By Michael: Is the financial collapse of Italy going to be the
final blow that breaks the back of Europe financially? Most people don't
realize this, but Italy is actually the third largest debtor in the entire
world after the United States and Japan. Italy currently has a debt to
GDP ratio of more than 120 percent,
and Italy has a bigger national debt than anyone else in Europe does.
That is why it is such a big deal that Italian voters have just overwhelmingly
rejected austerity. The political parties led by anti-austerity
candidates Silvio Berlusconi and Beppe Grillo did far better than
anticipated. When you combine their totals, they got more than 50 percent
of the vote. Italian voters have seen what austerity has done to Greece
and Spain and they want no part of it. Unfortunately for Italian voters,
it has been the promise of austerity that has kept the Italian financial system
stable in recent months. Now that Italian voters have clearly rejected
austerity, investors are fearing that austerity programs all over Europe may
start falling apart. This is creating quite a bit of panic in European
financial markets right now. On Tuesday, Italian stocks had their worst day in 10 months,
Italian bond yields rose by the most that we have seen in 19 months, and the
stocks of the two largest banks in Italy both fell by more than 8 percent.
Italy is already experiencing its fourth recession since 2001, and unemployment
has been steadily rising. If Italy is now "ungovernable", as
many are saying, then what does that mean for the future of Italy? Will
Italy be the spark that sets off financial armageddon in Europe?
All of Europe was totally shocked by the election
results in Italy. As you can see from the following excerpt from a Bloomberg article,
the vote was very divided and the anti-austerity parties did much better than
had been projected...
The results showed pre-election favorite Pier Luigi
Bersani won the lower house with 29.5 percent, less than a half a percentage
point ahead of Silvio Berlusconi, the ex-premier fighting a tax-fraud
conviction. Beppe Grillo, a former comedian, got 25.6 percent, while Monti
scored 10.6 percent. Bersani and his allies got 31.6 percent of votes in the
Senate, compared with 30.7 percent for Berlusconi and 23.79 percent for Grillo,
according to final figures from the Interior Ministry.
So what do those election results mean for Italy and
for the rest of Europe?
Right now, there is a lot of panic about those
results. There is fear that what just happened in Italy could result in a
rejection of austerity all over Europe...
"I think the election results (or lack thereof)
are a negative for the euro, which will likely keep the currency
pressured for some time," Omer Esiner, chief market analyst for
Commonwealth Foreign Exchange, told me. But it's not just the political
uncertainty in Italy, he adds. "The shocking gains made by
anti-establishment parties in Italy signal a broad-based frustration with
austerity among voters and a decisive rejection of the policies pushed by
Germany in nations across the euro zone's periphery. That theme revives
unresolved debt crisis issues and could threaten the continuity of reforms
across other countries in the euro zone."
And the financial markets have clearly interpreted the
election results in Europe as a very bad sign. Zero Hedge summarized
some of the bad news out of Europe that we saw on Tuesday...
Swiss 2Y rates turned negative once again for the first time in a month; EURUSD
relatively flatlined around 1.3050 (250 pips lower than pre-Italy); Europe's
VIX exploded to almost 26% (from under 19% yesterday); and 3-month EUR-USD
basis swaps plunged to their most liquidity-demanding level since 12/28. Spain
and Italy (and Portugal) were the most hurt in bonds today as 2Y Italian
spreads broke back above 200bps (surging over 50bps casting doubt on OMT
support) and 3Y Spain yields broke above 3% once again. The Italian equity
market suffered its equal biggest drop in 6 months falling back to 10 week lows
(and down 14% from its end-Jan highs). Italian bond yields (and spreads)
smashed higher - the biggest jump in 19 months as BTP futures volume exploded
in the last two days.
Not that things in Europe were going well before
all this.
In fact, the UK was just stripped of its prized AAA
credit rating. That was huge news.
And check out some of the other things that have been
going on in the rest of Europe...
In Spain, a major real estate company, Reyal Urbis,
collapsed last week, leaving already battered banks on the hook for millions of
euros in losses. Meanwhile, the government faces a corruption scandal and a
steady stream of anti-austerity demonstrations. Thousands of people took to the
streets again on Saturday, protesting deep cuts to health and other services,
as well as hefty bank bailouts.
Life is no better in a large swath of the broader EU.
In Britain, Moody’s cited the continuing economic weakness and the resulting
risks to the government’s tight fiscal policy for its rating cut. In Bulgaria,
where the government fell last week and the economy is in a shambles, rightists
who joined mass demonstrations across the country burned a European Union flag
and waved anti-EU banners. Other austerity-minded governments in the EU face
similar murky political futures.
At this point, Europe is a complete and total economic
mess and things are rapidly getting worse.
And that is really bad news because Europe is already
in the midst of a recession. In fact, according to the BBC, the recession in the eurozone got
even deeper during the fourth quarter of 2012...
The eurozone recession deepened in the final three
months of 2012, official figures show.
The economy of the 17 nations in the euro shrank by
0.6% in the fourth quarter, which was worse than forecast.
It is the sharpest contraction since the beginning of
2009 and marks the first time the region failed to grow in any quarter during a
calendar year.
But this is just the beginning.
The truth is that government debt is not even the greatest
danger that Europe is facing. In reality, a collapse of the European
banking system is of much greater concern.
Why is that?
Well, how would you feel if you woke up someday and
every penny that you had in the bank was gone?
In the U.S. we don't have to worry about that so much
because all deposits are insured by the FDIC, but in many European countries
things work much differently.
For example, just check out what Graham Summers
recently had to say about the banking system in Spain...
It’s a little known fact about the Spanish crisis is
that when the Spanish Government merges troubled banks, it typically swaps out
depositors’ savings for shares in the new bank.
So… when the newly formed bank goes bust, “poof” your
savings are GONE. Not gone as in some Spanish version of the FDIC will
eventually get you your money, but gone as in gone forever (see the above
article for proof).
This is why Bankia’s collapse is so significant: in
one move, former depositors at seven banks just lost virtually everything.
And this in a nutshell is Europe’s financial system
today: a totally insolvent sewer of garbage debt, run by corrupt career
politicians who have no clue how to fix it or their economies… and which
results in a big fat ZERO for those who are nuts enough to invest in it.
Be warned. There are many many more Bankias coming to
light in the coming months. So if you have not already taken steps to prepare
for systemic failure, you NEED to do so NOW. We’re literally at most a few
months, and very likely just a few weeks from Europe’s banks imploding,
potentially taking down the financial system with them. Think I’m joking? The
Fed is pumping hundreds of BILLIONS of dollars into EU banks right now
trying to stop this from happening.
Like Graham Summers, I am extremely concerned about
the European banking system. Europe actually has a much larger banking
system than the U.S. does, and if the European banking system implodes that is
going to send huge shockwaves to the farthest corners of the globe.
But if you want to believe that the
"experts" in Europe and in the United States have "everything
under control", then you might as well stop reading now.
After all, they are very highly educated and they know
what they are doing, right?
But if you want to listen to some common sense, you
might want to check out this very ominous warning from Karl Denninger...
I hope you're ready.
Congress has wasted the time it was given by the
Europeans getting things "temporarily" under control. But they
didn't actually get anything under control, as the Italian elections just
showed.
Now, with the budget over there at risk of being
abandoned, and fiscal restraint being abandoned (note: exactly what the US has
been doing) the markets are recognizing exactly the risk that never in fact
went away over the last couple of years.
It was hidden by lies, just as it has been hidden by
lies here.
Bernanke's machinations and other games
"gave" the Congress four years to do the right thing. They
didn't, because that same "gift" also destroyed all market
signals of urgency.
As such you have people like Krugman and others
claiming that it's all ok and that we can spend with wild abandon, taking our
fiscal medicine never.
They were wrong. Congress was wrong. The
Republicans were wrong, the Democrats were wrong, and the Administration was
wrong.
Congress is out of time; as I noted the deficit
spending must stop now, irrespective of the fact that it will cause significant
economic damage.
For the past couple of years, authorities in the U.S.
and in Europe have been trying to delay the coming crisis by kicking the can
down the road.
By doing so, they have been making the eventual
collapse even worse.
And now time is running out.
I hope that you are ready.
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