Submitted by Tyler Durden: Back on July 3, we made an explicit and very simple prediction: "now
that the natural succession path at the BOE has been terminally
derailed, it brings up those two other gentlemen already brought up
previously as potential future heads of the BOE, both of whom just
happened to work, or still do, at... Goldman Sachs: Canada's Mark Carney or Goldman's Jim O'Neil. Granted
both have denied press speculation they will replace Mervyn King, but
it's not like it would be the first time a banker lied to anyone now,
would it (and makes one wonder if this whole affair was not merely
orchestrated by the Squid from the get go... but no, that would be a
'conspiracy theory'.)"
A few weeks later, in "On The Path To Global Goldmanation: Former Goldmanite Mark Carney To Head The BOE After All?" we added:Granted both have denied press speculation they will replace Mervyn King, but it's not like it would be the first time a banker lied to anyone now, would it (and makes one wonder if this whole affair was not merely orchestrated by the Squid from the get go...* * *
but no, that would be a 'conspiracy theory'.)" We wonder if this speculation can be upgraded from conspiracy theory to conspiracy fact, now that Bloomberg itself has written a major article discussing just this suddenly very likely outcome.
From Bloomberg:
Carney Leading Bank of England Seen as Scandal RemedyThere is one problem regarding the domestic candidates: none of them have Goldman on their resume, something which sets not only Mark Carney, but also Bill Dudley and Mario Draghi apart.
London is losing so much trust as the global financial center that Prime Minister David Cameron may need to consider an unprecedented choice for Bank of England governor: Mark Carney, the Canadian who polices the world’s financial system and has no ties to the bailouts or rigged markets tainting Labour and Conservative governments alike.
The 47-year-old Carney, who received his masters and PhD degrees from Oxford University, is no stranger to the City of London after working there with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Now serving as governor of the Bank of Canada and the head of the Financial Stability Board, he is unscathed by the fallout from the 2008 financial crisis.
“Mark Carney is one of the brightest, most capable people I’ve ever met in global finance and central banking,” said Tim Adams, a former U.S. Treasury undersecretary who worked with Carney at Group of Seven meetings. “I’ve been around these circles a long time and he’s smart, politically savvy, a good manager and has an outstanding track record. It’s tough to find all those elements in a single person.”
Domestic candidates for the job include Gus O’Donnell, former head of the U.K. civil service, Financial Services Authority Chairman Adair Turner and Bank of England Deputy Governor Paul Tucker, a three-decade veteran at the bank.
As for the punchline:
“Why not get a head that’s global? Bankers aren’t very popular, and a Canadian sounds like a good choice,” said Kent Matthews, a professor at Cardiff University and former Bank of England researcher. “It may well be that to restore credibility they have to look outside.”So that's the strategy: play Carney off as a Canadian, instead of as Goldman. We wonder how many minutes the general public will be fooled by that particular strawman.
We are, once again, 100% correct, and have beaten all the bookie odds which had Tucker as a favorite and Mark Carney as a long odds outsider. Pity: all one needs to realize and remember how the events in the world play out is to remember one simple thing: GOLDMAN SACHS RUNS IT. Everything else is secondary.
As we expected months ago, it has just been confirmed.
- MARK CARNEY NAMED AS NEXT BANK OF ENGLAND GOVERNOR
- OSBORNE: CARNEY WILL BRING FRESH PERSPECTIVE
- OSBORNE: CARNEY WON'T COMMENT ON U.K. POLICY BEFORE TAKING POST
- BANK OF CANADA GOVERNOR CARNEY SAYS HONORED TO ACCEPT BOE ROLE
- OSBORNE SAYS U.K. NEEDS `THE VERY BEST' AT THIS TIME
- OSBORNE SAYS CARNEY IS BEST, MOST EXPERIENCED CANDIDATE
Europe before:
and After:
Finally, our conclusion from that article, which today merely encapsulated:
- Because with money printing squids like these, who needs sovereign states?
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