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Wednesday, April 25

25th Apr - Germany losing friends left and right


The media in Finland has finally woken up to the TARGET2 balances and the fact that the euro crisis is definitely not over. This is either a surprisingly well-planned action to prepare the voters for the coming Spanish losses and/or a closer fiscal union. Or it might be that they simply are good journalists. As Finland is soon the only remaining AAA-rated country, together with Germany, any rhetoric signaling a possible policy shift should be watched very carefully.

I had a very angry and speculative rant of the long-term game plan in last night’s post You Better Read This. I think the market is moving to a new phase. Policy is no longer dictated by the level of PIIGS bond yields, but the political support on the national level. In a way there is nothing new to this, as everyone knows in the end it will be what Germany decides it will be. But losing valuable friends (first Holland, then France and next perhaps Finland), Germany cannot pretend anymore that what they do is for something greater than simply Bundesbank’s receivables from the eurodisaster.
 
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Markets – Between The Hedges
The Closer – alphaville / FT

Debt crisis: live – The Telegraph
Europe Crisis Tracker – WSJ
Tracking Europe’s Debt Crisis – NYT
FX Options Analytics – Saxo Bank

EURO CRISIS
The Coming European Growth PactCredit Writedowns

These events mark the beginning of the push back against German-led austerity, but it is even bigger as the IMF’s call for the ECB to cut rates illustrated

Wilders discovers EuropeTrouw
Now that the Dutch Prime government has fallen, with elections likely for 12 September, political commentator Les Oomkes argues that Wilders’ railing against Europe might prove fortuitous: leading to Europe as the central theme of the election campaign and a shift in the political balance of power.

Brussels has tough time justifying bigger budgeteuobserver
The European Commission on Wednesday (25 April) had an uphill struggle explaining why next year's EU budget needs to go up by 6.8 percent, even as it preaches austerity to member states.

FED’s FOMC
FOMC Statement: Economy "expanding moderately"Calculated Risk

Fed Policy Remains on HoldEconomist’s View
Mark Thoma: The question is whether this is the correct policy. Presently, the Fed is missing its employment target, and it is also below its declared inflation target of 2 percent. As the statement says, "the Committee anticipates that subsequently inflation will run at or below the rate that it judges most consistent with its dual mandate." So there is no risk of overshooting the inflation target according to the Fed, only a risk of undershooting it.

FOMC: Still no sign of QE3Danske Bank (pdf)

FOMC statement – no QE in June unless…Pragmatic Capitalism

FOMC Wrap: Forecasts more hawkish, but Bernanke dovishSaxo Bank


Bernanke and the wrong credibility issuealphaville / FT

Other reactions to the FOMCalphaville / FT

BRITAIN’S RECESSION
Fiscal policy: Austerity bitesFree exchange / The Economist
Britain's economy has substantial structural problems… a key monetary transmission mechanism is broken… despite significant economic headwinds, including substantial financial-market spillover from Europe, Britain is doing all right.

UK Back in Recession, Did it Really Ever Leave? Disappointing Details; Five Reasons the UK Recession Will Get Much WorseMish’s
1) Credit markets, Spain and Italy 2) ECB undecided 3) UK services 4) UK exports to Eurozone 5) even the good macro numbers will probably disappoint soon.

OTHER
Preliminary international banking statistics at end-December 2011BIS
Large movements in the latest data are highlighted in the Statistical commentary