Marc Faber – Mirror, Mirror on the Wall, When is the Next AIG to Fall?

We hadden het vorige week al uitgebreid over de speech van Marc Faber op een bijkomst van de Mises Institute. Hierbij de volledige bijdrage ‘on tape’: een aanrader!

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China waarschuwt voor ‘Double Dip’

De Chinese premier Wen Jiabao waarschuwde voor het risico van een double dip scenario door de toenemende schuldenproblemen in Europa. De waarschuwing volgt een dag nadat Frankrijk zijn twijfels had uitgesproken over z’n toprating AAA.

Via Reuters:

China warned on Monday that Europe’s struggle to contain ballooning debt posed a risk to global economic growth, raising the specter of a double-dip recession.

Premier Wen Jiabao, addressing business leaders during an official visit to Japan, issued his warnings a day after France admitted it will struggle to keep its top credit rating and days after a downgrade of Spain’s credit status again jolted financial markets.

Referring to the risk of a second dip in global economic growth rates, Wen said: “I believe that we can’t say with absolute certainty, so we must undertake close observation and act to prevent it.

“The world economy is stable and beginning to revive, but this revival is slow and there are many uncertainties and destabilizing factors,” he said, adding it was too early to wind down stimulus deployed during the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

Governments around the world ran up record debts during the $5 trillion effort to pull the economy out of its deepest slump since the Great Depression and now face a tough balancing act: how to reduce debt without choking off growth.

“Some countries have experienced sovereign debt crises, for example Greece. Is this kind of phenomenon over? Now it seems that it’s not so simple,” Wen said. “The sovereign debt crisis in some European countries may drag down Europe’s economic recovery.”

ECB Governing Council member Ewald Nowotny summed up the task.

“The big challenge is to prevent a vicious circle in which (a) crisis of the public sector again leads to crisis developments in the financial and real sectors of the economy,” he told a conference hosted by Austria’s central bank.

Greece stumbled into the global spotlight late last year when it sharply revised its budget deficit figures, provoking a series of credit downgrades and sending its borrowing costs soaring, which in turn fanned fears it may default on its obligations.

While a 110 billion euro rescue package put together by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund helped avert an immediate meltdown, it failed to dispel fears that other highly indebted euro zone members such as Spain, Portugal and Italy may face a similar fate.

POLITICAL BACKLASH

A massive 750 billion euro emergency scheme cobbled together by EU leaders early this month, again with IMF help, aimed to deter with its sheer size possible speculative attacks on the euro zone’s weaker members and thus support the euro.

In return for the safety net, Athens, Lisbon, Madrid and Rome signed billions of euros in spending cuts and tax hikes to rein in debt, despite an outcry from trade unions and political backlash.

IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn praised Spain’s austerity package in a newspaper interview, saying they should help restore confidence.

On Friday, Fitch became the second ratings agency to strip Spain of its top triple-A rating a day after it passed its austerity plan by a single vote.

However, recent opinion polls showing the ruling Socialists trailing badly behind the center-right opposition cast doubt whether the government will manage to muster enough support in parliament for its budget.

Such concerns, have been plaguing the euro, which is heading for its worst month since January 2009, down more than 7 percent against the dollar since the start of May and heading for the sixth straight monthly fall. It was steady in Asia on Monday.

“It is difficult to see a recovery in market sentiment as there are worries that further bad news about southern European countries may come out,” said a currency trader at a Japanese bank.

Investors and policymakers around the world are also increasingly worried that Europe’s efforts to cut debt will sap the continent’s anemic growth, denting demand for exports from emerging economies and derailing the global recovery.

The fact that not just the fiscally weakest southern European countries, but also nations at the euro zone’s core are under pressure to cut debt and deficits amassed during the financial crisis, is adding to those concerns.

On Sunday, France said keeping its AAA credit rating would be a stretch without some tough action on its deficit, while Germany indicated it might resort to raising taxes to bring its shortfall closer to the EU’s limit of 3 percent of gross domestic product.

France, the euro zone’s second-largest economy, expects the budget deficit to hit 8 percent of GDP this year, but aims to bring it down to the EU limit by 2013. Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, expects its deficit to exceed 5 percent of GDP in 2010. In the future, major improvements are needed in the euro area to prevent bad fiscal behavior and to enforce effective sanctions in the case of breaches of fiscal rules, the head of the European Central Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet told the conference in Austria.

Striking a more optimistic note, China’s Wen said the world’s third-largest economy and its prime growth engine remained on course to meet its growth targets this year, though he added it would require Beijing to “maintain a certain level of intensity in its economic stimulus.” (Additional reporting by Sarah Morris in Madrid; Writing by Tomasz Janowski; Editing by Neil Fullick)

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The Fiat Fools

Een term bedacht door Keith McCullough, CEO van Hedgeye. McCullough waarschuwt nogmaals dat het creëren van nog meer fiat currency (door JC Trichet en Ben Bernanke) om de huidige schuldenproblemen aan te pakken, geen oplossing is. In Europa was Griekenland al een eerste waarschuwing! De volgende rij is Spanje, waarna Frankrijk en Italië aan de beurt komen, aldus Keith McCullough.

The Fiat Fool mentaliteit is tegenwoordig overal aanwezig. Die mentaliteit hebben we vooral te danken aan Keynes, die dacht dat de overheid het antwoord voor alles is. Het Keynes-experiment lijkt echter niet te slagen, volgens McCullough. We hebben niet veel geleerd van onze fouten.

Toeval of niet, John May­nard Key­nes is vol­gens de me­ning van Vlaan­de­ren de meest in­vloed­rij­ke eco­noom uit de ge­schie­de­nis. Dat blijkt uit een enquête van de Tijd-re­dac­tie bij Vlaam­se eco­no­men, de le­zers van de Bear & Bull Blog van De Tijd en ge­spe­ci­a­li­seer­de Tijd-re­dac­teu­ren.

Frankrijk waarschuwt voor rating AAA

De Franse budgettaire minister Francois Baroin waarschuwde zondag dat het behoud van de top rating AAA een ‘uitdaging’ zal worden voor Frankrijk.

Via Reuters:

France admitted on Sunday that keeping its top-notch credit rating would be “a stretch” without some tough budget decisions, following German hints that Berlin may resort to raising taxes to help bring down its deficit.

France

Euro zone trade unions are preparing for possible confrontations in the coming week if governments impose austerity measures or labor reforms unilaterally.

But ministers made clear they were ready to take unpopular steps to prevent the Greek debt crisis spreading to their economies, although doubts are growing about whether the Spanish government in particular has enough support to get its way.

Budget Minister Francois Baroin indicated on Sunday that France should not take for granted its AAA rating, which allows Paris to borrow relatively cheaply on international markets and finance its big budget deficit.

“The objective of keeping the AAA rating is an objective that is a stretch, and it is an objective that, in fact, partly informs the economic policies we want to have,” Baroin said.

“We must maintain our AAA rating, reduce our debt to avoid being too dependent on the markets, and we must do this for the long term,” he told Canal+ TV in an interview.

Baroin later clarified that the target was “a demanding (objective) which we’re committed to.”

France has forecast its deficit will hit 8 percent of gross domestic product this year, but aims to bring it down to within the European Union’s 3 percent limit by 2013.

Talks are under way on pension reform and Paris has frozen central government spending, barring pensions and interest payments, between 2011 and 2013. It is also considering a constitutional amendment to set binding budget deficit limits.

SCHAEUBLE SIGNALS

Berlin’s budget problems are less severe but Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble signaled at the weekend that Germans may have to stomach tax rises as well as spending cuts.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government is considering raising value-added tax (VAT) to the full rate of 19 percent on certain items that currently benefit from a lower rate of 7 percent, coalition sources told Reuters on Friday.

“If you abolish tax breaks, some will say that’s a tax increase. At the end of the day, it’s about having a sensible and balanced policy,” Schaeuble told the Bild am Sonntag paper.

“And let’s bear in mind that cuts on social spending hit those in the country with less money.

Germany’s budget deficit is expected to exceed five percent of GDP in 2010, modest by current EU standards but well above the bloc’s limit.

While France expressed its determination to hold on to its top-notch rating, Fitch on Friday became the second agency to strip Spain of its triple-A, sending markets reeling.

Spain’s Socialist government is battling to prove to nervous markets that the euro zone’s fourth largest economy will not go down the same path as Greece. But with political opposition growing at home, its ability to push through reforms is limited.

Weekend opinion polls put Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s government far behind the opposition, and indicated that many voters believe he will have to call early elections as support for a 2011 austerity budget will be hard to muster.

“The government faces not only an economic crisis but a political crisis too, because the way it’s governing is not good enough,” said Angel Laborda, an economist at Spanish savings banks consultancy FUNCAS. “I believe that early elections will be called, sooner or later.

A deadline for the government, trade unions and business to agree on labor reforms, aiming to cut unemployment and make the Spanish economy more competitive, looms in the coming week.

Already a May 31 deadline has been pushed back a week. If the talks fail, the government says it will propose its own changes by June 11, risking a confrontation with the unions.

PREPARING THE DEFENCES

The unions, traditionally close to the Socialists, have said they will respond to any imposed reform with a general strike.

Unions across the continent are preparing their defenses. The European Trade Union Confederation will consider its response to austerity measures in Brussels on June 1 and 2.

But Italy’s largest trade union already aims to force Rome to modify its austerity budget with a national strike, probably on June 25.

Europe’s debt crisis began in Greece, after Athens revealed last year that its budget deficit was far higher than first reported. Investors reacted by dumping Greek government bonds, fearing Athens would default on its debt repayments.

But Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou promised that Greece would not restructure its debt.

“Debt restructuring would be disastrous for the country’s credibility. It would lead to its marginalization from capital markets, to even more belt-tightening and a very deep recession,” he told Sunday’s Eleftherotypia newspaper.

Greece has agreed to drastic belt-tightening under a 110 billion euro ($134 billion) bailout organized by the EU and IMF.

(Reporting by Helen Massy-Beresford and Jean-Baptiste Vey in Paris, Paul Day in Madrid, Dave Graham In Berlin, Francesca Piscioneri and Gavin Jones in Rome, and George Georgiopoulos in Athens)

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Maurice de Hond ziet België als Griekenland 2

Maurice de Hond was vanmorgen te gast bij het ochtendprogramma Business Class op RTL (Nederland), waarbij op het einde van het gesprek plots ging over de ervaringen die Maurice recent had opgedaan als gast aan tafel bij Phara (Canvas, België). Hij vond het nogal opmerkelijk dat de Belgen, met 42 miljard euro bezuinigingen in het vooruitzicht, het enkel hadden over het probleem Brussel-Halle-Vilvoorde (B-H-V). De bezuinigingen zijn namelijk hoger dan in Nederland, terwijl België slechts 10 miljoen inwoners telt (t.o.v. 16,5 miljoen Nederlanders).

Op de vraag (aan enkele aanwezige politici en journalisten) hoe men dit probleem gaat aanpakken, kreeg hij enkel het antwoord dat dit pas op tafel zou komen als de regering gevormd wordt. Men roept enkel dat men de fiscale fraude zal aanpakken, wat volgens Maurice de Hond geen oplossing is voor het grote probleem. Daarenboven zullen de Vlamingen dan weer de schuld in de Waalse schoenen schuiven.

Hij twitterde achteraf over dat hij België ziet als Griekenland 2, waarop hij verschillende reacties binnenkreeg waaronder Griekenland 2A & 2B (Vlaanderen & Wallonië).

Het fragment is te zien via onderstaande (picture)link vanaf 27 min 15 sec.

David Einhorn – Goed Nieuws voor onze Kleinkinderen

Het is de opmerkelijke titel van een bijdrage van hedge fund manager David Einhorn (Greenlight Capital) op de Ira Sohn Investment Conference. Einhorn gaf aan dat onze kleinkinderen niet hoeven op te draaien voor de consequenties van onze acties, maar wij zullen dat moeten doen! Hij denkt dat onze crisis reeds is losgebarsten en dat wij voor de gevolgen zullen opdraaien. Hij hoopt dat we de huidige situatie niet laten uitmonden in een totale en globale schuldencrisis, maar dat we nu (harde) maatregelen nemen.

Het hoeft niet te verbazen dat hij een voorkeur heeft voor goud en goudmijnaandelen!


David-Einhorn-Ira-Sohn-Presentation-2010

Eurovisie Songfestival 2010 lijdt onder crisis!

Ook het Eurovisie Songfestival lijdt onder de financiële crisis in Europa. Het Europese songfestival, dat dit jaar z’n 55ste editie viert, zag inmiddels verschillende deelnemers afhaken. Maar ook de organisator Oslo zag zich genoodzaakt om het oorspronkelijke budget fors verlagen.

Diverse experts bestempelden de editie van 2010 als ‘minimalistisch’ inzake de competitie. Verschillende deelnemende landen die het volgens de organisatoren momenteel economisch hard te verduren hebben, zoals Andorra, Montenegro en de Tsjechische Republiek, vielen ondertussen al af, terwijl Hongarije zelfs besloot om niet deel te nemen! “Uiteraard hebben we last van de crisis. Verschillende landen haakten af en ze gaven allemaal dezelfde reden op: kostenbesparingen!” aldus Svante Stockselius, ‘executive supervisor’ van Eurovision.

Ook organisator Oslo moest z’n budget met 25% verlagen vanwege de crisis. Vorige jaar spendeerde Moskou nog voor 25 miljoen euro, terwijl de Norwegen het dit jaar met slechts 18 miljoen euro moeten doen. De nationale TV-zender NRK twijfelt er zelfs openlijk aan of Noorwegen het Eurovisie Songfestival nog een tweede keer zou kunnen organiseren indien men nog eens zou winnen. NRK moet het dan ook vooral hebben van z’n creativiteit.

Inge Solmo, auteur van de Eurovisie Songfestival boek ‘Absolute Grand Prix’, zou het zelfs zielig vinden voor bijvoorbeeld Moldavië of Azerbeidzjan: “Waar zouden ze in hemelsnaam het geld vandaan moeten halen?!”

Stockselius  is echter niet onder de druk: “De regels zijn voor iedereen bekend: als je deelneemt, weet je dat je het festival moet kunnen organiseren”

Bron: The Guardian

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Slim Beleggen – Weekend TV

The Keiser Report ft. James Rickards

Gerald Celente: Financial Armageddon 2.0

Peter Schiff op CNBC: is de VS het volgende Griekenland of Japan?

Marc Faber is negatief op alles!

Voor de Gadget Freaks: iPad + Velcro = Love

iPad + Velcro from Jesse Rosten on Vimeo.

Fitch downgrade Spanje: AA+

Na de verlaging van de kredietrating van Spanje door het ratingbureau S&P, volgt nu ook ‘concurrent’ Fitch met een downgrade van het Spaanse schuldpapier. De hoogste rating AAA wordt verlaagd naar AA+

Via MarketWatch:

LONDON (MarketWatch) — Fitch Ratings on Friday cut Spain’s credit rating from AAA to AA+, citing expectations that efforts to reduce public- and private-sector debt levels would significantly slow economic growth over the medium term.

Fitch said Spain’s ratings outlook was stable.

“Despite government debt and associated interest costs remaining within the AAA range, Fitch anticipates that the economic adjustment process will be more difficult and prolonged than for other economies with AAA-rated sovereign governments, which is why the agency has downgraded Spain’s rating to AA+,” said Brian Coulton, head of EMEA sovereign ratings at the agency.

The move, announced after the close of European markets, put added pressure on U.S. stocks. The euro (CUR_EURUSD 1.2271, -0.0088, -0.7119%) remained lower versus the U.S. dollar at $1.2302, down around 0.3% on the day.

But economists said the downgrade wasn’t a surprise.

Spain moved into the spotlight in the long-running euro-zone sovereign debt crisis this week as worries mounted about the country’s banking sector after the Bank of Spain stepped in to rescue CajaSur, a failed regional lender.

The Spanish parliament earlier this week approved a controversial 15 billion euro ($18 billion) package of austerity measures by a single vote. The measures include cuts to pay for civil servants and a pension freeze. Read about Spain’s austerity plan.

“All in all, no big news, and Spain losing AAA status is therefore not overly surprising,” said Tullia Bucco, economist at UniCredit Bank in Milan. “While recent austerity measures are credible and go in the right direction, growth prospects remain investors’ main concern.”

Standard & Poor’s last month downgraded Spain to AA from AA+. Read about S&P’s downgrade.

Fitch said Spain’s rigid labor market and the restructuring of regional and local savings banks, or cajas, will hinder the pace of adjustment, particularly in the aftermath of the nation’s collapsed property bubble.

The agency said the government’s fiscal consolidation plan is “ambitious and supported by specific and detailed measures, some of which have already been implemented.” It also noted what it called Spain’s track record of responsible public finances and an “unblemished” debt-servicing record.

But the recovery is likely to underperform the government’s expectations.

Servicing Spain’s foreign debt will be a source of strain, while the costs of restructuring the caja sector could be “substantial,” although likely to remain significantly less than the €9 billion set aside under the governments Fund for Restructuring of Banks, Fitch said.

The stable outlook for Spain’s sovereign rating reflects expectations the country’s credit profile “will remain very strong and consistent with its AA+ rating, even in the event of some slippage relative to official fiscal targets,” the agency said.

William L. Watts is a reporter for MarketWatch in London.

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Morgan Stanley ‘overweegt’ aandelen Groeimarkten

Morgan Stanley brengt voor het eerst sinds juni 2009 een verandering aan in haar fonds Asia/Global Emerging Markets. De zakenbank bouwt haar cash (2%) af ten voordele van aandelen uit de Groeimarkten (56%). De reden is onder meer dat massale vlucht van beleggers uit bijvoorbeeld de BRIC-landen.

Daarenboven blijven de bedrijven uit de Groeimarkten een superieure winstgroei voorleggen!

De stijgende winstgroei in combinatie met dalende beurskoersen, levert vervolgens een koerswinstverhouding van slechts 9,5x gemiddeld!

Daarenboven wordt er momenteel zo’n 1,75x de boekwaarde van bedrijven uit de Groeimarkten betaald, wat historisch gezien niet duur is. Aandelen worden pas duur vanaf een koersboekwaarde van +3x.

Het Groeimarkten Rapport

John Hussman: “De weg naar beneden is nog lang!”

Money manager John Hussman was te gast op Bloomberg TV, waar hij had over een (nog steeds) overdreven marktwaardering, de lange weg naar beneden die de markten nog mogelijk in het vooruitzicht hebben en de problemen in Europa.

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