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Tuesday, August 16

16th Aug LATE - United States of Europe?


Herman The Great
Summary: Merkel/Sarkozy meeting over, message: budget balancing and better governance in PIIGS, a financial transaction tax, a new pan-European economic government and national laws on balanced budgets – oh yeah, and more Herman van Rompuy. Dear God.

Views: EURUSD still in range, latest trade suggestion returned only 20 pips. I’ll try harder next time. No recommendations at the moment. Next week we’ll get the latest figures on how much the ECB has been buying PIIGS debt this week. Then maybe someone will notice ECB’s balance sheet situation and the fact that it cannot continue buying for much longer, perhaps only couple of weeks.Obviously, something must happen really soon. My current end game  scenarios are as follows:
 

A) Euro breaks up 
 a) PIIGS-countries (or some of them) leave or are kicked out of the currency union, or b) core countries leave the currency union.Both leave open the choice between forming a new regional currency union or returning to national currencies. At least this solution worked in 1992.

B) Integration (eurobonds, fiscal union)
United States of Europe. The federal treasury emits bonds, and individual countries get financing under strict criteria. Or, if the countries want and can, they can also go to the open markets themselves. At least this solution has worked in U.S., but it was and is a whole lot more an optimal currency area than euroland.

C) ECB goes nuclear
ECB purchases 1-2 trillion euros worth of government bonds, i.e. European QE. The bonds could be cancelled after the purchase. The confidence in euro as a currency would take a permanent hit. Of course, ‘pressing the button’ would require a credible threat that this is the first and last time, and no sovereigns or banks will be saved again in this manner in the future. Did this work in the U.S.? No.

D) Muddling through
Increased ESFS, bail out packages, occasional bond purchases by ECB, more of the same. As the national debts are not convincingly cut, this will simply not work – not unless they find oil in Greece, gold in Italy and a cure for cancer in Portugal. Has this worked? No.


MERKEL / SARKOZY MEET
“several new measures, some substantial, some speculative, some silly.”











G20 countries currently levy four types of financial transaction taxes, equity, debt, foreign exchange and revenue.  Pros and cons, from Matheson’s working paper


EURO CRISIS

Germany sinks with the periphery. Euro crisis solution is the only way out
Europe's economy: Trouble at the core – Free exchange / The Economist


“Had the ECB known this at the start of Europe’s debt crisis, it might have resisted taking so many risks with its balance sheet and reputation. Then again, it probably could not have done otherwise”
Europe’s Central Bank at Sea – Project Syndicate


EMERGING


Mortgages in CHF sounded like a good idea in 2007-2008

Very good summary. Problems: inflation, investment reliance, debt. Now growth is also a problem.

Daiwa’s Kevin Lai suggests believes slowdown is more serious than headline numbers suggest

Stronger yuan could help against inflation? As deposit rates are capped, high inflation forces households and businesses to invest, purchase stocks and real estate, inflating an asset bubble.


Notice that majority of FDI comes from H.K. and off shore entities. FDI is to a large extent Chinese money, cycled abroad.


OTHER
Prices of internationally traded assets are affected by local factors

NY Fed Primary Dealers Report Stone Street Advisors

Global: Structural Alpha, Cyclical Beta
U.S.: Review and Preview
Japan: Same Party, Different Dreams: Noda versus Mabuchi in the DPJ Election
Brazil and Mexico: Is it Different this Time?
H.K.: Bracing for a Double-Dip?