irish

Huffington Post…

By Douwe Miedema LONDON (Reuters) – Europe’s banks are facing more government-prescribed mergers and further measures to strengthen capital, as the region’s inability to end its debt crisis makes investors wary of shoveling more money into lenders. Politicians may also quietly be urging banks to carve out toxic assets into separate units — known as bad banks — and present the healthy remainder to money managers, investment bankers working in the sector said. “It won’t happen in a prescriptive way. But in a factual way it is happening. It is not like they put a gun to your head. But we’re part of the system, so yes, you pick up the phone,” said one senior investment banker. A European Union official told Reuters on Tuesday that finance ministry officials will discuss how governments can inject capital into struggling banks. The discussion follows a meeting on Monday among euro zone officials that examined progress in involving private investors in Greece’s second international bail-out. There are growing concerns further market turmoil will follow if not enough bondholders participate. European bank shares have lost value at pace this year, as the euro zone struggles to escape the threat of sovereign default, sending risk premia soaring and hurting the value of banks’ massive bond holdings. With no swift solution in sight for the 17-country bloc’s debt crisis, investors are unwilling to bet their money on banks and plug a capital hole left behind by tighter regulation and years of anemic income. “Tell me one reason why a rational investor should put money in a bank rather than a pharma company,” said another investment banker, who advises financial institutions. “Politicians can run around as much as they want telling investors to recapitalize the sector, but unless they get their house in order the only last resort for the banking sector will be the tax payer,” the banker said. European bank shares are trading at levels first reached in 1993. They have lost more than 40 percent from a February peak, and are at their lowest since a 2009 trough hit in the wake of the collapse of Lehman Brothers. Some of Europe’s weaker banks now rely on European Central Bank funding, having been locked out of money markets as their rivals hesitate to lend them short-term unsecured money because of concerns over their ability to repay. DEALS NUDGE Tying up with a stronger rival allows weaker banks to raise market share, making them more attractive for investors because of better access to depositor funding, and lessening the risk that any government would let them go under. The recent merger between Greece’s Alpha Bank and EFG Eurobank — backed by a Qatari capital injection — suggested that governments may now be promoting such deals, which had virtually ground to a halt in the crisis. “I have to assume (the Qataris) have spent time with politicians doing due diligence on the political and macroeconomic context,” the second banker said. “This is not just putting money in a bank, this is putting money in Greece. And therefore I have to believe they are comfortable with that,” the banker added. EFG Eurobank was one of only eight banks to flunk Europe’s “stress tests” — an annual health check — and other banks that failed the test, or just scraped through, could face a similar fate, and be taken over. Greece should also consider separating banks’ non-performing loans from good assets into a bad bank, if its financial sector is not able to attract outside investors, a consultant with experience of bad banks said. “What is likely to happen … is a repeat of the Irish model. It’s a process that should happen hand in hand with the stress tests, and which could help attract investment,” said the consultant, who now advises banks. Ireland’s state-run bad bank, the National Asset Management Agency, is one of the world’s largest property groups after bailing out banks of assets they were stuck with. Germany and the UK have set up bad banks on a smaller scale. Such measures stop short of the 200 billion euros ($284 billion) mandatory recapitalization that International Monetary Fund head Christine Lagarde said Europe’s banks needed last month, higher than official estimates. Banks scorned the idea, with Deutsche Bank chief executive Josef Ackermann saying on Monday the idea would “threaten to send the signal that politics has lost faith in the ability of existing measures to succeed. (Additional reporting by Sarah White and Kylie MacLellan; editing by Sophie Walker)

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Analysis: Europe to prescribe more merger medicine to banks

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Moody’s Cuts Irish Bonds To ‘Junk’ Status

by The Huffington Post on July 12, 2011

Huffington Post…

Credit ratings agency Moody’s downgraded Ireland’s foreign and local government bond ratings to junk status on Tuesday, increasing the cost of borrowing in the country and putting further pressure on the eurozone. Moody’s said that the country would likely to need another bailout before its situation recovered. Ireland’s bonds were cut by one notch from from Baa3 to Ba1, and Moody’s said the overall outlook remains negative. Investors are likely to read the move by the credit-ratings agency as further evidence that the problems affecting the Greek economy could spread. Last month Moody’s downgraded Portugal’s ratings on similar fears, and there are now growing concerns about the situation in Italy and Spain. In its statement Moody’s recognised Ireland’s economy for its “continued competitiveness and business-friendly tax environment”, but said the government there would have to work hard before the agency would consider raising its rating: Moody’s Investors Service has today downgraded Ireland’s foreign- and local-currency government bond ratings by one notch to Ba1 from Baa3. The outlook on the ratings remains negative. The key driver for today’s rating action is the growing possibility that following the end of the current EU/IMF support programme at year-end 2013 Ireland is likely to need further rounds of official financing before it can return to the private market, and the increasing possibility that private sector creditor participation will be required as a precondition for such additional support, in line with recent EU government proposals.

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Moody’s Cuts Irish Bonds To ‘Junk’ Status

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EU Rushing To Complete Greece’s Second Bailout Package

May 30, 2011

BRUSSELS/ATHENS (Jan Strupczewzki and Harry Papachristou) – The European Union is working on a second bailout package for Greece in a race to release vital loans next month and avert the risk of the euro zone country defaulting, EU officials said on Monday. Greece’s conservative opposition meanwhile demanded lower taxes as a condition for reaching a political consensus with the Socialist government on further austerity measures, which Brussels says is needed to secure any further assistance. Moves to plug a looming funding gap for 2012 and 2013 were accelerated after the International Monetary Fund said last week it would withhold the next tranche of aid due on June 29 unless the EU guarantees to meet Athens’ funding needs for next year. Senior EU officials held unannounced emergency talks with the Greek government over the weekend, an EU source said. Greece took a 110 billion euros ($158 billion) rescue package from the EU and IMF last May but has since fallen short of its deficit reduction commitments, raising the risk of a default on its 327 billion euro debt — equivalent to 150 percent of its economic output. The tax cuts sought by conservative New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras could aggravate the revenue shortfall, but he argues they are essential to revive economic growth. EU officials said a new 65 billion euro package could involve a mixture of collateralized loans from the EU and IMF, and additional revenue measures, with unprecedented intrusive external supervision of Greece’s privatisation program. “It would require collateral for new loans and EU technical assistance — EU involvement in the privatisation process,” one senior EU official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Extra funding for Greece faces fierce political resistance from fiscal conservatives and nationalists in key north European creditor countries — Germany, the Netherlands and Finland — complicating EU governments’ task. Greek daily Kathimerini said finance ministers of the 17-nation single currency area may hold a special meeting next Monday on a new package. European Commission spokesman Amadeu Altafaj dismissed the report as “unfounded rumours, once again.” The next scheduled meeting of euro zone finance ministers is on June 20 in Luxembourg, having been pushed back a week from its original date. It will be followed three days later by a summit of EU leaders to assess the 18-month-long debt crisis. MARKETS RATTLED Mass unemployment and wage and benefit cuts due to the EU/IMF austerity plan have triggered spontaneous youth protests in Greece as well as a series of one-day strikes by powerful trade unions. Weekend comments by an Irish minister that Dublin too may need a second rescue package may also fuel opposition to further bailouts among lawmakers in Berlin, the Hague and Helsinki. Transport Minister Leo Varadkar told The Sunday Times newspaper that Ireland was unlikely to be able to return to capital markets next year as foreseen in its EU/IMF program. “It would mean a second program (of emergency loans),” he was quoted as saying. Irish central bank governor Patrick Honohan acknowledged at a news conference on Monday that debt market conditions were worse now than when Ireland took an 85 billion euro bailout last November but said they would improve. Uncertainty over whether Greece will receive the next 12 billion euro aid tranche required to meet 13.4 billion euros in funding needs in July continued to rattle financial markets. The Greek 10-year bond spread over safe haven German Bunds rose by 20 basis points to 1,387. Two-year yields were up 58 bps to 26.23 percent. The European Central Bank maintained a drumbeat of pressure against any attempt by EU politicians to restructure Greece’s debt mountain, even by asking investors to accept a voluntary extension of bond maturities. ECB board member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi said in an interview published on Monday the idea that debt restructuring could be carried out in an orderly way was a “fairytale,” saying it was the equivalent of the death penalty. “If you look at financial markets, every time there is mention of a word like ‘restructuring’ or ‘soft restructuring’ they go crazy — which proves that this could not happen in an orderly way, in this environment at least,” Bini Smaghi told the Financial Times. He also warned against a debt ‘reprofiling’, or voluntary extension of Greek bond maturities, saying it would be hard to get investors to agree to such a deal without the use of force. Euro zone governments are actively studying options for changing the maturities on Greek debt, officials say, although German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble acknowledged in an interview last week that it was very high risk. “The Eurogroup is doing research for reprofiling — what can you do on reprofiling? Is it possible without a credit event?” Dutch Finance Minister Jan Kees De Jager told reporters on Saturday in Cyprus. “It’s an investigation, and we have to wait for the outcome of it. EU officials contend that Greece could do much more to help itself by selling off a treasure trove of state assets. ECB executive board member Juergen Stark told Welt am Sonntag newspaper that Athens could raise as much as 300 billion euros from privatising state property. Greece currently aims to raise 50 billion euros from privatisations by 2015 to help stave off a fiscal meltdown, but the country lacks a proper land registry and ownership of many potentially lucrative assets is legally uncertain. Athens is setting up a sovereign wealth fund to pool real estate assets and state stakes in companies such as telecom company OTE, Post Savings Bank and ports. Top EU officials have asked Greece to step up privatisations urgently and suggested creating a trustee institution to help the process similar to the body that privatised East German firms after the fall of communism. (Additional reporting by Angeliki Koutantou and Ingrid Melander in Athens, Marius Zaharia in London, Luke Baker in Brussels; writing by Paul Taylor, editing by Mike Peacock) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Janet Tavakoli: Wall Street’s Advice to the IMF: Control Your Alleged Rapists!

May 22, 2011

We are outraged at your lack of empathy for your victims! We’re not talking about the targets of your sexual advances, of course. We mean us. You’re supposed to be bailing out trading partners, bankers in weak foreign countries bankrupted by bailouts. Remember, you pigs are supposed to be financially raping the citizens of the PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain). We’ll get back to that shortly, but first we have to address some housekeeping. Jeopardizing Our Health Condoms aren’t foolproof, and the HIV virus doesn’t care how much you paid for a hooker in Thailand. It has come to our attention that you have allegedly been customers of our New York based suppliers of prostitutes , and we’re furious. We need you to stick to the job. Moreover, if you had just listened to our advice to Joran van der Sloot , you wouldn’t be caught allegedly doing anything in the wrong place at the wrong time. Targets Can Shoot Back As for the handling of your internal matters, it was a nice touch to call newly resigned IMF head and alleged sex offender Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s 2008 affair with a subordinate a “serious breach of judgment” and impose no real consequences. It was a great move to reportedly decline investigations and consequences for other managers involved in suspect activities. It’s well known that a permissive atmosphere enables harassment (and more) and dismays the targets who perceive they will get no support. This is exactly the kind of thing we do all the time, but you have to save all this good stuff for your next high profile job in finance or politics. Until now, your internal targets felt so intimidated you were able to sweep all this under the rug. You can’t count on that anymore with all the new publicity you’ve brought on yourselves. Targets have caught on that they have nothing to lose and at least can gain back the self-esteem you’ve tried to destroy. Targets’ careers are already embattled, so it is in their interest to take action, and they’re not going to apologize for standing up for themselves. Moreover, it’s a snap to see through the flaws in the IMF’s new “policy.” You say that when it comes to intimate relationships, you will investigate if there is evidence of harassment. Obviously, the complainer will have to produce the evidence. But how has letting you handle things worked out so far for targets? Targets will never buy that nonsense now. They’ll tell you to stuff it and act independently. Targets have a right to treat this as a matter of personal safety. When it comes to the topic of their personal safety, you have nothing to add. The IMF Can’t Even Negotiate “Consensual Sex” Even when sexual relations between your bosses and subordinates apparently begin as consensual, the IMF inspires targets to rebel. According to the New York Times : “One woman is said to have slept with her supervisor, who then gave her poor performance reviews to pressure her into continuing with the relationship.” We must point out that if you want someone to continue a sexual relationship, tell them their performance was great. In the battle of the sexes, he declared thermonuclear warfare! Remember Who You’re Supposed to Be Screwing This may sound as if we’ve developed a conscience, but don’t worry, we haven’t. The truth is that we need you do as we say and not as we do for a change. We need you to keep bailing out weak countries like Ireland. Many of Ireland’s bankers fled the country, and the people of Ireland are drowning in their debt. We love the way the IMF forced a loan on the Irish to pay off the government debt that was forced on them to pay off the bankers’ debts. To get the bailout loan, the Irish government had to slash spending, lay off tens of thousands of public workers, lower wages, increase taxes, and cut health care budgets. The bankers got away with financial murder, and the citizens are paying for it, just the way we like it. Instead of letting banks fail or restructuring banks, we need you to do the same thing to Greece and possibly other countries, too. The Greeks are already protesting: “We’re not Ireland!” Your recent scandals may encourage them to get even more insistent and come up with an alternative of their own. We do lots of business with these foreign banks and governments. So stop spending so much energy trying to screw each other and spend it screwing the citizens of countries with governments that need bailouts because they bailed out bankers. Clean up your act, so that we don’t have to clean up ours!

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Obama Heading To Europe

May 22, 2011

WASHINGTON — Weaving together strands of pomp, policy and summitry, President Barack Obama’s weeklong European tour is all about tending to old friends in the Western alliance and securing their help with daunting challenges, from the political upheaval in the Mideast and North Africa to the protracted war in Afghanistan. Obama’s eighth trip to Europe as president, with a quick-moving itinerary that dips into four countries in six days, unfolds against the backdrop of the NATO-led bombing campaign in Libya and stubborn economic weakness on both sides of the Atlantic. A priority for the president and his allies will be to more clearly define the West’s role in promoting stability and democracy in the Arab world without being overly meddlesome and within tight financial limitations. Obama, who departs late Sunday, will visit Ireland, England, France and Poland. Each is weathering an economic downturn that has forced European nations to adopt strict austerity measures. The U.S. has pushed its national debt to the limit, and Obama and congressional Republicans are in contentious talks about how steeply to cut spending. But never mind all that, at least for a moment. A highlight of Obama’s opening stop in Ireland will be a feel-good pilgrimage to the hamlet of Moneygall, where America’s first black president will explore his Irish – yes, Irish – roots, and most likely raise a pint. It turns out that Falmouth Kearney, who immigrated to the United States in 1850 at the age of 19, is the great great great grandfather of Obama on his white, Kansas-born mother’s side. Obama, whose father was born in Kenya, will connect in Moneygall with distant relatives from the Irish branch of his family tree. Michael Collins, the Irish ambassador to the United States, says the president’s visit will be “a golden moment” for a country that’s been on the economic ropes after its boom time. The visit is sure to play well at home for Obama – make that O’bama – as he heads into re-election season after being pushed to great lengths simply to prove he was born on U.S. soil. After his day in Ireland, Obama spends two in England, where he and first lady Michelle Obama will be treated to all the pomp and pageantry that the monarchy can muster for the president’s first European state visit. The Obamas even get a Buckingham Palace sleepover. Though the United States and Britain remain the closest of allies, the relationship has been strained by recent events, including last year’s oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico triggered by the explosion of an oil rig owned by British-based BP. Britain’s unilateral announcement of a timetable for withdrawal of its 10,000 troops from Afghanistan also rankled the United States. Heather Conley, director of the Europe program at the private Center for Strategic and International Studies, said Obama’s stop in Britain could help “put the `special’ back into the U.S.-U.K. special relationship.” Obama on Wednesday will become the first American president to speak to members of Parliament from the historic Palace of Westminster. European leaders are eager to see how president frames the U.S.-European partnership at a time when Obama has prodded Western allies to shoulder greater responsibility in areas such as Afghanistan and Libya. A NATO-led mission is working to protect civilians and assist the rebel fighters trying to oust Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi. Former Liberal Democrat leader Menzies Campbell, a member of the House of Commons foreign affairs committee, said British politicians would be listening keenly to what Obama had to say about Afghanistan when he addresses both houses of Parliament on Wednesday. “The death of Osama bin Laden can only encourage those with the ear of the president to proceed more quickly with the draw-down of American forces in Afghanistan,” Campbell said. “MPs and peers alike will be listening closely to what he says about America’s intentions for Afghanistan.” In private, Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron will plunge into the details of a host of international challenges on which the U.S. and Britain have worked together: Afghanistan, Libya, counterterrorism, the global economy and more. Both leaders then scoot to a French summit of the Group of Eight industrialized nations, where the president hopes to build on momentum from his speech days ago about how best to promote stability and democracy in the Middle East. Obama has called on the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to present the G-8 with an ambitious plan to help Egypt and Tunisia, in particular, recover from the disruptions caused by their democratic revolutions and prepare for elections later this year. The U.S. and its allies don’t want those elections to occur against a backdrop of economic chaos that could increase support for extremists. But there’s no expectation of a big aid measure emerging from the G-8. Rather, the countries in the region will present their plans for democratization and stabilizing their economies, and the G-8 will consider ways to help. Although not on the official agenda, the G-8 leaders are sure to be talking about future leadership of the IMF now that former chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn has resigned after being arrested on attempted rape charges in New York. European leaders are anxious to put another European in that position while emerging economies would like to see a process that is open to someone from the developing world. U.S. officials have said they favor an open process, without being more specific. Obama’s visit to Europe comes a little more than a month before the U.S. is scheduled to start its gradual troop withdrawal in Afghanistan. The president has said the initial drawdown will be significant, but it’s unclear how many specific answers he’ll have for European leaders. Britain and France, in particular, are looking for details on the U.S. withdrawal timetable for signs of how NATO will move from combat missions to a training role by the end of 2014. The Afghan mission is deeply unpopular in many European countries, and political pressure has led some leaders to set timetables for their withdrawal. The British are planning to draw down 400 of their nearly 10,000 troops this year, with all British troops out by the end of 2014. France, which has 4,000 troops in Afghanistan, has said it is considering speeding up its withdrawal now that al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden is dead. During his two-day stay in Deauville, France, Obama will take time for one-on-one meetings on the side of the G-8 with several world leaders, including Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan. The U.S.-Russia relationship, though much improved since the Bush administration, remains complex. Medvedev has spoken out strongly in recent weeks against U.S. plans to plant missile interceptors in Romania as part of a U.S. shield over Europe, saying that could threaten Russia. He’s warned that Washington’s failure to cooperate with Russia on the missile shield could lead to a new arms race, and also threatened to pull out of the New START nuclear treaty with the U.S. if Russia feels at risk. Obama’s meeting with Kan would be his first with the Japanese prime minister since the March tsunami and earthquake that triggered a nuclear crisis in Japan. The U.S. has sent military and humanitarian assistance to Japan, as well as nuclear experts, to help the country recover from the disaster. Obama’s visit to Poland is emblematic of a growing front in the administration’s engagement in Europe, as the U.S. expands its economic and security relationship with Central European nations. Robert Kupiecki, Poland’s ambassador to the United States, says Central Europe’s experiences in moving toward democracy offer many lessons that are “directly applicable” in the Middle East and North Africa, and that Poles and others in the region are anxious to help the democratic movement spread. Lech Walesa, the former Polish president who founded the Solidarity freedom movement, has visited Tunisia, and Walesa will meet with Obama in Poland to talk about the experience. Obama can point to Poland, with its stable government and growing economy, as a benefactor of democracy’s virtues.

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Ireland Expects Debt Restructuring Within Three Years, Report Says

May 8, 2011

Ireland’s government expects the country’s debts will be restructured within the next three years, The Irish Mail on Sunday reported, citing an unnamed senior minister. The newspaper said the Irish government was hoping a possible restructuring deal for fellow euro zone struggler Greece would pave the way for a rethink about Ireland, which entered into an 85 billion euros ($123.5 billion) bailout package with the EU and IMF last year. “It is not called defaulting — it’s code for a restructuring,” the newspaper quoted the minister as saying. “This is hopefully where we are going to get to. But you do that by agreement. You don’t do it be being the first one to jump into the lake. “You don’t do it if there’s no other course of action open to you; you do it with the support of the people who are lending to you. You cannot do it unilaterally.” A secretive meeting of top euro zone finance officials on Friday did not yield any decisions on how to proceed with Greece’s debt crisis but there is a growing acknowledgement that a new plan is needed. The plan may include pushing back Greece’s budget targets, easing the terms of emergency loans in its 110 billion euro international bailout, giving it additional aid and a relatively mild restructuring of Greek sovereign debt held by private investors, official sources and analysts say. Ireland’s government has insisted that its debt burden, expected by the IMF to peak at 125 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2013, is sustainable. The IMF forecasts Greece’s sovereign debt will peak at 158 percent of GDP in 2013. Academic economists in Ireland, however, have said that Ireland’s debt-to-GDP level will go well above 125 percent of GDP if the debts of the country’s “bad bank” and central bank losses on emergency loans to Irish banks are included. The Irish government would like to resume borrowing from debt markets in 2012 but some economists believe it won’t be able to and instead will have to borrow from a new European rescue fund, due to be up and running in 2013, when its current bailout runs out. There are concerns that sovereign debt restructuring will be a pre-condition of borrowing from the new fund. ($1=.6882 Euro) (Reporting by Carmel Crimmins; Editing by Hans Peters) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Video: Brunnermeier Says Portugal’s Problem Is Economic Growth

April 1, 2011

April 1 (Bloomberg) — Markus Brunnermeier, a professor at Princeton University, talks about the stress tests of Irish banks and the outlook for the Portuguese economy. He speaks with Ryan Chilcote in Cernobbio, Italy, on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Edward D. Kleinbard: The Global Tax Avoidance Dance

March 31, 2011

America’s most successful multinationals make great products and offer superior services. But they have another, less enviable quality in common — they have become world leaders in tax avoidance. General Electric’s global effective tax rate for 2010 was 7.4% . Pfizer’s was 11.9% ; Cisco came in at 17.5% . The nominal U.S. corporate tax rate is 35%. Each company has its own tax story, but all — like other multinationals — have for years relied heavily on low-taxed foreign income to drive down their worldwide tax obligations, including those of their U.S. businesses. American multinationals claim they are taxed on their worldwide income, but in reality the “active” income they earn through foreign subsidiaries is not taxed in this country until the cash is repatriated. In addition, financial accounting practices (the lens through which we view these firms because their tax returns are not public) permit a company not to book any U.S. tax liability on foreign earnings if the firm states that the income is “indefinitely invested” abroad. General Electric has $94 billion in indefinitely reinvested earnings. The total for corporate America is more than $1 trillion. 
 If the story was simply that U.S. firms have successfully expanded into international markets and are paying taxes abroad at lower rates, one could argue that there is no U.S. tax mischief afoot. But these are not the facts. Tax collectors in the U.S. and in high-tax foreign countries are the direct victims of the tax avoidance, but we all suffer from the resulting budget deficits and distorted investment decisions that firms make as a result of their ability to generate what I call “stateless income” — income derived from selling goods and services in a high-tax country but that, through internal tax legerdemain, surfaces in a low-taxed affiliate. What’s going on is a highly choreographed six-step dance. Step 1: U.S. firms rely on aggressive “transfer pricing” to sell, at bargain prices, high-profit U.S. assets or business opportunities to their low-taxed foreign subsidiaries in countries like Ireland. It cannot be simply the luck of the Irish that explains the extraordinary profitability of the Irish subsidiaries of U.S. firms relative to their European sister companies. Step 2: U.S. multinationals move income from higher-tax foreign countries, where their customers actually are located, to lower-taxed ones not only through transfer pricing but also through “earnings stripping.” For example, a corporation funds its German subsidiary with loans secured in Ireland, so the interest is deductible in Germany. Step 3: Not satisfied with low corporate tax rates in Ireland (12.5%) or in other countries, U.S. firms set up exotic internal funding structures — with such names as “Double Irish Dutch Sandwich” — to shift income from these countries to zero-tax havens like Bermuda. Step 4: Firms arbitrage what remains of their U.S. tax base by parking their global external-debt financing here, which creates interest deductions to shield their U.S. income. They then overstuff their low-taxed foreign subsidiaries with equity capital. Step 5: Having put their stateless-income generating machines in motion, U.S. firms let their ultra-low-taxed foreign income accumulate abroad. Microsoft, for example, has accumulated $29.5 billion in offshore indefinitely reinvested earnings. Its financial statements suggest that its effective foreign tax rate from selling its products and services to customers located primarily in populous and relatively high-tax countries is in the neighborhood of 4%. Step 6: With more than $1 trillion in low-taxed earnings offshore, the firms complain to Congress that U.S. tax law impedes their ability to reinvest their foreign earnings back home because they have not yet paid U.S. taxes on them. They demand a special tax holiday from Congress so they can complete the circle and repatriate all those earnings at nominal cost. All this tax engineering has yielded tax burdens that bear no relationship to tax rates in the United States or in the populous foreign countries where the firms actually have personnel, real investment and customers. It’s true that the U.S. corporate tax rate, at 35%, is too high relative to its economic peers, about 28% on average. ( Click here for data on the 31 member states of the OECD; the 28% figure is an unweighted average of the larger OECD members. Click here for the “BRICs” and other non-OECD countries.) But the solution is not to reward U.S. multinationals for concocting and implementing worldwide tax-minimization schemes. The only feasible solution is to lower the U.S. rate to a level comparable with global norms and to pay for the reduction in part by introducing worldwide tax consolidation for U.S. firms, just as they today consolidate their worldwide operations for financial accounting purposes. Edward D. Kleinbard, a professor of law at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law, is former chief of staff of the U.S. Congress’ Joint Committee on Taxation. The facts and arguments in this piece are abstracted from two recent papers authored by Prof. Kleinbard: Stateless Income and The Lessons of Stateless Income . 




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Video: Irish Stress Tests May Leave State Owning Two More Banks

March 30, 2011

March 30 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Linda Yueh reports on the outlook for the nationalization of Bank of Ireland Plc and Irish Life & Permanent Plc, the last of the country’s biggest lenders to escape state control.

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Robert Teitelman: St. Patrick’s Day as a Derivative Instrument

March 17, 2011

Right next door to world headquarters of The Deal LLC looms the impressive wedding cake of the New York Stock Exchange, opened 1903. These days that columned façade serves as a kind of proscenium arch for large corporate banners; The Deal itself hung a very striking banner on the occasion of our Deal Economy conference at the NYSE in December. Mostly, the banners that hang from the façade appear because of initial public offerings going on inside; HCA hung its IPO banner up there recently. But, in fact, marketers seem to believe the NYSE façade is one very classy billboard, and they use it for any number of other purposes that have nothing to do with IPOs or, frankly, the exchange at all; it’s a great place to hang a very large American flag, for instance, and to announce that Pepsi Max is the soft drink of the Super Bowl. The building itself, like the bell-ringing ceremonies inside, or indeed the activity on the hallowed floor itself, has been abstracted away from its original purpose and into the metaphysical empyrean of Higher Marketing: as much image as reality. All of which brings us to Lucky Charms. Today, General Mills, a food company founded in 1846 in Minnesota, hung a very handsome banner in commemoration of St. Patrick’s Day. The connection of this large, global, multinational food conglomerate to a day celebrating Ireland’s national saint appears to be a sugary breakfast cereal that features a green-clad leprechaun on the box: the aforementioned Lucky Charms. Let us attempt to unpack, if we can before the festivities begin — and they do not involve Lucky Charms — the underlying messages lurking here. There are so many! General Mills is clearly attempting to forge a complex set of identities. It goes something like this: St. Patrick is to Ireland what Ireland is to Irish-Americans what Irish-Americans are to partying what partying is to Lucky Charms is to General Mills is to the NYSE, etc. Each of these identities contains its own embedded meaning, some of which is authentic, some of which is, well, received wisdom, popular belief and pure marketing malarkey. St. Patrick was real, though, like many saints, his life is a misty amalgam of myth and truth. That’s hardly a revelation. What’s fun is to ponder the connections between these identities. Somehow, a Catholic saint (apparently a Brit to boot), who had something to do with snakes and conversion to the True Faith in a godless and very damp land, gets identified with a leprechaun from Ireland’s pagan pre-Christian past, who is a multimedia spokesman for a cereal, made in America and peddled to children to the profit of a global food conglomerate that sells stock, which rises and falls based on those profits (and dividends), to investors through its listing on the NYSE, which, in turn, is actually a part of a larger company (NYSE Euronext) that is involved in merger talks with a German derivatives exchange, Deutsche Börse. What would St. Patrick say? Gimme some Lucky Charms. “Lucky the Leprechaun,” by the way, got to ring the NYSE bell. Of course the “authentic” St. Patrick’s Day, which lies at the heart of all this, has its own complex history in America, where so many Irish settled and prospered. The holiday is, in its own way, a memory device, a symbol, like the leprechaun on the box. This massive emigration to America is a long and complex saga — comic, tragic, heroic, insane — that has (need I say this?) nothing to do with cereal, despite its commendable calcium content. The celebration has long grown past the memories and allegiances of Irish-Americans, or indeed authentic Irish persons themselves: We are all Irish today on St. Patrick’s Day. We wear a little green, chug a little beer, stagger about the streets talking in loud voices. “Being Irish” has become a state of mind, a spirit that has little to do with real estate woes and failing banks and a lot to do with parades, parties and pride. Like a securitized instrument, vast abstractions that serve many purposes have been erected upon the underlying reality of Ireland and a priest named Patrick. It’s a derivative! Maybe that explains the NYSE. Let’s hope it’s not a bubble. Robert Teitelman is editor in chief of The Deal . For more from Robert Teitelman, check out The Deal Economy.

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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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Video: BNP’s O’Callaghan Discusses Irish Bonds After Election

February 28, 2011

Feb. 28 (Bloomberg) — Eoin O’Callaghan, an economist at BNP Paribas SA, discusses the possibility that losses will be imposed on Irish bondholders after the bailout of the country’s banking system. O’Callaghan talks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Ireland Credit Rating Slashed Again

February 2, 2011

DUBLIN — Ratings agency Standard & Poor’s cut its credit grade for Ireland on Wednesday and warned it could fall further because of doubts about the true scale of defaulting loans yet to surface in the country’s largely state-owned banks. S&P joined fellow agencies Moody’s and Fitch in dropping Ireland’s credit score following the nation’s November negotiation of a potential euro67.5 billion ($93 billion) credit line from the European Union and International Monetary Fund. Ireland already has drawn down euro8.4 billion ($11.6 billion) this year from that rescue fund – and plowed much of it straight into the cash-strapped coffers of Dublin banks. Still, S&P’s reduction Wednesday was just one notch to A minus, one step above the multi-grade cuts imposed last month by Moody’s and Fitch. Both dropped Ireland into the higher-risk BBB tier in the immediate wake of the EU-IMF bailout deal. The BBB level is considered the lowest investment-grade rating, whereas BB and lower indicate “junk bond” status. S&P senior analyst Frank Gill warned the agency could also drop Ireland’s rating somewhere into the BBBs in April, once a new Irish government settles in and the impact of the current infusion of EU-IMF cash into Dublin banks can be assessed. The S&P announcement coincided with Wednesday’s formal launch of campaigning for Ireland’s Feb. 25 election. The free-market government of Prime Minister Brian Cowen – who presided over the country’s spectacular collapse from Celtic Tiger success in 2007 to a bank-crippled debtor today – is universally forecast to be ousted from power in favor of a left-leaning coalition. The two parties expected to form the next coalition government, Fine Gael and Labour, are both campaigning on promises to reopen negotiations with the EU and IMF to loosen some of the strings attached to the aid deal. Both question Cowen’s determination to slash euro15 billion ($21 billion) from the economy over the next four years through spending cuts and tax hikes. Troublingly, the two would-be government partners criticize Cowen’s brutal austerity effort from opposite extremes, with Fine Gael favoring more cuts and Labour insisting on more taxes for the rich. Gill warned that Ireland’s economic forecasts presume that the total bank-bailout bill funded by taxpayers won’t top euro50 billion ($70 billion) while the current unemployment rate of 13.4 percent – near a 17-year high – will stabilize in 2011 and decline in 2012. He noted the total debts of the six Irish banks – Allied Irish Banks, Bank of Ireland, Irish Life & Permanent, Anglo Irish Bank, Irish Nationwide and Educational Building Society – actually approach euro275 billion ($375 billion), more than 170 percent of Ireland’s gross domestic product. “Irish domestic banks currently depend almost entirely on the (European Central Bank) to refinance expiring market debt,” Gill said. “Were the labor market to deteriorate further, a rise in the level of delinquencies in the domestic banks’ mortgage books could result in higher new capital requirements than we presently assume,” Gill said. On the flip side, he said Ireland’s prospects would be boosted if European Union leaders agree to change its bailout rules, which currently require donors to tack a profit margin on its loans of approximately 3 percentage points. That means Ireland’s EU-IMF loan package comes with an average interest rate of 5.8 percent rather than the donors’ actual financing costs of 2.8 percent. This premium will add tens of billions to Ireland’s annual deficits, which last year soared to a modern European record of 32 percent of GDP. European leaders are also planning to discuss this week possible bailout-rules reforms that would make it easier for governments to negotiate hefty discounts on repayments to a bank’s foreign creditors. Ireland so far has repaid tens of billions to those banks and hedge funds rather than risk poisoning the country’s credit worthiness with a major default. Ireland’s government and main opposition parties remain publicly committed to a goal of slashing the deficit to just 3 percent of GDP by 2014, the limit that eurozone members are supposed to observe. But that plan presumes Ireland’s economy will grow by at least 2 percent each year, whereas the most recent forecasts from the Irish Central Bank and the Economic and Social Research Institute, Ireland’s main think tank, expect much weaker growth if any in 2011.

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FX Headlines: Euro Advance to be Short Lived as Debt Fears Resurface; Irish Central Bank Cuts Its 2011 Growth Forecast

January 31, 2011

FX Headlines: Euro Advance to be Short Lived as Debt Fears Resurface; Irish Central Bank Cuts Its 2011 Growth Forecast

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Video: Ireland’s Coalition Collapses as Greens Withdraw Support

January 24, 2011

Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Francine Lacqua reports on efforts by Irish political leaders to pass a budget before elections as the collapse of Prime Minister Brian Cowen’s coalition threw the government into disarray. Finance Minister Brian Lenihan will meet today with lawmakers from the Green Party, which withdrew from the coalition yesterday, and opposition parties in Dublin to discuss a timetable for passing the Finance Bill. Lacqua reports on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: Barclays’s Callow Doubts Portugal Can Avoid External Aid

January 13, 2011

Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) — Julian Callow, chief European economist at Barclays Capital, discusses the Portugese and Irish economies. He talks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Allied Irish shares drop ahead of High Court move

December 23, 2010

Allied Irish shares drop ahead of High Court move

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Marian Salzman: Who’s in Control?

December 10, 2010

This is the tenth in a series of 12 posts expounding on the 2011 forecasts in the annual trends report from Salzman, president of Euro RSCG Worldwide PR and an internationally respected trendspotter. Remember “The Gong Show,” where there was the loud bonnnnnng to save contestants from catastrophe’s bottomless pit? Hello, Central Casting…. Has anybody seen the gong? Our 24/7 news cycle with daily cascades of worsening news has become enough to blanch even an egg. State pension funds are coming up $1 trillion short . The FDIC’s list of failed banks , a parade of former stalwarts, numbered 140 in 2009 and 149 through Nov. 19 of this year. Yes, Virginia, sometimes facades really do hide blank vessels. The ire at home, though, pales lately against the anger in Great Britain over Ireland’s required $110 billion IMF bailout . The Guardian says , “the western world teeters on the edge of calamity caused by the bank-lending extravaganza that fuelled the great property bubble.” (Echo, anyone?) Ireland’s house price index dropped almost 19 percent in 2009, to April 2003 levels–but, more shockingly, amid Flickr feeds of abandoned Irish houses, one learned that house prices would have to come down 57 percent more for the average household income to afford one. Irish government officials, meanwhile, expanded from fat cats to “morbidly obese cats”–after disclosures that 66 public servants receive more than €500,000 each (about U.S.$662,000; David Cameron’s salary, by comparison, equals about $225,800). And Bono has apparently abandoned his home shores for the Netherlands, where business tax rates are much lower. Investors dumped Spanish and Portuguese bonds in a panic sell-off; Iceland is in a cash crisis ; and this week, Ireland announced $8 billion in tax hikes and spending cuts to secure its IMF loan. Prime ministers and world leaders at the G-20 meeting in Seoul, contemporaneously, denied it was just Ireland on their minds, but how to deal with a future of restabilizing the shared currency, without country-by-country costs far outweighing the benefits to the union? Who’s in control? If we could find somebody, what possible line would be drawn around their responsibilities? (And what would Jean Monnet have said? He who thought up the EU in the 1950s, revolutionized industry for unparalleled European postwar prosperity and constantly repeated, “Continue, continue, there is no future for the people of Europe other than in union.) But, continue, continue this way? Is it any wonder that we the people of the U.S. might feel a great longing for some old way? A strong nostalgia for, yes indeed, the repressive but sedate 1950s, when the idea of union was so positive? A Norman Rockwell magazine cover, “Home for Thanksgiving,” showed a heartwarming mom and uniformed son joined to peel the taters, after a war of huge sacrifices. By 1957, tune in to June Cleaver issuing forth maternal clucking–seen through Beaver’s eyes, the Tom Sawyer of the television age. Barbara Billingsley (the real-life June Cleaver) died earlier this year, and I found all the buzz around that very significant. Did we mourn her together because June Cleaver’s death stands for the end of ideals that appeared to be collective, ideals around motherhood, gender roles , knowing and keeping your place because society itself was orderly? The flip side–and arguably more apropos to the insane volatility we’ve experienced in the last couple of years–lies in Dennis Hopper’s death this May. As Frank Booth in Blue Velvet , Hopper inhabited the dark side of the American dream. Whether you vote for pathos or horror, what can’t be argued is how finally the curtain has rung down over a simpler epoch, long-gone as the age of Lassie or silly love songs about blue velvet or blue suede shoes. One would need more than a weatherman to call out the rogue winds that have unmoored whole continents and sent stock and sterling swirling. It used to be that the things lamented as cultural fall-offs had to do with mores. Conservative parents in the ’60s responding to problems of a post-Cleaver decade blamed Dr. Spock and the Beatles. Meanwhile, in France, where new philosophies were being written, Simone de Beauvoir described Brigitte Bardot–the opposite of mommy figure–in a 1959 essay as a “locomotive of women’s history.” Lately, it strikes me as fitting to recall Peter Fonda’s warning to Hopper, as Billy, in Easy Rider : “We blew it.” That could well be the underscore of the last few years. These massive failures go straight to what mental health professionals call family systems. The effect of unsettling losses of control, where you realize you have none, is called ambiguity. In literature, ambiguity underpins terror. The less you know, the more you fear the evil behind the curtain, the unforeseen Frankenstein born of hope. As I’ve written in earlier trends in this series, we’ve all been experiencing the many effects of our loss-of-faith crisis . Stepping right up to the fear-filled plate, the Tea Party has tapped into widespread anxieties Americans have of losing control, being overwhelmed by vast, inhumane systems. The market phrase “wild swings” applies, too, to human life. In uncertain, ambiguous times, it does and should give anybody concerned about addictive and compulsive behaviors plenty to worry about. From ADHD in kids to eating disorders, suicide attempts and miscellaneous substance addictions that have parents and spouses shaking their heads over what that new thing is called, much less what it is , our wired society makes our worst impulses as easily accessible as borrowing a cup of sugar from neighbors used to be. Shopping addictions are said to affect 6 percent of Americans. Gambling is especially risky for teens. Next year, we’ll see mass-scale demands for greater control, but how will they be expressed? From the home to the boardroom, no doubt, with outcomes possibly short-term and private but longer-term socially disruptive. What precisely should be controlled, and by whom? Such queries promise to expose new schisms and widen already appearing cracks in the social network. There are those who consider addiction issues morality issues, and even sexuality an arena for legislating self-control. (But who wins a hormonal battle? Not even Christine O’Donnell could read a crystal ball on that score.) There are others who think regulatory control is the answer to corporations spinning out of control. Then there’s the issue of who controls the airwaves, the broadband, the Internet and the media, where all this gets endlessly dissected for effect, not meaning. Conservatives complain about liberal media, and liberals berate conservative agendas thinly veiled. On both sides of the aisle, election laws permit shadowy nonprofits to make contributions –and control us without ever being seen. In 2011, we’ll all be looking for more control in answer to being sick at heart, sick to busting, of unpredictability. Like “riders on the storm” (as the recently pardoned Jim Morrison sang), “into this house we’re born/into this world we’re thrown.” But we’ll be looking to redress our vertigo with greater control. Previously: “Mad as Hell–and Only Getting Madder” “Talk to the Hands” “Net Gain” “Public Mycasting System” “Booting Up” “Yes, We Can…Reinvent Ourselves” “Reinvention, Part II” “Separated at Worth” “Gender Bender” On Monday: “Tapping Minitrends”

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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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Europe Debt Fears Escalate

November 30, 2010

MADRID — Investors sold off government bonds from Spain, Portugal and Italy on Tuesday amid worries that Europe’s debt crisis has not been contained by Ireland’s bailout but is instead mounting pressure on other weak economies. The yields on Spain’s 10-year bonds jumped as high as 5.7 percent, a euro-era record difference of 3.05 percentage points against the benchmark German 10-year bond. That compared with 2.67 points on Monday and below 2.00 points just a week ago. The spread on Italy’s 10-year bond reached 210 points, also the highest since the launch of the euro, before easing back somewhat. Portugal, whose yields soared last week, likewise saw its spread edge higher. Spain and Portugal, deemed the next weakest links in the eurozone economy, have continually denied they will need outside help but investors have become increasingly skeptical that the series of bailouts will stop. At the heart of the problem is that the austerity measures these countries need to take to reduce their deficits threaten to backfire by weakening economic growth and hurting state revenues. That is what’s happening in Greece, which has been able to drastically cut its spending but is struggling to raise tax income as economic and corporate activity wilts. “It is clear that the market is aware of the tightrope that ‘peripheral’ governments are walking,” said Neil Mellor, currency strategist at Bank of New York Mellon. While rescuing Portugal would be about as costly as Greece or Ireland, who each represent less than 2 percent of the eurozone economy, a Spanish bailout would test the limits of Europe’s finances. It accounts for over a tenth of the eurozone economy, and Italy is even larger. Portugal’s central bank warned in a report Tuesday that the financial system is facing “serious challenges,” as foreign concerns about public, private and corporate debt have made it harder for Portuguese banks to raise money on international markets. Continuing to request financing from the European Central Bank is “unsustainable,” the report warned, saying banks should adopt a commercial policy of encouraging saving to ensure their liquidity. Traders worry that instability in Portugal could easily cross the border into Spain. Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has vigorously defended the nation’s economy and finances. He blames the bond market problems on speculators looking to make money on Spain in the short term and said they would be proven wrong. But former Spanish premier Felipe Gonzalez, who chairs an EU Reflection Group that analyzes the bloc’s future, felt the European Central bank could help. “If the European Central Bank were to do even a third of what the Federal Reserve does – having almost double the number of citizens and gross production 10 or 15 percent more than the United States – with a third of the effort in buying public debt, this speculation would end,” said Gonzalez on Tuesday. He warned that if Europe did not get ahead of the markets, the cases of Ireland and Greece would be repeated and in the end the entire 27-nation group would be contaminated. Zapatero claims the structural reforms under way, which include loosening hiring and firing restrictions in the job market, freezing pensions and liberalizing the energy sector, will eventually boost the country’s competitiveness, among the worst in the eurozone. He maintains Spain’s plans to reduce its deficit are being fulfilled scrupulously and noted that the country’s total debt was still 20 percentage points below the European average. At the end of 2009 it amounted to euro560 billion ($740 billion), roughly 60 percent of GDP. Still, the country is struggling to emerge from a near two-year recession and has a eurozone high unemployment rate of near 20 percent. It is also battling to slash its swollen deficit from 11.2 percent of gross domestic product in 2009 to within the EU limit of 3 percent by 2013. European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs Olli Rehn said Monday it was doubtful that Spain, Portugal and Ireland would meet their deficit targets and said more austerity measures might be needed. Portugal’s government has repeatedly insisted that its austerity program of tax hikes and pay and welfare cuts next year will be enough to restore its fiscal health. However, that line was used by the Greek and Irish governments as well before they finally accepted bailout packages. Investors fear a likely economic downturn because of the belt-tightening will make it harder for the Portuguese to meet their debt obligations. Jean-Claude Juncker, the head of the Eurogroup, which represents the 16 euro nations, was quoted as saying Tuesday that other countries in the bloc were not leaning on Portugal to accept a rescue. “There is no pressure. It’s up to the Portuguese government to decide whether it wants help,” Juncker told Portuguese reporters during a visit to Tripoli, Libya, according to the national news agency Lusa. Madrid’s main stock index, which has had more than a week of negative trading and saw a sharp drop on Monday, was up marginally at 0.04 percent at midday Tuesday, while Portugal’s main index was 0.4 percent lower. ___ Barry Hatton in Lisbon and Colleen Barry in Milan contributed to this report.

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FOREX: US Dollar May Give Ground on Irish Bailout News

November 29, 2010

FOREX: US Dollar May Give Ground on Irish Bailout News

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FOREX: US Dollar May Give Ground on Irish Bailout News

November 29, 2010

FOREX: US Dollar May Give Ground on Irish Bailout News

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FOREX: US Dollar May Give Ground on Irish Bailout News

November 29, 2010

FOREX: US Dollar May Give Ground on Irish Bailout News

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FOREX: US Dollar May Give Ground on Irish Bailout News

November 29, 2010

FOREX: US Dollar May Give Ground on Irish Bailout News

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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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Irish Official: Bailout Deal Coming Sunday

November 28, 2010

DUBLIN–Irish Communications Minister Eamon Ryan said Saturday that talks between the EU and the International Monetary Fund on an €85 billion ($112.5 billion) Irish aid package will conclude Sunday, and he described as “inaccurate” speculation that the interest rate on loans would be as high as 6.7%. European Union finance ministers will meet Sunday in Brussels for talks on the bailout package, the U.K. treasury confirmed. U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne will travel to the event. It is understood the original push for the meeting came from France. It had previously been thought the finance ministers would speak by telephone on Sunday to discuss the package. “There’s got to be some clarity on our deal before Monday because what we’ve seen is a real uncertainty affecting markets, affecting this country, affecting other countries,” he told state broadcaster RTE Radio. He is a member of the Green Party, the junior coalition partner.

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Video: O’Brien Says Ireland’s Cuts Will Boost Competitiveness

November 25, 2010

Nov. 25 (Bloomberg) — Fergal O’Brien, chief economist at the Irish Business and Employers Confederation, talks about the country’s austerity measures and their effect on competitiveness. He speaks with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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FOREX: Euro Threatened as Irish Government Faces Election Loss

November 25, 2010

FOREX: Euro Threatened as Irish Government Faces Election Loss

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Video: Jefferies’s Owen Says Ireland Growth Plan Is `Fanciful’

November 25, 2010

Nov. 25 (Bloomberg) — David Owen, chief European economist at Jefferies International Ltd., talks about the Irish growth plan and the country’s sovereign debt crisis. He speaks with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Video: Mortimer-Lee Says Ireland Can Learn From Korea in 1990s

November 24, 2010

Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — Paul Mortimer-Lee, global head of market economics at BNP Paribas SA, talks about the Irish bank bailout and the prospects for Portugal or Spain following the same route. He speaks with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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European Markets Edge Higher as Irish Bailout Nears Conclusion

November 24, 2010

European Markets Edge Higher as Irish Bailout Nears Conclusion

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European stocks recover from yesterday’s selloff on Irish budget 

November 24, 2010

European stocks recover from yesterday’s selloff on Irish budget

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Video: Knight Says U.K. Bank Exposure to Ireland ‘Containable’

November 24, 2010

Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) — Angela Knight, chief executive officer of the British Bankers’ Association, talks about U.K. banks’ exposure to Irish debt. She speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Euro Faces Pressure as Irish Junior Party Balks at Rescue

November 23, 2010

Euro Faces Pressure as Irish Junior Party Balks at Rescue

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FOREX: US Dollar Weakness Hinted as Irish Bailout Boosts Risk Appetite

November 22, 2010

FOREX: US Dollar Weakness Hinted as Irish Bailout Boosts Risk Appetite

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European stocks fall by midday after Irish approval to EU-IMF rescue package

November 22, 2010

European stocks fall by midday after Irish approval to EU-IMF rescue package

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Sterling Vulnerable as Irish Bailout on Shaky Ground

November 22, 2010

Sterling Vulnerable as Irish Bailout on Shaky Ground

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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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Centrel Bank: Irish Republic to Get Bail-out Loan

November 21, 2010

Centrel Bank: Irish Republic to Get Bail-out Loan

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Dollar and Risk Appetite Teeter on Trend as Irish Bailout Faces Low Liquidity

November 20, 2010

Dollar and Risk Appetite Teeter on Trend as Irish Bailout Faces Low Liquidity

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Euro: How Will Traders React to an Irish Bailout?

November 20, 2010

Euro: How Will Traders React to an Irish Bailout?

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Video: McCarthy Says Ireland Won’t Increase Corporation Tax

November 19, 2010

Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) — Tom McCarthy, chief executive officer of the Irish Management Institute, talks about the prospects for Ireland raising its corporate tax rate as part of a European Union and International Monetary Fund bailout of the country’s banks. He speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Hoguet Expects `Orderly’ Resolution of Irish Debt Crisis

November 19, 2010

Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) — George Hoguet, global investment strategist at State Street Global Advisors, talks about the outlook for resolution of the Irish debt crisis and China’s economy. Hoguet speaks with Carol Massar at the MIT Sloan CFO Summit in Boston on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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FOREX: Euro Gains on Irish Bailout Bets, EU Summit Eyed for Details

November 18, 2010

FOREX: Euro Gains on Irish Bailout Bets, EU Summit Eyed for Details

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The 14th Banker: Unsafe at Any Speed

November 17, 2010

When I first became aware of Ralph Nader , he was already considered a flake by the New Economic consensus that would shortly sweep Ronald Reagan into office. I would have laughed out loud if you had told me that 30 years later I would quote him. In the preface to his book, Unsafe At Any Speed , he says the following: This country has not been entirely laggard in defining values relevant to new contexts of a technology laden with risks. The post-war years have witnessed a historic broadening, at least in the courts, of the procedural and substantive rights of the injured and the duties of manufacturers to produce a safe product. Judicial decisions throughout the fifty states have given living meaning to Walt Whitman’s dictum, “If anything is sacred, the human body is sacred.” Mr. Justice Jackson in 1953 defined the duty of the manufacturers by saying, “Where experiment or research is necessary to determine the presence or the degree of danger, the product must not be tried out on the public, nor must the public be expected to possess the facilities or the technical knowledge to learn for itself of inherent but latent dangers. The claim that a hazard was not foreseen is not available to one who did not use foresight appropriate to his enterprise.” These words speak of legal and social developments in materials manufacturing going on 50 years ago. Yet it is striking that we have not achieved these most foundational values when it comes to another kind of manufacturing, the manufacture of financial products. The clock has completed its cycle on the day in which the Congressional Oversight Panel released its report on Mortgage Irregularities and the consequences for financial stability. In addition to documentation concerns, another problem has arisen with securitized mortgage loans that could also threaten financial stability. Investors in mortgage-backed securities typically demanded certain assurances about the quality of the loans they purchased: for instance, that the borrowers had certain minimum credit ratings and income, or that their homes had appraised for at least a minimum value. Allegations have surfaced that banks may have misrepresented the quality of many loans sold for securitization. Banks found to have provided misrepresentations could be required to repurchase any affected mortgages. Because millions of these mortgages are in default or foreclosure, the result could be extensive capital losses if such repurchase risk is not adequately reserved. The dawn will soon break in Europe, where volcanoes erupt with regularity. Today’s volcano is the Irish Debt Crisis and an apparent impending bailout or series of bailouts, this time more painful. I give you this link , not to endorse it’s assessment because frankly I don’t know. But the very fact that such extremity can be considered plausible and be posted to a highly reputable blog (not mine, Calculated Risk’s) paints the picture rather well does it not? So back to the quote from Ralph Nader’s preface. ”Where experiment or research is necessary to determine the presence or the degree of danger, the product must not be tried out on the public, nor must the public be expected to possess the facilities or the technical knowledge to learn for itself of inherent but latent dangers. The claim that a hazard was not foreseen is not available to one who did not use foresight appropriate to his enterprise.” I heard a commenter recently say that in financial services, “complexity is fraud”.  I am becoming inclined to believe him. Products have been introduced into the system which simply cannot be modeled by experiment or research. Yet they continue to be introduced, promoted, and defended by their issuers as well as those in government who have sold out to the industry. It is time for that to end.

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William K. Black: The Celtic Chimera

November 17, 2010

I’m writing from the scene of the first Kilkenomics Festival, which brings together finance experts and professional comics to try to answer the public’s questions about why the world is suffering recurrent, intensifying financial crises, why Ireland has gone to the heights and crashed spectacularly, and what options does it have that other nations in crisis have used successfully. David McWilliams, an Irish economist, and Richard Cook the man that started the Kilkenny comedy festival (Cat Laughs) decided to create an economics festival with sessions run by professional comedians questioning the economists. This is an utterly bizarre idea, so I accepted immediately. It turns out that professional Irish comics are every bit as quick and well read as you would have guessed by extrapolating from what you see on Jon Stewart’s Daily Show. (Irish angst and Jewish angst bear a strong resemblance.) There’s a long European tradition of the “fool” being able to mock the pretentious and powerful and bring out the truth. Talking to the comics and answering their questions forces us to speak clearly and bluntly – or be skewered. The public love it (both parts – getting clear answers to their questions or watching the comics skewer us) and the roughly 20 events have been sold out. Ireland was known as the “Celtic Tiger.” It shot to economic fame. From the poor man of Northern Europe, it was transformed into a nation with a reported per capita GDP equivalent to that of the United States. The old, true, and painful joke: “What’s Ireland leading export? (Answer: “the Irish”) was reversed as people began to move to Ireland. Unfortunately, the Celtic Tiger was ultimately revealed to be a Celtic Chimera. Irish bank supervision was so weak and Ireland’s banks so wild and crazy that the New York Times called Ireland the new “Wild West.” Ireland’s largest banks hyper-inflated twin bubbles in commercial and residential real estate. They grew massively. Fortunately, Lehman failed and the Irish banks’ ability to grow collapsed – which meant that the bubbles imploded in late 2008. Had it not done so, the Irish banks would have continued their staggering growth and caused almost incomprehensible losses (relative to the size of the Irish economy) when the (vastly larger) bubbles finally collapsed. Anglo Irish Bank was merely the worst an awful collection of large Irish bank. The Irish entity disposing of the Irish banks’ bad assets is now estimating 70% losses on Anglo’s (copious) bad assets. That percentage loss estimate is, bizarrely, mandated to be as of a year ago even though property values have fallen significantly since that date and are expected to continue to decline next year. Non-linear increases in losses are common when a bubble hyper-inflates. Therefore, any estimate of the increased losses that would have resulted had the collapse of the Irish bubbles come two years later should assume percentage losses on the new assets of well above 75%. The size of Irish bank losses that the Irish government claims its taxpayers should bear is contested, but has a lower bound of roughly 60 billion Euros. Had Dick Fuld’s avaricious heart not led to Lehman’s collapse, or had Treasury bailed out Lehman and prevented (delayed) its failure, Ireland (and Iceland) would have collapsed as nations. If their banks had continued their growth for even two more years, Ireland and Iceland’s per capita debts would have been so staggering (in the range of $50,000) that they would have sparked massive emigration, which would have pushed the per capita debt even higher. Both nations would now be occupied almost entirely by pensioners and non-nationals. The economists and finance practitioners that presented at the Kilkenomics Festival came from diverse streams of economic and political views. They, nevertheless, agreed on three points about the Irish crisis: (1) it was insane for the Irish government to provide and extend unlimited financial guarantees of virtually all debts of the failed Irish banks, (2) the Irish government had transformed a private banking crisis into a sovereign debt and budgetary crisis that imperiled Ireland’s recovery from the economic crisis and gravely stressed the EU and the Euro, and (3) that either the EU or IMF would bail out Ireland or Ireland would default. I’m going to write a series of columns about what I’ve learned by examining the Irish and Icelandic crises. I urge readers to take these two small islands’ experience seriously for at least five reasons. First, one of the key analytical issues has long been which flashpoint would spark the next stage in the ongoing, global financial crises. The leading candidates have been the EU periphery and the collapse of the still-growing Chinese bubbles. (Of course, they may occur simultaneously or the first crisis may quickly trigger the second.) Europe now looks like it will win the “next crisis” race. (I believe that the European Union (EU) is rich enough to paper over the crisis for several years, but European politics could scuttle that effort. Second, the EU is set up in a fashion that creates strong, perverse incentives for future financial crises. Third, the EU is set up in a fashion that is periodically strongly criminogenic in particular nations. These criminogenic environments will feed future epidemics of “accounting control fraud” — the leading cause of severe financial crises. Massive amounts of European money will move to fund these frauds, which will cause financial bubbles to hyper-inflate and produce catastrophic banking losses and severe recessions. Fourth, the EU is set up in a manner that makes it extremely difficult (and expensive) to attempt to respond to the severe recessions and debt crises that these perverse incentives generate. The EU “channels” IMF’s “let’s turn a financial crisis into a crisis of the real economy” strategy. Fifth, the Irish government’s response to their epidemic of fraudulent lending has been so exquisitely awful that it (A) demonstrates the catastrophic costs of deregulation, desupervision, and deifying finance, and (B) allows one to illustrate why it is essential to combine good analytics, skepticism, courage, and integrity in responding to such epidemics. One of the independent reports that the Irish government commissioned about the banking crisis was co-authored by Professor Karl Whelan of University College Dublin. That report has received moderate attention and I will discuss it in more detail in future posts. Professor Whelan, however, has provided a far more candid briefing paper for the European Parliament: “The Future for Eurozone Financial Stability Policy” (September 2010). His briefing paper makes clear why there will be an EU bailout of the Irish banks. One of his key conclusions is that sovereign defaults by EU nations are likely and that the EU must prepare now to deal with them. That fundamental candor is matched by his explanation for why the EU created a bailout fund earlier in 2010. “While the public discussion of this decision has largely focused on the idea that the agreement was aimed at preserving the Euro as the common currency, the truth was more prosaic: The European banking system was already in a fragile state and would not have coped with a series of sovereign defaults. The need to maintain financial stability, specifically banking sector stability, was what prompted the unprecedented announcement of the bailout funds.” “The health of the European banking system remains in question. The most likely trigger for sovereign defaults in the next few years is a prolonged period of slow growth or perhaps a double-dip recession.” Whelan is trying to make clear the great underreported fact of the Irish banking crisis — the broader EU banking crisis. (And, while Whelan does not emphasize this point, his discussion inherently means that there was a horrific failure of EU banking regulation.) He explains that the European “stress tests” were farcical because they assumed no sovereign defaults could occur and ignored all market value losses on the banks’ “held for investment” exposures to sovereign risk. He cites the OECD study that discussed these massive loss exposures. The OECD emphasized that the losses were lumpy. “Large cross-border exposures (defined as an exposure above 5% of Tier 1 capital) to Greece are present for Germany, France, Belgium (all with systemically important banks), Cyprus and Portugal. Large exposures to Portugal are present in Germany and Belgium; to Spain in Germany and Belgium; to Italy in Germany, France, Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria and Portugal; and to Ireland in Germany and Cyprus.” The alert reader will have noted the nation whose banks have large, unrecognized losses on debt among each of the PIIGS — Germany. German banks acted like drunken “Girls Gone Wild” as soon as they were approached by a foreign borrower. Germany’s Bank Gone Wild were hooked on yield — for a trivial increase in yield, without any meaningful due diligence, they made massive unsecured loans to many of the most fraudulent borrowers throughout Europe. Borrowers engaged in control fraud have two great attractions for bankers gone wild — they typically report extreme profitability (which makes them appear to be creditworthy to the credulous) and they are willing to promise to pay higher interest rates). Their promises, of course, have all the reliability of the producers’ of “Girls Gone Wild” promises that the girls will be able to launch a film career if they shed their clothes. Where were the German banking regulators? They seem to have believed that “What happens in Vegas (Dublin) stays in Vegas (Dublin).” Instead, their German banks came back from their riotous holidays in the PIIGS with BTDs (bank transmitted diseases). The German banks’ regulators continue to let them hide the embarrassing losses they picked up on holiday, but that cover up will collapse if any of the PIIGS default. The PIIGS will default if the EU does not bail them out, so there will be a bail out even though the German taxpayers hate to fund bailouts. All of this should put a very different interpretation on Chancellor Merkel’s insistence on unsecured creditors suffering losses when they lend to banks that fail. She has argued that it is essential that they suffer losses so that they will have the proper incentives to provide effective “private market discipline” and that it is fair that they suffer losses given the premium yields they received and their lack of due diligence. German banks would be the primary losers under her proposal, so her position is remarkable. She is apparently disgusted with the German “banks gone wild” that were the largest funders of the accounting control frauds that drove several of the epicenters of the European financial crises and helped push Europe into the Great Recession. This post originally appeared at Benzinga .

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The Debt Problems Of The European Periphery

November 17, 2010

Last week’s renewed anxiety over bond market collapse in Europe’s periphery should come as no surprise.  Greece’s EU/IMF program heaps more public debt onto a nation that is already insolvent, and Ireland is now on the same track. Despite massive fiscal cuts and several years of deep recession Greece and Ireland will accumulate 150% of GNP in debt by 2014.   A new road is necessary: The burden of financial failure should be shared with the culprits and not only born by the victims. The fundamental flaw in these programs is the morally dubious decision to bail out the bank creditors while foisting the burden of adjustment on taxpayers.  Especially the Irish government has, for no good reason, nationalized the debts of its failing private banks, passing on the burden to its increasingly poor citizens.  On the donor side, German and French taxpayers are angry at the thought of having to pay for the bonanza of Irish banks and their irresponsible creditors.

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Video: IBEC’s McCoy Says Irish Companies Need Clarity on Budget

November 17, 2010

Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) — Danny McCoy, director general of the Irish Business and Employers’ Confederation, talks about the outlook for Irish companies and the economy. He speaks from Dublin with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Estonia’s Ligi Says Ireland Needs Budget ‘Consolidation’

November 17, 2010

Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) — Estonian Finance Minister Jurgen Ligi talks about the Irish economy and the possibility of Estonia joining the euro. He speaks from Brussels with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown”.

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Video: O’Leary Says Announcement of Irish Bailout ‘Very Close’

November 17, 2010

Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) — Dermot O’Leary, chief economist at Goodbody Stockbrokers, talks about the outlook for the Irish economy and the banking system. He speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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