreseen because no one had ever pushed the limits of performance like that before. The consensus of the foreseeable was that no such thing could happen. Somehow, and for some time, someone, perhaps a driller (master foreman) or a roughneck, had punched an ambitious corporate prick in the face to stop a disaster, again and again. That last safety valve didn’t work this time. The consensus foreseeable had been designed into Fukushima nuclear facilities. Likely earthquake intensities were designed into the structures. A tsunami sea wall had been built for the likely size of tsunami. But intensity and tsunami were surpassed at once, and the redundant systems failed to arrest the dangers of damaged nuclear facilities. Obvious design flaws in those backup systems were excused by assumptions of what is probable given the sea wall and earthquake measures. The housing bubble collapsed, and because of assumptions that all risk had been taken out of the system by laying it off on counterparties to bad loan practices, it became a disaster in catastrophic scale. No one foresaw that the counterparties couldn’t absorb the scale of claims against them. The consensus wisdom was that they could underwrite it all, the consensus not knowing the depths of exposure they were buying into because of the lack of transparency in the private equities markets. The perfect financial tsunami took out the engine of American finance in a sequence of events not unlike events that triggered the melting down of Fukushima nuclear reactors. 9/11 happened because even the small measures necessary to stop it weren’t considered by reason of the likelihood of it being so small. When the personal ego ambitions of George W. Bush were added to the catastrophe, it was multiplied into 1,000 times the original tragedy to persons and properties and our international standing. Bush’s ambition to be a “war president” was not calculated into the risk assessments. A conflagration could have been stopped by measures at airport check in, and would have had we foreseen the magnitude of the eventual outcome. Black Swans. The world is so big, so volatile, there are so many people living on the edge of volcanoes both natural and manmade, it’s impossible to excuse the thinking that governments are not responsible, or that governments are not needed to correct their own irresponsibility and the irresponsibility of their private enterprises. The American housing bubble collapse triggered the near failure of global finance. Only government, by harnessing the power of the worlds largest economy through borrowing, saved the globe from total financial meltdown. Only governments can repair the damages of events so calamitous that they swallow up private capital’s ability to underwrite the risks. To make governments smaller is to take the biggest risk of all. That risk is that nothing will happen that it will take a government to fix. Bad decisions are made by governments. Bad decisions are made by private enterprise. Independent of each other, they would still both make bad decisions. But together, enterprise looks to influence government to sanction their mistakes and correct them if they go terribly wrong. Government makes fewer mistakes unencumbered by the influence of private enterprise to backstop enterprise’s willingness to take risks or it’s just plain stupidity. Government and business is a union that is mutually and universally destructive because of the quid pro quo of campaign finance. Business influences government to think poorly, an outcome which abrogates it’s charter to “promote the general welfare.” The ability to foresee is not that hard. I figured to build a house that would stand a 100 years in an environment of horizontal rain and an unpredictable sea and sand. So what could happen in a 100 years was input into how I built it. Unfortunately, this is a skill of foresight lost by politicians, most particularly those on the right. My house may yet not survive a 100 years. But it will not be for the lack of the foresight I had while building it. It will be lost for the risk of a foreseen earthquake in the subduction fault just a few miles off shore, the last rupture of which happened 300 years ago. The Monday Morning Economist

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Video: EU Leaders Widen Bailout Fund, Ease Greece’s Loan Terms

March 14, 2011

March 14 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s David Tweed reports on the agreement struck by European leaders to broaden the size and scope of their 440 billion-euro ($614 billion) bailout fund and ease the terms of Greek rescue loans. This report includes comments from German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny and ING Group economist Carsten Brzeski.

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Europe Ahead: UK trade balance and German industrial production under the spotlight

March 9, 2011

Europe Ahead: UK trade balance and German industrial production under the spotlight

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First CEO Of The Year Foregoes 2010 Bonus

March 4, 2011

ZURICH/LONDON (Reuters) – Oswald Gruebel, chief executive of UBS (UBSN.VX: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), is the first head of a major bank to say he will forego his 2010 bonus after the wealth manager’s share price fell during the year. While the Swiss bank has succeeded in stemming wealth management outflows — one of Gruebel’s stated priorities — and returned to profit in 2010, the CEO renounced his payout for the second successive year. “The fact that the share price did not increase in 2010 has led to Mr Gruebel’s decision,” UBS (UBS.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) said in a statement. The bank said Gruebel, who was brought out of retirement two years ago to revive UBS, was entitled to a bonus based on profit, an improvement in results and progress toward medium-term strategic goals. UBS shares fell 4.4 percent in 2010 but outperformed the Stoxx European Banks index , which dropped 11.6 percent. Like Gruebel, many other CEOs at top banks renounced their bonus for 2009. But many have said they will take their awards for 2010 while others are expected to do so after profits recovered and political pressure eased on them to pass up extra payments. Some have taken their bonus in deferred share awards. PAY SCRUTINY Switzerland had to rescue UBS in 2008 after its flagship bank wrote down $52 billion in the crisis, pushing it to the biggest annual corporate loss in Swiss history. Former chairman Marcel Ospel and other ex-board members agreed to return 33 million Swiss francs in payments from the bank after a media campaign against excessive pay. Gruebel has set an ambitious plan to rebuild UBS’s profit beyond its pre-crisis level and the straight-talking German wants to instill a new culture of strict cost control. UBS is under more scrutiny than most banks to rein in pay. Compensation represented 52.9 percent of income last year, down from 73 percent in 2009, but still one of the highest among investment banks, where the compensation ratio averaged near 40 percent for 2010. “Nomura and the two Swiss majors still have problems with high cost ratios,” analysts at Barclays Capital said in a research note on Friday, although they added that UBS was “moving in the right direction.” In contrast to Gruebel, Brady Dougan, CEO of rival Credit Suisse, took a bonus of almost 18 million Swiss francs for 2009, bringing his total pay to over 19 million francs for the year and making him the second highest paid executive in Switzerland. Last year Credit Suisse, which did not need a government bailout, threw oil on the Swiss debate around executive pay by awarding Dougan shares worth around 71 million Swiss francs under a five-year bonus plan. Pay at 11 European banks totaled $164.5 billion, up 7 percent from 2009, with staff costs rising at all but two firms, according to analysis by Reuters. But on Friday Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) Chief Executive Josef Ackermann said “significant progress” had been made on policies for compensation in the industry. Many politicians and the public remain angry at the scale of pay in the industry so soon after the financial crisis, especially in Europe. The Swiss government has kicked off a legal process to tighten regulation of its top banks, including the right to force those bailed out by the state to make changes to bonuses and even cancel payouts. UBS has brought in a scheme that withholds a portion of bonuses and only pays them out if the bank’s results warrant it. (Additional reporting by Steve Slater; Editing by Will Waterman and David Cowell) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Banker In Jail For What Could Be ‘Germany’s Biggest Case Of Corruption’

March 3, 2011

In January, Gerhard Gribkowsky, the former risk manager of the Bavarian regional public-sector bank BayernLB, was taken into custody under suspicion of bribery, tax fraud and breach of trust toward his former employer — in what the German paper Sueddeutsche Zeitung is saying “could become Germany’s biggest case of corruption.” The investigation stems from an alleged kickback Gribkowsky took for engineering the sale of the bank’s stake in Formula One — a popular motor sport — to London based private equity firm CVC Capital Partners Ltd. The grounds for the investigation, according to Die Zeit , are the unclear origins of Gribkowsky’s $50 million fortune which he has allegedly placed in a private Austrian trust called Sunshine. Bloomberg provides a rundown of the tangled web surrounding the investigation into Gribkowsky and the sale of BayernLB’s Formula One stake to CVC: That mystery has thrown a spotlight on the partnership between 80-year-old Formula One Management Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Bernie Ecclestone, a fixture of London’s tabloids, and the company’s buyer, CVC Capital Partners Ltd., one of Europe’s largest and most-private buyout firms. The case is also reviving the anger of media mogul Leo Kirch, who says the racing company he once owned was sold on the cheap. Meanwhile, Gribkowsky sits in a German prison that held Adolf Hitler. This is not the first time Gribkowsky has been enmeshed in controversy. As the Telegraph reports : BayernLB’s purchase of 50 per cent of the Austrian bank Hypo Group Alpe Adria for €1.63 billion in 2007, and the subsequent re-sale for one euro and nationalisation to avoid a collapse, led to his questioning by prosecutors last year. BayernLB reported a net loss in 2008 of €5.1 billion, mostly lost in disastrous investments on the American sub-prime mortgage market. BayernLB is seeking damages against Gribkowsky for his role in the scandal-ridden acquisition of HGAA. BayernLB lost $5.1 billion in the deal and had to be backed with $13.8 billion in tax money by the state government, according to Die Zeit . Check out Bloomberg ‘s story for an in-depth run down of the complex investigation.

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Video: Bosomworth Says Merkel’s Loss May Prompt `Bigger Check’

February 21, 2011

Feb. 21 (Bloomberg) — Andrew Bosomworth, a fund manager at Pacific Investment Management Co., talks about the loss by German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party in Hamburg state elections and the implications for bond markets. He speaks from Munich with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Felix Salmon: Wall Street’s Dead End

February 14, 2011

THE stock market has been big news in recent days. Last week’s report that Deutsche Börse, a giant German exchange, intends to buy the New York Stock Exchange, creating a company worth some $24 billion, arrived shortly after the Dow broke the 12,000-point barrier for the first time since before the financial crisis.

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GE Makes Big Move Into Oil Business

February 14, 2011

(By Megan Davies): General Electric Co (GE.N) is to buy a unit of British energy services firm John Wood Group (WG.L) for about $2.8 billion, the latest move by the largest U.S. conglomerate to boost its presence in oil services. GE’s acquisition John Wood’s well support division raised hopes of more deals in the oilfield services sector, where GE has recently been an active buyer of assets. GE, which is buying the unit through its oil and gas business, in December agreed to buy Britain’s oil drilling pipemaker Wellstream Holdings Plc for $1.3 billion. That followed a 2008 deal to buy pressure control equipment company Hydril for $1.1 billion and a 2007 deal to buy privately held oil and gas field equipment maker Vetco Gray. The U.S. company has said it could spend up to $30 billion on takeovers in the coming years as CEO Jeff Immelt renews GE’s focus on heavy manufacturing after reaching a deal to sell its media unit and scaling back the GE Capital finance arm. John Wood said it intends to return cash of no less than $1.7 billion to shareholders, helping to boost the company’s shares by 14.6 percent to 657 pence at 0921 GMT on Monday, their highest ever level. “We definitely think they John Wood got an attractive price. It was considerably more than what we were expecting,” said Royal Bank of Canada analyst Todd Scholl. “I would expect that, based on this valuation all of the oilfield services stocks would trade higher. The space certainly is very hot from an M&A perspective. We wouldn’t be surprised to see more deals.” Shares in oil services firm Petrofac (PFC.L) traded up 3.1 percent while London-listed pump and valve-maker Weir Group (WEIR.L), which has an oil field services division, rose 5 percent, with the latter helped by speculation that German conglomerate Siemens (SIEGn.DE) could be interested in it. GE said the John Wood unit acquisition would allow it to tap fast growing demand for enhanced oil recovery from mature oil fields. “Five years ago, drilling and production in GE did not exist,” John Krenicki, CEO of GE Energy said in a telephone interview. “Over the last five years we’ve built it up to be an industry leader.” He said that GE expects the deal to be ‘slightly accretive’ in 2011 assuming it closes by the end of the second quarter. Krenicki doesn’t anticipate more deals in the medium term in the specific area of drilling and production, but said there could be deals elsewhere. “Specific to this space — drilling and production — we think we have got what we needed for the medium term,” Krenicki said. “But the rest of the energy portfolio has capability to do more and we’ll look for things that make sense.” UNLOCKING PUZZLE Wood Group’s Well Support division is comprised of three business platforms — electric submersible pumps (ESPs), pressure control and logging services. GE said that deployment of electric submersible pumps are one of the most effective methods of enhancing production. “If you look at world oil production today, about two-thirds comes from 300 giant wells that are depleting about six percent a year,” said Krenicki. “Of those giant wells, only about one third of the oil has been extracted — for lots of reasons – cost, technology, difficulty. And world oil demand is to grow about 20 million barrels per day over the next decade.” “We know that these (electric submersible pumps) are the key to unlock this puzzle,” Krenicki said. John Wood said earlier in February it was looking into the possible sale of the well support unit. Sources previously told Reuters the company had put the division on the block and had hired Credit Suisse (CSGN.VX) to advise on the sale. Chief Executive Allister Langlands told reporters on Monday that John Wood would use some of the funds to pay for its purchase of oil production services company PSN, which it bought for $955 million in December, and added that the company will also look to make more acquisitions. “We’d like to expand our engineering business in Brazil, we’d like to grow our brownfield support business in Canada so those will be two areas that we continue to look at,” he said, adding that no deal was imminent. GE said on Sunday that Wood Group’s board intends to unanimously recommend the deal to its shareholders. It is expected to close later in 2011, GE said. (Additional reporting by Sarah Young; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Erica Billingham) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Volkswagen to raise German workers pay by 3.2%

February 8, 2011

Volkswagen to raise German workers pay by 3.2%

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Video: Super Bowl Ads Take German Tone as Mercedes, BMW Pitch

February 4, 2011

Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Adam Haynes reports on the advertising strategy of Daimler AG’s Mercedes and Bayerische Motoren Werke AG who are promoting their German cars with high-priced advertising spots during the Super Bowl.

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After Deluge of European Data Picture Starts to Look Brighter; German Unemployment Headlines

February 1, 2011

After Deluge of European Data Picture Starts to Look Brighter; German Unemployment Headlines

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Crisis Panel Finds Wall Street Appeared To Violate Federal Law

January 28, 2011

Wall Street firms that sold mortgage-backed securities appear to have violated federal securities laws by misleading investors on the quality of the underlying mortgages, a bipartisan panel created by Congress to investigate the root causes of the financial crisis concluded. Banks that sold home loan bonds often didn’t disclose key details that would have helped investors accurately judge the quality of the investments. For example, investors were rarely told whether the mortgages failed to meet the banks’ own standards. That failure raises “the question of whether the disclosures were materially misleading, in violation of the securities laws,” the panel said. The claim of allegedly widespread securities law violations is among the more explosive findings in a sweeping report released Thursday by the Congressionally-appointed Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission. Those details help explain why the panel opted to refer several financial industry figures to state or federal law enforcement agencies for potential prosecution, as The Huffington Post reported Monday . The report, the result of a year-long investigation, finds fault with nearly every every cog in the financial system: Wall Street investment banks, government regulators, the Federal Reserve, hedge funds and credit rating agencies. The crisis panel blamed Wall Street for taking excessive risks and creating exotic financial instruments that even bank chiefs didn’t understand. It criticized federal regulators for ignoring clear warning signs that the meteoric rise in home prices was unsustainable and the bubble would one day pop. Credit rating agencies were faulted for telling investors that mortgage-linked investments based on sketchy home loans deserved to be rated as highly as Treasuries. And government officials were taken to task for allowing bloated mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to help inflate the bubble, then resisting calls to rein them in because it threatened political goals of maximizing the national homeownership rate. The worst financial crisis since the Great Depression was avoidable, the report concludes. Yet while much of the commission’s findings simply reiterate what many already know to be true — government officials watched and did nothing as Wall Street took ever bigger risks — the plight of investors possibly being duped into buying dubious securities has largely been ignored. The multi-trillion mortgage bond market was rife with poor data, an overall lack of information, and little oversight, the crisis commission found. Many of these instruments were sold by Wall Street giants like Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and Citigroup. Big investors like pension funds and German banks bought them without knowing all the risks. The commission’s report concludes that sellers of mortgage bonds didn’t tell buyers enough about the underlying mortgages they were purchasing. The crisis panel found that firms routinely failed to disclose basic facts that would have helped investors properly evaluate what they were buying. The finding appears to bolster claims by investors suing Wall Street firms for selling them now-toxic mortgage bonds. Giant lenders like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America face billions of dollars in lawsuits and potential losses over such allegations. JPMorgan set aside nearly $6 billion last year to cover legal costs “predominantly for mortgage-related matters,” it said on January 14. Bank of America is facing almost $8 billion in claims to buy back soured mortgages from aggrieved investors, the firm said on January 21. In September, the crisis commission heard testimony from Keith Johnson, former president of Clayton Holdings, one of the nation’s biggest mortgage research companies. Johnson testified that some 28 percent of the loans given to homeowners with poor credit examined by his firm on behalf of Wall Street banks failed to meet basic standards. Yet nearly half appear to have been sold to investors regardless, he added. Last April, the commission heard from Richard Bowen, a whistleblower and former chief underwriter for Citigroup’s consumer-lending unit. Bowen told the panel that in the middle of 2006, he discovered more than 60 percent of the mortgages the bank had purchased from other firms and then sold to investors were “defective,” meaning they did not satisfy the bank’s own lending criteria. On November 3, 2007, Bowen sent an e-mail to top Citi officials, including Robert Rubin, a former Treasury Secretary. Bowen’s warnings appear to have been ignored. Thanks to their testimony — especially Johnson’s — the commission’s final report found that investors weren’t adequately told what they were actually buying. “Such disclosures were insufficient for investors to know what criteria the mortgage they were buying actually did meet,” the report states. Christopher Whalen, a bank analyst and managing director at Institutional Risk Analytics, said the crisis commission’s findings on behalf of investors will help them in their fight against securities issuers, but only slightly. “It’ll help the plaintiffs to have more evidence in the public domain,” Whalen said, in reference to the commission’s report. “But the real place where the rubber hits the road is when the investor alleges fraud. Basic, plain vanilla fraud.” “Whether disclosure was there or not doesn’t matter,” he added. The crisis panel, hobbled by staff turnover and partisan infighting throughout the year, produced the report after a year-long investigation in which it reviewed millions of pages of documents, interviewed more than 700 witnesses and held 19 days of public hearings across the country. The six Democratic commissioners voted for the report’s findings; the four Republicans voted against, producing two separate, dissenting reports. The Republicans largely looked at global forces, like savings from Asia flooding the U.S. financial system, and the role played by government housing goals. ************************* Shahien Nasiripour is a business reporter for The Huffington Post. You can send him an e-mail ; bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed ; follow him on Twitter ; friend him on Facebook ; become a fan ; and/or get e-mail alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 646-274-2455.

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European stocks advance by midday on upbeat German confidence report

January 21, 2011

European stocks advance by midday on upbeat German confidence report

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Video: Ifo’s Nerb Expects ECB Rates Increase Later This Year

January 21, 2011

Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) — Gernot Nerb, head economist at Ifo Institute, talks about the January survey of German business confidence and the outlook for European Central Bank interest rates. German business confidence unexpectedly rose to a record high in January as booming exports to Asia and stronger household spending bolstered growth in Europe’s largest economy. Nerb speaks from Munich with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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‘Global Burnout Syndrome’ May Hurt Recovery, Official Warns

January 20, 2011

GENEVA (By Jonathan Lynn) – The world is suffering from “global burnout syndrome” and is too weak to tackle the web of interrelated threats facing businesses and governments, the head of the World Economic Forum said on Wednesday. Klaus Schwab, who chairs the WEF that organizes the annual meeting of executives and politicians at Davos, said the world had not yet fully digested the crisis that emerged from the financial crunch, and was not yet in post-crisis phase. “We have to be careful that this crisis does not become a social crisis — which it has in some countries,” the German business studies professor told a media conference on the gathering at the Swiss resort from January 26 to January 30. “We have in the world a situation where the political system and the institutions are just overwhelmed by the complexity which they have to face,” he said. The Davos meeting, protected by beefed-up Swiss security which includes the closing of local airspace, is the world’s top networking event, allowing bankers and CEOs to rub shoulders with presidents and prime ministers, and to cut deals. But the uneven economic recovery makes it a particularly challenging time to be meeting, with emerging economies rebounding but rich countries still struggling. In the rich world social tension is rising as governments bring in austerity measures to pay off debt or postpone hard decisions on borrowing, while companies return to profitability and banks resume controversial bonus payments. Global forecasting and analysis group IHS says a restructuring of eurozone sovereign debt is inevitable and while it is unlikely that fringe countries will drop out of the euro, financial markets could force the next phase of crisis management as early as this year. “This will very likely include a debt restructuring plan, with ‘haircuts’ for investors and further aid for the European banks holding much of this debt,” IHS Chief Economist Nariman Behravesh said in a briefing for the Davos forum. COMBINATION OF RISK, FAILURE OF GOVERNANCE In a report last week, the WEF identified three interrelated nexuses of risks — economic, such as fiscal, trade and currency problems; raw materials, particularly the impact of rising energy costs and dwindling water supplies on food prices; and illegal trade, corruption and failed states. “It’s not just risks in isolation, it’s the combination of risks that can be so dangerous,” said WEF Chief Business Officer Robert Greenhill. Rising economic disparity and social tension nationally and the increasing inability of the global community to tackle problems proactively exacerbates these threats. “It’s that failure of global governance… which is perhaps the greatest risk of all,” Greenhill said. Glitz and hype surround the meeting in Davos, an upmarket ski resort made famous by German novelist Thomas Mann in his novel “The Magic Mountain” written at a time when it was better known for its sanitoriums for wealthy tuberculosis sufferers. But the organizers do not claim it can actually solve the problems it discusses — although anti-capitalist campaigners denounce it as a plutocratic cabal plotting global domination. “The World Economic Forum is not a decision-making body. It fosters dialogue, it fosters understanding,” Schwab said. But Greenhill said it will try to help with the complex of threats by launching a “global risk response network” bringing together company risk officers and government policy-makers. As usual the WEF will wheel out several global leaders among its 2,500 participants. The chair of the G20, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, addresses the forum on Thursday, January 27. Among 25 government heads expected are German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who opens the forum on Wednesday, January 26. Medvedev, a keen user of the micro-blogging site Twitter, will take questions from the public via “crowdsourcing” on www.wef.ch/askdmitrimedvedev. The cast list also features eight central bankers, including European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet, who will also take part in an open session accessible to the public, and 14 labor leaders and more than 1,400 CEOs and other business chiefs — 400 of whom will be using Twitter as “CEO reporters.” Davos’s reputation in the past was made by several high-profile diplomatic meetings on the sidelines. This year, seven key trade ministers hosted by the European Union will meet on Friday, January 28, as part of renewed efforts to conclude the nine-year-old Doha round to free up world trade — itself one of the biggest failures of global governance. For full coverage, blogs and TV from Davos go to www.reuters.com/davos (Editing by Louise Ireland) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Robert Lenzner: People Don’t Imagine The Worst Until It’s Upon Them

January 18, 2011

“I believe that people will not imagine the worst until it’s upon them.” These are Canadian mining mogul Frank Giustra’s words of wisdom at the start of 2011 about the fate of the dollar, and America’s burgeoning financial difficulties. This is a lesson for investors everywhere. Don’t deny reality. Deal with painful policy decisions now. No one thought that U.S. subprime mortgages would infect the entire planet. But, had the central banks of the U.S. and Europe not responded to the emergency with trillion dollar dollops of emergency cash, emergency guarantees and emergency loans, we might have experienced a global depression. No one realized that AIG’s $500 billion credit default swaps — which were not hedged with even a dollar of insurance — were financial hari kari, corporate suicide by an excess that threatened the very fabric of all markets. No one understood that Citigroup’s off-balance-sheet financial engineering — mortgage backed bonds leveraged by selling worthless commercial paper to unsuspecting central banks — meant the nation’s largest bank was insolvent. So, what overhanging financial problems have we been “kicking the can down the road?” Meaning, what pending matters have we waited until the last possible moment to deal with? Americans seem unconcerned by European sovereign debt problems and the cost of the crisis to the European banking community, like the leading German, Spanish, French and British banks, which have trillions on the line to the sovereign debtors. State governments have been “kicking the can down the road” of their financial condition and now must face painful cuts in services as well as a showdown with public service unions over the cost of benefits like Medicaid in New York State which has $63 billion in unfunded liabilities. The estimate of unfunded public pension fund liabilities nationwide is $2.5 trillion to $3.0 trillion — and there are no feasible plans to deal with this extraordinary problem. Some states are selling assets (Arizona is selling its capitol building) and leasing them back just to have funds to pay the current expenses. This is the classic case of “kicking the can down the road,” and cannot go on forever if the infrastructure of these states is not improved. Then, there the nation’s mortgage debt, which is larger than the current market value of many millions of homes. There is no bold solution for the prospect of declining home prices. This amounts to a pure depression in the home building industry. Did you know that 40% of the increase in jobs during boom years came from the construction industry? Lastly, there’s China, where inflation is higher than reported, where unrest is growing, where real estate companies are in financial trouble, and where official statistics are looked at circumspectly. The rush to invest in China could be causing problems not well understood in the west.

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Video: Hoyer Says ECB Should Take Portugal Seriously on Bailout

January 12, 2011

Jan. 12 (Bloomberg) — German Deputy Foreign Minister Werner Hoyer talks with Bloomberg’s Indira A.R. Lakshmanan about the European Central Bank’s response to financial crises. Hoyer, speaking in Washington, also discusses Iran’s nuclear arms program. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Euro Hovers Below Resistance Ahead of German Unemployment Data

January 4, 2011

Euro Hovers Below Resistance Ahead of German Unemployment Data

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Five German states record price rise in December

December 30, 2010

Five German states record price rise in December

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FOREX: US Dollar May Slip on Risk Appetite, German CPI on Tap

December 29, 2010

FOREX: US Dollar May Slip on Risk Appetite, German CPI on Tap

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Robert Lenzner: Santa Bernanke Giveth And Taketh Away

December 18, 2010

Christmas began early on August 27 for equity lovers, when Santa Ben unveiled his plans for QE2 in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The Standard and Poor’s 500 index has gained a splendid 17% since then according to my Forbes mate Steve Schaefer in his “Exile On Wall Street” blog. Be advised that 60% of that double-digit advance was due to commodity-related stocks like oils, metals and agricultural production. Example: FCX, Freeport McMoran (which Streettalk has consistently recommended as the preferred way to play copper prices ) rose from $87 a share on October 1 to $113 a share today, December 17. That is a run-up of 35% in three months of QE2. Please send BB at the Fed, 20th and Constitution Ave.NW, Wash. D.C., 20551 a thank you note. And CC the White House and Congress for the fiscal stimulus Bernanke requested in Germany a few weeks ago. (The $120 billion from the reduction in the payroll tax and the $180 billion from retaining Bush tax cuts is essential for the economy.) Santa Bernanke’s gift bag for equity lovers meant that bondholders- who had been pouring money into fixed income mutual funds and ETFs received only painful tidings. What a fall from grace! Since October 1, long term Treasuries have lost 15% if you measure by iShares ETF, trading under TLT. Hardly anyone expected the 10-year Treasury bond yield to rise 115 basis points from 2.35% to 3.50% since early October. It’s yield is a hugely wide premium of 260 basis points over the 0.9% core inflation level. Bond mutual funds just endured their first outflow of the public’s money, signaling the possible run for cover. All sorts of Wall Street gurus are declaring the bull market in bonds over; the bull market in stocks about to gain momentum. Bond pros like Robert Smith of Smith Capital reckon the 10 year Treasury will rise again and yield 2.50% over the next 6 months- making it a hell of a trade from here. Sums up Smith: “No job growth, no credit extension, currency debasement, monetary inflation.” I would add the putrid picture in housing, where higher mortgage rates make absolutely no sense as conditions continue to deteriorate. “U.S. housing starts is the quintessential leading indicator for economic activity and right now it is going absolutely nowhere,” writes David Rosenberg in his “Breakfast With Dave Blog.(Gluskin Sheff) The perverse rise in interest rates together with financial contagion among European sovereign credits and banks has also strengthened the dollar- which means as we have learned all-too-well- that gold prices fall in inverse relation to the dollar. So, weakness in the Euro and higher interest rates (the 10 year US Treasury yields a premium over the 10 year German bund) has led to a correction in gold prices, which sare now off some $60 or $70 an ounce. An excuse for hedge funds with hot money to book already incredible profits. Gold falling in price is mainly an unexpected ramification of Santa Bernanke’s QE2 giftbag. Looking to New Year surprises, it’s best to look to the 2011 offerings of the People’s Bank of China for more interest rate hikes, more radical tightening that could put a dampener on that other band of believers in emerging market stocks and bonds. We may yet get blindsided by the policy requirements of the inscrutable Chinese. I’m reading “The Party, The Secret World of China’s Communist Rulers” by Richard McGregor for tips on my portfolio.

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Euro continues its rise after upbeat in German business confidence

December 17, 2010

Euro continues its rise after upbeat in German business confidence

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Euro rises after German confidence data

December 14, 2010

Euro rises after German confidence data

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Georges Ugeux: The Euro will Neither Collapse nor Disappear

December 13, 2010

The abyss of knowledge of the European situation is as impressive as the pontification of gurus about the end of the Euro. In two previous blogs I suggested not to shorten the Euro (you would have lost 20%) and that the problem is the one Americans refuse to see: the deplorable state of their currency, further weakened by the recent QE2 initiative of one of the worst President that the Federal Reserve had recently. But let’s look at the arguments. The first is that Germany might “drop” the Euro and go back to the Deutsche Mark. This idea ignores two factors. The first one is that there is no way the members of the Eurozone can “drop” the Euro under the prevailing treaties. There is no exit mechanism and any such mechanism would have to be agreed unanimously by the 16 Members of the Eurozone: that is totally unlikely, if not impossible. But there is a reality that few observers understand: before the Euro, most weak European countries -who, by the way, are the same as today- were resorting to competitive devaluation. In other words the disparities of discipline and performance were resolves by devaluing the currencies of the weak countries, and the Italian Lira, the Spanish Peseta and the French Franc were always part of it. That was making German companies less competitive. Now, there are no more competitive devaluations, and Germany is the best performing European country and the most solid financially. The fact that the Eurozone participants agree in difficulty was totally predictable. So predictable that the Stability Pact attached to the Maastricht Treaty provides for sanctions against those who derail. Instead, Europe derailed and did not impose those sanctions as a result of its weak political governance and the fact that the problem was entirely in the hands of politicians and no institution or mechanism was provided to prepare those decisions. It is that negligence that led to the current crisis. However, it also has a secondary advantage: those economies that diverged economically and socially are forced to act now and correct the mechanism. A common currency means that investors will differentiate the countries through interest rates, and they do so. That forces eventually the countries with high interest rates to take drastic and decisive measure not to go bankrupt. In a sense, the current crisis should strengthen further the Euro, and since the dollar is on a sliding slope, its value should improve seriously in the coming months. The key to that is the ability of the weak countries to take the drastic measures they need. It creates social turmoil. It will be politically difficult. Provided that the financial support of the European Stability Fund is assorted with strict conditions, there is a chance that the Euro comes out reinforced and stronger. It requires political decisiveness: the need for convergence is urgent. Without it, further crisis will continue to make investors doubt. Those doubts, however, should not include any scenario of break up or disappearance of the Eurozone.

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Nataly Kelly: Lady Gaga Sings the Language of Global Marketing

December 8, 2010

Lady Gaga, who was recently crowned CNN’s most provocative entertainment icon of 2010, is well-known for her creative costumes and performances. Now, she’s planning to mix things up from a language perspective. According to Lady Gaga’s promoter, Ralph Simon, her forthcoming album in May 2011 may include one song in Russian. The international music phenomenon has also been discussing plans to release tunes in Hindi, Mandarin, Portuguese, and Spanish. Releasing international hits is a savvy business move, one that many music super-stars have practiced long before her. Back in 1988, Sting released a version of his album “Nothing Like the Sun” which included songs in Portuguese and Spanish. In 1995, Madonna’s Spanish-language version of her hit, “You’ll See” (“Verás”) was a hit on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs. What Sting and Madonna did decades ago — making their music available to potential fans in more languages — was a smart move. In today’s highly globalized and digital world, adopting a multilingual approach not only makes sense, but will help Gaga optimize the potential of the world wide web to deliver more relevant content to her global fan base. Which languages should Lady Gaga pick? Earlier this year, we published a study that revealed the top 57 languages for expanding global brand presence. If Gaga wants to target the 10 most economically significant tongues, she should select Japanese, German, Spanish, French, Mandarin, Italian, Dutch, Portuguese, Korean, and Arabic. Russian comes in at #11 on our list, but is growing in importance. Hindi is much further down the list of languages of global importance on the web. But in the music industry in general, Hindi could be a very smart move, as it could help Lady Gaga ease into the enormous — and potentially lucrative — Bollywood music scene. However, songs might not be enough to achieve global music dominance. If Lady Gaga wants to effectively crack the global code, she’ll need to do much more, including implementing a multilingual social media strategy. She currently has more than 24 million fans on Facebook, but to truly take her brand global, the Gaga team will need to look at strategies such as the one Anheuser-Busch recently announced to make social media content available in many languages. Lady Gaga is considering what other artists have done for decades — singing in other languages. That alone is not a revelation. Yet, in all other areas of artistic expression, Lady Gaga balances the mainstream with the avant-garde. What’s the linguistic equivalent of the gravity-defying shoes for which she’s known? Instead of just selecting the languages that will help her global brand, she also should choose a less common language to add to her music arsenal. Recording a tune in, say, Tibetan, would not only help her make a statement, but would draw attention to languages and populations that might benefit from the positive publicity. Such a stunt would certainly get people talking — and beyond her music, that’s what Gaga does best.

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Michael Likosky: Happy Critical Infrastructure Protection Month: Let’s Invest

December 4, 2010

December is Critical National Infrastructure Protection Month . And, it’s about even more than safeguarding our homeland in a post-9/11 world through securitizing our airports, information systems, and financial institutions from attacks. Like President Eisenhower, President Obama sees targeted investments as central to ensuring that our critical national infrastructure promotes our national security. In his proclamation establishing December as Critical Infrastructure Protection Month , Obama says: My Administration is committed to delivering the necessary information, tools, and resources to areas where critical national infrastructure exists in order to maintain and enhance its security and resilience. I have proposed a bold plan for renewing and expanding our Nation’s infrastructure, including its critical infrastructure, in the coming years. Eisenhower looked abroad at how other countries were using infrastructure to protect their own homelands. Particularly the German Autobahn. Germany’s high quality national road system investments meant that it could use its roads as a platform to launch attacks and move munitions. According to Eisenhower, a national road system was essential to move our forces across the country quickly in case of a coastal attack. Obama too realizes that a high quality critical national infrastructure is essential for national security. However, unlike Eisenhower who faced twentieth century security challenges, Obama and America must address twenty-first century ones. On this front, Obama has drawn a key lesson from the impact of President Eisenhower’s security-directed investments – the federal highway system came to be the foundation of our post-War boom. As were our military investments during the Cold War which created the Internet which laid the foundation of today’s American economy. In other words, infrastructure investments feed our economic growth which is our best guarantor of, in fact essential to – in the words of the proclamation – the security, economic welfare, public health, and safety of the United States. Investing in economic growth to ensure our national security is certainly something bipartisan. The Department of Homeland Security’s National Infrastructure Protection Plan makes clear that our success depends upon us coordinating all levels of government (federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial) and also the private sector. This insight applies to our re-investment in American infrastructure – we must create public-private-partnerships united in a common purpose. Moreover, as Chris Matthews speaks eloquently about – it’s about patriotism – investments in a genuinely national infrastructure can ensure that we are not a fly-over nation but a sea-to-shining-sea one.

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Jeffrey Rubin: Irish and Greek Defaults Will Reshape Europe

November 30, 2010

German and British taxpayers are beginning to realize the downside of our economic interdependence in the global economy. When British banks have too much exposure to Irish banks, all of a sudden Dublin’s property crash becomes the UK’s problem. Similarly, when German taxpayers have to bail out bankrupt governments in Athens and Dublin, Greece and Ireland’s problems become Germany’s. How long will that model of international economic interdependence last? Probably not too much longer, particularly if Portugal and Spain have to join the bailout queue, too. What’s increasingly obvious, as I noted in my May 25th blog post , is that the European monetary union is no longer feasible. A monetary union between similar economies, like those of Germany, France and the Benelux countries, is. But clumping fiscally wayward economies with much lower per-capita incomes, like Portugal, Spain, Ireland and Greece, into a common currency union with Northern Europe is no more sustainable than is a monetary union between Mexico and its North American free-trade partners, the US and Canada. It might have taken an oil-induced financial shock to unravel it, but the euro was an accident waiting to happen. By not allowing their loosely regulated banks to fail, countries themselves are failing as a result. So while Irish banks keep their doors open, schools and hospitals will soon close as the country tries to cope with a public-sector deficit one third the size of its economy. (Curiously, these are the very same banks that only recently passed financial stress tests.) German taxpayers, who must shoulder the lion’s share of the financing burden for the 85 billion euro bailout package for Ireland, are understandably increasingly irate that they have to dish out billions so that Ireland can maintain a 12.5 per cent corporate tax rate that steals jobs and production from their own economy. And they weren’t any happier when even more of their hard-earned tax dollars were being sent over as welfare checks to Greece, a country where tax evasion is a national pastime. Taxpayers in creditor countries are starting to ask themselves the same question that bond holders have been troubling themselves over. The burden of reducing a deficit as large as one third of GDP means that the Irish economy, like the Greek one, will be shrinking for the foreseeable future. And shrinking economies, riddled by growing social unrest, are not economies that are able to service gargantuan debt loads. That’s why the bond market was already charging Ireland as much as three times Germany’s borrowing rate. Chances are that Ireland and Greece (and likely Portugal and Spain) are going to default, unraveling the monetary union. What will follow: a born-again drachma, Irish pound and perhaps escudo and peseta. And as those currencies plunge in value against what’s left of the euro (likely still to be traded in Germany, France and the Benelux nations), even the free trade zone may be up for grabs.

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The Eurozone Endgame: Four Scenarios

November 29, 2010

In the aftermath of the Irish bailout, the German proposal for a future sovereign and/or senior bank debt restructuring mechanism within the eurozone makes complete political sense to the electorate in stronger European countries. They do not want to write “blank checks” to weaker countries and to out-of-control financial institutions going forward; creditors to countries that run into trouble will face likely losses. While the details of this “burden sharing” approach remain to be hammered out (after Sunday’s announcements), there is no way for German or other politicians to backtrack on the broad strategic principles. But once this arrangement is in place, say in 2013 or thereabouts, all eurozone countries will (a) be able to sustain less debt than has recently been regarded as the norm, and (b) become vulnerable to the kinds of speculative attacks in debt markets that we have seen in recent weeks – to reduce funding rollover dangers, they will all need to lengthen the maturity of their outstanding debt.

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David Isenberg: PMSC: They’re Not Just for the United States

November 28, 2010

Usually lost in the often histrionic conversation about private military and security contractors is that they are not used by the United States. When PMSC advocates talk about their industry being a global phenomenon they are exactly right; they are everywhere. One brief example is the following excerpt, taken from this paper, Privatization Coalitions, Strategic Decisions and Ideational Discourses: The Use of Private Military and Security Companies in Zones of Conflict . It was written by Andreas Kruck of the University of Munich and presented at the SGIR 7th Pan-European International Relations Conference , in Stockholm, Sweden, September 9-11, 2010. While among the Anglo-Saxon countries privatization is strongest and unmatched within the United States, it has increased in scope and scale in other states as well (Deitelhoff 2009: 2f). Almost all new security strategies of western states refer to privatization strategies (Deitelhoff 2009: 16; cf. BMVg 2006: 74). European militaries lacking adequate means to transport and support their overseas forces now rely on PMSCs for such functions. To get to Afghanistan, European troops relied on a Ukrainian firm that, under a contract worth more than $100 million, ferried them there (Singer 2005: 120). Not only the governments of France and the UK are working with PMSCs with the UK being considerably more inclined to do so (Kinsey 2006); the German military has also relied on PMSCs for satellite intelligence, troop transportation, maintenance of armoured weapons carriers and facility security (of the camp in Faisabad) in Afghanistan as well as logistic services in Kosovo (Petersohn 2006: 15, 18). Moreover, it has further developed some (limited) privatization aims with regard to non-core functions such as site and facility management (Branovic/Chojnacki 2007). Out of theatre, the German Bundeswehr has outsourced further military and security functions in the areas of logistics, training (e.g. of jet pilots), maintenance of material (especially with the marine) and site security (Petersohn 2006: 18). However, so called ‘core military functions’ remain mostly (though not completely) with public military forces, while the use of PMSCs by the US extends into these core military areas (ibid. 12-21).

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EUR/USD: Trading the German IFO Business Confidence Survey

November 22, 2010

EUR/USD: Trading the German IFO Business Confidence Survey

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EUR/USD: Trading the German IFO Business Confidence Survey

November 22, 2010

EUR/USD: Trading the German IFO Business Confidence Survey

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Europe Ahead: amid the focus on the Irish bailout, German and British GDP figures will be the week’s highlight

November 21, 2010

Europe Ahead: amid the focus on the Irish bailout, German and British GDP figures will be the week’s highlight

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Michael Hudson: My Talk With Michael Hudson, Part 1

November 10, 2010

Michael Hudson and Michael Hudson are often mistaken for each other. Along with sharing a name, they share an interest in the creative ways that some people help themselves to other people’s money. Michael Hudson the economist — author of such books as Super Imperialism — teaches at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. In 2006, he wrote a prescient cover story for Harper’s entitled ” The New Road to Serfdom: An illustrated guide to the coming real estate collapse .” Michael W. Hudson the reporter is a staff writer at the Center for Public Integrity , a nonprofit news organization. He’s been credited with being far ahead of the media pack in exposing subprime lenders’ methods. He’s the author of the new book, The Monster: How a Gang of Predatory Lenders and Wall Street Bankers Fleeced America, and Spawned a Global Crisis . This is Part 1 of an edited transcript of an email conversation between the two Michael Hudsons. Michael W. Hudson, reporter : First of all, let me apologize for all the confusion that the publication of my book has caused. I’ve lost count of the magazines and Web sites have identified me as you, and vice versa. I am not trying to assume your identity. I swear. I first became aware of the “Will-the-real-Michael-Hudson-please-stand-up?” problem in the spring of 2006. I started getting compliments from friends and colleagues for your Harper ‘s piece about the coming real estate bust. I pushed aside the unworthy impulse to simply say, “Thanks,” and explained that I hadn’t written the story. A different Michael Hudson, an economist, had written it. Besides the fact that there was another Michael Hudson out there writing a Harper ‘s cover story I wished I’d written, the thing that struck me was your willingness to go beyond a “what-goes-up-must-come-down” analysis of the housing run-up. You came right out and declared that “this particular real estate bubble has been carefully engineered to lure home buyers into circumstances detrimental to their own best interests.” I was also intrigued by the way you questioned not only the sustainability but also the ideology of the housing boom, noting how going into debt — taking on a huge mortgage — had become defined as an “investment,” as a path to not only wealth but freedom as well. As I reported on the mortgage market, one thing that fascinated me was how the impresarios of the housing boom used the idea of the American dream to clear the way. They talked about homeownership as if nothing else mattered. Even Ameriquest , the most notorious of the subprime sharks, called itself “Proud Sponsor of the American Dream” and described its mission as “helping people achieve their homeownership dreams and financial freedom.” There was one problem: Ameriquest almost never made home purchase mortgages. It was a refi shop. In 2004, one quarter of 1 percent of its loans went for home purchases. Rather than promoting home ownership, Ameriquest’s loans increased the odds that borrowers would end up in foreclosure, by ratcheting up the amount of debt they owed on their homes. The rhetoric worked well, though, on Democrats who worried about minority access to credit as well as on Republicans who embraced George W. Bush’s “ownership society.” Some conservatives have pushed the talking point that liberal Democrats “forced” bankers to make subprime loans. The lenders made these loans, however, not because government required them to do so, but because they were wildly profitable. What the homeownership spiel did, though, was give the mortgage lenders a fig leaf they could hide behind. Whenever somebody suggested tougher rules on home loans, the mortgage industry painted it as an assault on homeownership and equal opportunity. Michael Hudson, economist : I first heard of you about a decade ago. A Norwegian economist greeted me at a German economics conference and telling me that he had just bought my latest book. He then proudly held up your first book on consumer debt, Merchants of Misery , and suggested I autograph it. The next year there was a third Michael Hudson at the same conference, giving an article on Georg Simmel’s Philosophy of Money . The offprints were mailed to me by mistake. I began to wonder if there was something in the numerology of names that led to three Michael Hudsons all dealing with money and credit. I never heard of the third MH again, but I began reading your articles , especially after you joined the Wall Street Journal . While you were dealing with the abuses on the ground level, I was dealing with the economy-wide debt level. I’m on the economics faculty at the University of Missouri at Kansas City. UMKC is the main alternative to the Chicago School monetarists. Where the Chicago Schoolers speak of “money” and relate it to consumer prices, I focus on credit and relate it to asset prices. I popularized my academic articles for Harpers in 2006, explaining how real estate prices were determined by how much a bank would lend. Lower interest rates, slower amortization rates (“interest-only loans”), lower down payments and easier credit terms enabled millions of Americans to take on huge debts today with the hope of reaping huge capital gains sometime in the future — or simply to avoid having to pay more as home prices rose beyond their means. Your articles showed how the mortgage brokers and other pilot fish for Wall Street increased debt pyramiding by outright fraud. These sleight-of-hand lending practices at the local level were enabled by junk economics at the highest level. Alan Greenspan became a Bubblemeister, applauded by CNBC and the media for convincing them that prices bid up by debt leveraging was “wealth creation.” This wealth creation really was debt creation. That’s what was bidding up real estate prices — just as was the case with leveraged buyouts bidding up stock prices during the takeover wave. And a rising proportion of this debt was “empty” debt, without any corresponding real value. Much of it simply represented hope that real estate prices would rise all the more. And much of it was based on fictitious income statements, fictitious appraisals, fictitious mortgages filled in by crooks — thousands of people all involved in financial crime. As my UMKC colleague Bill Black has noted, not a single major player has been indicted in the recent financial scandals — except for the one person who walked into a police station with his hands up and surrendered (Bernie Madoff).

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Euro continues its decline after German data

November 8, 2010

Euro continues its decline after German data

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Euro Area Manufacturing Expands, Driven By German Boost  

November 2, 2010

Euro Area Manufacturing Expands, Driven By German Boost

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Video: Merkel Makes Headway at EU With Call for Treaty Rewrite

October 29, 2010

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s David Tweed reports from Brussels on the European Union summit in which German Chancellor Angela Merkel won backing for a rewrite of EU treaties to create a permanent debt-crisis mechanism by 2013.

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Norwegian Innotech Solar breaks ground at new German site

October 28, 2010

Norwegian Innotech Solar breaks ground at new German site

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Dave Johnson: Winning The Race To The Bottom

October 27, 2010

This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture I am a Fellow with CAF. Visit the “I’m Voting For…” campaign Conservative policies have propelled us into a global raced to the bottom. Conservatives can take pride: we’re winning! “Free trade” — moving factories across borders to evade the protections of democracy that generations of Americans fought for — pits exploited workers with few rights and no means of improving their condition against Americans who once had environmental and wage protections. But ideas like protecting the gains of democracy are out of favor. That is labeled “protectionism” and is thought for some treason to be a bad thing. Conservatives were able to break the unions and wages for working people have stagnated, which the amount going to the top few has soared. Here is the future of American wages: From today’s Washington Post: In its biggest foreign market, BMW gets skilled workers for less , Among the applicants: a former manager of a major distribution center for Target; a consultant who oversaw construction projects in four Western states; a supervisor at a plastics recycling firm. Some held college degrees and resumes in other fields where they made more money. But they’re all in the factory now making $15 an hour – about half of what the typical German autoworker makes. . . . the price of having a more globally competitive workforce means more in the United States could fall well short of the middle-class living standards that manufacturing workers once could expect. Wages adjusted for inflation have declined for these workers since 2003. That’s right, German workers are now paid almost twice what American’s can make. (And they get health care and an average of 35 paid vacation days, we get 13.) Tea Party Wants To End Minimum Wage The Tea Party has its sights set on the minimum wage . They say it is ” unconstitutional ” and want it ” abolished .” Your Wages Are Next If you still have a job, your wages are next. You can bet that executives in every company are wondering why they are paying their employees so much when there are so many hungry, unemployed people out there looking for work. Every dollar they can save on paying you goes into their pockets. Isaiah Poole pointed out the other day, in Latest Reagan Revolution Price Tag: A $313 Billion Wage Cut , (Please

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Rosneft to buy $1.6b stake in German refinery

October 17, 2010

Rosneft to buy $1.6b stake in German refinery

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CILF: Top-ranked infrastructure key to German economic rebound

October 14, 2010

CILF: Top-ranked infrastructure key to German economic rebound

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Janet Tavakoli: Goldman Sachs Sued by German Bank Over Davis Square VI, an AIG CDO Bailed Out by Taxpayers

October 5, 2010

Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg, a German state-owned bank, is suing Goldman Sachs over a $37 million loss on its investment in its share (a tranche) of a CDO called Davis Square VI. TCW, the manager for all of Goldman Sach’s Davis Square deals, is also being sued: “Goldman knew at the highest levels of its organization that its representations to LBBW Luxemburg that the notes merited triple-A ratings and were high grade were blatantly false,” the Stuttgart-based bank said. “Goldman committed fraud and, or, was negligent in marketing and selling the notes to LBBW Luxemburg.” ” Goldman Sachs Sued Over German Bank’s $37 Million Loss on CDO ,” by Edvard Petterson and Patricia Hurtado, Bloomberg News , October 5, 2010. Separately, French Bank Societe Generale bought protection from AIG on two tranches of the Davis Square VI CDO, which Goldman Sachs created (structured) and underwrote. On November 10, 2009, I uncovered that information, and it was the first time this information was in the public domain. (” Goldman’s Undisclosed Role in AIG’s Distress ,” TSF , November 10, 2009) The German bank makes an excellent point. The portfolio backing Davis Square VI before the September 2008 initial taxpayer bailout of AIG, can be found on my web site via this link: Davis Square VI . In an earlier commentary, I discussed Davis Square IV, another one of the AIG deals: ” Congress Exposes Potential Profiteering in AIG’s Deals: Delay Enabled Further Cover Up ,” January 28, 2010. Taxpayers might again ask why the Federal Reserve was so eager to bail out all of AIG’s deals linked to problematic CDOs at 100 cents on the dollar. The largest beneficiary of that largesse was Goldman Sachs, whose former officers rose to influential positions in the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve Bank and were at Goldman’s helm when these deals were created. The taxpayer funded bailout of AIG very likely helped Goldman Sachs to avoid potential lawsuits, among other lucrative benefits. (See ” Goldman Sachs: Bullies on the Block ,” September 13, 2010.

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Alan Schram: Thoughts on Inflation, Deflation and Interest Rates

October 4, 2010

We are now at the crest of a decades’ long cycle of declining interest rates. Chairman Bernanke fears a Japanese scenario, where the strong Yen has been pushing the Nikkei lower and exacerbating Japan’s deflationary woes with a 15-year high against the US dollar. So the Federal Reserve has been keeping interest rates artificially low. By aggressively purchasing Treasuries, they keep the short end of the yield curve very low. And because treasury debt is mostly short term, the scarcity of long term bonds makes their yields fall also. In that way the Fed has taken over the entire yield curve. As a result, we are experiencing a new paradigm, where both inflation and deflation are prevalent. This dichotomy is vexing. On one hand, markets are flashing warning signals of global deflation. Yields worldwide are falling, on Japanese, US, German and UK debt. Real estate is declining. Large institutions are still deleveraging as a result of the global financial crisis and consumers are cutting back in response to unemployment. But markets are also responding to the vast increase in money supply, and the gusher of cheap money making its way throughout the economy. There is fear that the only way out from the debt levels we have is to inflate the currency. Many commodities are soaring. Gold is hitting new highs. Cotton is trading at over $1 per pound, for only the third time in history (incidentally, one of the other two instances was the Civil War). With the national debt nearing 100 % of GDP, a deficit of 10% of GDP and with Federal spending that consumes 25% of GDP, government expenditures clearly have to be curtailed. But to cut the budget to 20% of GDP, where it was in the roaring ’90′s, we would need to eliminate $700 billion in annual spending. Even then, we will still be running a sizeable deficit. Since interest rates on existing debt are not negotiable, the only two components of the budget that have the potential for that size of cutbacks are entitlements and defense. That leaves our political leaders with an impossible choice. Cutting the entitlement programs — Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security– is political suicide, and reducing defense expenditures at a time of war also seems parlous. And hence the inflation expectations. It is little wonder then that markets are concerned with the Federal Reserve’s policies. Chairman Bernanke has pledged to engage in quantitative easing and promised to ensure economic recovery. The Fed has considerable clout, but still markets doubt whether they have the tools to catalyze a recovery, and whether such promises can be kept. The scale of the quantitative easing program is unprecedented. The Fed does not have an easy exit strategy and withdrawing its efforts will throw the economy into turmoil. And there is no consensus among Fed Governors on how to do it, either. Seven members recently argued that the Fed should not take drastic steps just yet. But what is important to understand is which of these circumstances are already priced in. All the concerns described above have been well publicized. Bond yields have not been this low since the 1950′s, and I believe they are pricing in a pessimistic outlook of either another recession or an extended period of tepid growth. Market prices always reflect a certain point of view, and sometimes they are right. George Soros coined the term Reflexivity to describe this phenomenon, in which market participants influence reality with their views at the same time that they are using market signals to form their opinions. Currently, people are anticipating weak economic results. But if the economy moves in a different direction, prices will make an appropriate adjustment. Interest rates are not likely to decline much from here, but if the economy turns out less dire than the current outlook, and especially if inflation becomes more pronounced, rates could easily rise substantially, sending bond prices tumbling down. Alan Schram is the Managing Partner of Wellcap Partners, a Los Angeles based investment firm. Email at aschram@wellcappartners.com.

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Debt Woes Remains Predominant in Europe, German Unemployment Revives Hopes  

September 30, 2010

Debt Woes Remains Predominant in Europe, German Unemployment Revives Hopes

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GfK: German consumer confidence rises on employment hopes

September 28, 2010

GfK: German consumer confidence rises on employment hopes

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Video: Siemens Offers German Employees Protection From Firings

September 27, 2010

Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Louise Beale reports on Siemens AG’s decision to offer its German employees open-ended employment guarantees.

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Ellen Brown: Basel III — Tightening the Noose on Credit

September 17, 2010

The stock market shot up on September 13, after new banking regulations were announced called Basel III. Wall Street breathed a sigh of relief. The megabanks, propped up by generous taxpayer bailouts, would have no trouble meeting the new capital requirements, which were lower than expected and would not be fully implemented until 2019. Only the local commercial banks, the ones already struggling to meet capital requirements, would be seriously challenged by the new rules. Unfortunately, these are the banks that make most of the loans to local businesses, which do most of the hiring and producing in the real economy. The Basel III capital requirements were ostensibly designed to prevent a repeat of the 2008 banking collapse, but the new rules fail to address its real cause. Why Basel III Misses the Mark Two years after the 2008 bailout, the economy continues to struggle with a lack of credit, the hallmark of recessions and depressions. Credit (or debt) is issued by banks and is the source of virtually all money today. When credit is not available, there is insufficient money to buy goods or pay salaries, so workers get laid off and businesses shut down, in a vicious spiral of debt and depression. We are still trapped in that spiral today, despite massive “quantitative easing” (essentially money-printing) by the Federal Reserve. The money supply has continued to shrink in 2010 at an alarming rate. In an article in the Financial Times titled “US Money Supply Plunges at 1930s Pace as Obama Eyes Fresh Stimulus,” Ambrose Evans-Pritchard quoted Professor Tim Congdon from International Monetary Research, who warned: The plunge in M3 [the largest measure of the money supply] has no precedent since the Great Depression. The dominant reason for this is that regulators across the world are pressing banks to raise capital asset ratios and to shrink their risk assets. This is why the US is not recovering properly. In a working paper called “Unconventional Monetary Policies: An Appraisal”, the Bank for International Settlements concurred with Professor Congdon. The authors said, ” The main exogenous [external] constraint on the expansion of credit is minimum capital requirements .” (“Capital” means a bank’s own assets minus its liabilities, as distinguished from its “reserves,” which apply to deposits and can be borrowed from the Federal Reserve or from other banks.) The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) is “the central bankers’ central bank” in Basel, Switzerland; and its Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) is responsible for setting capital standards globally. The BIS acknowledges that pressure on banks to meet heightened capital requirements is stagnating economic activity by stagnating credit. Yet in its new banking regulations called Basel III, the BCBS is raising capital requirements. Under the new rules, the mandatory reserve known as Tier 1 capital will be raised from 4 percent to 4.5 percent by 2013 and will reach 6 percent in 2019. Banks will also be required to keep an emergency reserve of 2.5 percent. Why Is the BCBS Raising Capital Requirements When Existing Requirements Are Already Squeezing Credit? Concerns about the credit-tightening effects of Basel III were reported in a September 13 Huffington Post article by Greg Keller and Frank Jordans, who wrote: Bankers and analysts said new global rules could mean less money available to lend to businesses and consumers… European savings banks warned that the new capital requirements could affect their lending by unfairly penalizing small, part-publicly owned institutions. We see the danger that German banks’ ability to give credit could be significantly curtailed,’ said Karl-Heinz Boos, head of the Association of German Public Sector Banks. Insisting that French banks were ‘among those with the greatest capacity to adapt to the new rules,’ the country’s banking federation nevertheless said they were ‘a strong constraint that will inevitably weigh on the financing of the economy, especially the volume and cost of credit.’ Juan Jose Toribio, former executive director at the IMF and now dean of IESE Business School in Madrid, said the rules could hamper the fragile recovery. “‘These are regulations and burdens on bank results that only make sense in times of monetary and credit expansion,” he said. For smaller commercial banks and public sector banks (government-owned banks popular in Europe), the credit-constraining effects of Basel III are a serious problem. But larger banks, said Keller and Jordans, “were quick to praise the agreement and insisted they would meet the required reserves in time.” The larger banks were not worried, because ” The largest U.S. banks are already in compliance with the higher capital standards demanded by Basel III, meaning their customers won’t be directly affected .” Their customers, of course, are mainly large corporations. “Small businesses that rely on borrowing from community banks,” on the other hand, “may be more affected… They will try to make up for the higher capital requirements by lending at higher rates and stiffer terms.” If the big banks that brought you the current credit crisis can already meet the new requirements, what exactly does Basel III achieve, beyond shaking down their smaller competitors? As David Daven remarked in a September 13 article called “Biggest Banks Already Qualify Under Basel III Reforms”: “Indeed, on the day Lehman Brothers collapsed, they would have been in compliance with the Basel III standards.” Punishing Your Local Bank for Wall Street’s Misdeeds What precipitated the credit crisis and bank bailout of 2008 was not that the existing Basel II capital requirements were too low. It was that banks found a way around the rules by purchasing unregulated “insurance contracts” known as credit default swaps (CDS). The Basel II rules based capital requirements on how risky a bank’s loan book was, and banks could make their books look less risky by buying CDS. This “insurance,” however, proved to be a fraud when AIG, the major seller of CDS, went bankrupt on September 15, 2008. The bailout of the Wall Street banks caught in this derivative scheme followed. The smaller local banks neither triggered the crisis nor got the bailout money. Yet it is they that will be affected by the new rules, and that effect could cripple local lending. Raising the capital requirements of the smaller banks seems so counterproductive that suspicious observers might wonder if something else is going on. Professor Carroll Quigley, an insider groomed by the international bankers, wrote in Tragedy and Hope in 1966 of the pivotal role played by the BIS in the grand scheme of his mentors: [T]he powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent private meetings and conferences. The apex of the system was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world’s central banks which were themselves private corporations . The BIS has now become the apex of the system as Dr. Quigley foresaw, dictating rules that strengthen an international banking empire at the expense of smaller rivals and economies generally. The big global bankers are one step closer to global dominance, steered by the invisible hand of their captains at the BIS. In a game that has been played by bankers for centuries, tightening credit in the ebbs of the “business cycle” creates waves of bankruptcies and foreclosures, allowing property to be snatched up at fire sale prices by financiers who not only saw the wave coming but actually precipitated it.

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Ellen Brown: Basel III — Tightening the Noose on Credit

September 17, 2010

The stock market shot up on September 13, after new banking regulations were announced called Basel III. Wall Street breathed a sigh of relief. The megabanks, propped up by generous taxpayer bailouts, would have no trouble meeting the new capital requirements, which were lower than expected and would not be fully implemented until 2019. Only the local commercial banks, the ones already struggling to meet capital requirements, would be seriously challenged by the new rules. Unfortunately, these are the banks that make most of the loans to local businesses, which do most of the hiring and producing in the real economy. The Basel III capital requirements were ostensibly designed to prevent a repeat of the 2008 banking collapse, but the new rules fail to address its real cause. Why Basel III Misses the Mark Two years after the 2008 bailout, the economy continues to struggle with a lack of credit, the hallmark of recessions and depressions. Credit (or debt) is issued by banks and is the source of virtually all money today. When credit is not available, there is insufficient money to buy goods or pay salaries, so workers get laid off and businesses shut down, in a vicious spiral of debt and depression. We are still trapped in that spiral today, despite massive “quantitative easing” (essentially money-printing) by the Federal Reserve. The money supply has continued to shrink in 2010 at an alarming rate. In an article in the Financial Times titled “US Money Supply Plunges at 1930s Pace as Obama Eyes Fresh Stimulus,” Ambrose Evans-Pritchard quoted Professor Tim Congdon from International Monetary Research, who warned: The plunge in M3 [the largest measure of the money supply] has no precedent since the Great Depression. The dominant reason for this is that regulators across the world are pressing banks to raise capital asset ratios and to shrink their risk assets. This is why the US is not recovering properly. In a working paper called “Unconventional Monetary Policies: An Appraisal”, the Bank for International Settlements concurred with Professor Congdon. The authors said, ” The main exogenous [external] constraint on the expansion of credit is minimum capital requirements .” (“Capital” means a bank’s own assets minus its liabilities, as distinguished from its “reserves,” which apply to deposits and can be borrowed from the Federal Reserve or from other banks.) The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) is “the central bankers’ central bank” in Basel, Switzerland; and its Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) is responsible for setting capital standards globally. The BIS acknowledges that pressure on banks to meet heightened capital requirements is stagnating economic activity by stagnating credit. Yet in its new banking regulations called Basel III, the BCBS is raising capital requirements. Under the new rules, the mandatory reserve known as Tier 1 capital will be raised from 4 percent to 4.5 percent by 2013 and will reach 6 percent in 2019. Banks will also be required to keep an emergency reserve of 2.5 percent. Why Is the BCBS Raising Capital Requirements When Existing Requirements Are Already Squeezing Credit? Concerns about the credit-tightening effects of Basel III were reported in a September 13 Huffington Post article by Greg Keller and Frank Jordans, who wrote: Bankers and analysts said new global rules could mean less money available to lend to businesses and consumers… European savings banks warned that the new capital requirements could affect their lending by unfairly penalizing small, part-publicly owned institutions. We see the danger that German banks’ ability to give credit could be significantly curtailed,’ said Karl-Heinz Boos, head of the Association of German Public Sector Banks. Insisting that French banks were ‘among those with the greatest capacity to adapt to the new rules,’ the country’s banking federation nevertheless said they were ‘a strong constraint that will inevitably weigh on the financing of the economy, especially the volume and cost of credit.’ Juan Jose Toribio, former executive director at the IMF and now dean of IESE Business School in Madrid, said the rules could hamper the fragile recovery. “‘These are regulations and burdens on bank results that only make sense in times of monetary and credit expansion,” he said. For smaller commercial banks and public sector banks (government-owned banks popular in Europe), the credit-constraining effects of Basel III are a serious problem. But larger banks, said Keller and Jordans, “were quick to praise the agreement and insisted they would meet the required reserves in time.” The larger banks were not worried, because ” The largest U.S. banks are already in compliance with the higher capital standards demanded by Basel III, meaning their customers won’t be directly affected .” Their customers, of course, are mainly large corporations. “Small businesses that rely on borrowing from community banks,” on the other hand, “may be more affected… They will try to make up for the higher capital requirements by lending at higher rates and stiffer terms.” If the big banks that brought you the current credit crisis can already meet the new requirements, what exactly does Basel III achieve, beyond shaking down their smaller competitors? As David Daven remarked in a September 13 article called “Biggest Banks Already Qualify Under Basel III Reforms”: “Indeed, on the day Lehman Brothers collapsed, they would have been in compliance with the Basel III standards.” Punishing Your Local Bank for Wall Street’s Misdeeds What precipitated the credit crisis and bank bailout of 2008 was not that the existing Basel II capital requirements were too low. It was that banks found a way around the rules by purchasing unregulated “insurance contracts” known as credit default swaps (CDS). The Basel II rules based capital requirements on how risky a bank’s loan book was, and banks could make their books look less risky by buying CDS. This “insurance,” however, proved to be a fraud when AIG, the major seller of CDS, went bankrupt on September 15, 2008. The bailout of the Wall Street banks caught in this derivative scheme followed. The smaller local banks neither triggered the crisis nor got the bailout money. Yet it is they that will be affected by the new rules, and that effect could cripple local lending. Raising the capital requirements of the smaller banks seems so counterproductive that suspicious observers might wonder if something else is going on. Professor Carroll Quigley, an insider groomed by the international bankers, wrote in Tragedy and Hope in 1966 of the pivotal role played by the BIS in the grand scheme of his mentors: [T]he powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent private meetings and conferences. The apex of the system was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world’s central banks which were themselves private corporations . The BIS has now become the apex of the system as Dr. Quigley foresaw, dictating rules that strengthen an international banking empire at the expense of smaller rivals and economies generally. The big global bankers are one step closer to global dominance, steered by the invisible hand of their captains at the BIS. In a game that has been played by bankers for centuries, tightening credit in the ebbs of the “business cycle” creates waves of bankruptcies and foreclosures, allowing property to be snatched up at fire sale prices by financiers who not only saw the wave coming but actually precipitated it.

Read the full article →

Video: SocGen’s Baader Says German Growth to Slow to 2% in 2011

September 17, 2010

Sept. 17 (Bloomberg) — Klaus Baader, chief European economist at Societe Generale SA, talks about the outlook for German economic growth. He speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse” with Andrea Catherwood.

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Video: SocGen’s Baader Says German Growth to Slow to 2% in 2011

September 17, 2010

Sept. 17 (Bloomberg) — Klaus Baader, chief European economist at Societe Generale SA, talks about the outlook for German economic growth. He speaks on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse” with Andrea Catherwood.

Read the full article →