Madrid Is This Week’s Eurobailout Winner

Another eurobailout, this time for Spain. Here’s how two politically useful idiots who cover business news for the Associated Press – Paul Wiseman and Peter Svensson — saw it, abetted by the perfect quote from a third:  “This move will come as a relief to the Obama administration as it suggests that European leaders are finally beginning to take significant actions to ease the intensifying pressure on the euro zone’s peripheral economies” such as Spain and Portugal,” said Eswar Prasad, professor of trade policy at Cornell University. Finally? Significant?  All three of these guys must have missed the news a few months ago that a trillion euros’ worth of  no-strings credit – about ten times the amount extended to Spain over the weekend – was put at the disposal of Europe’s commercial banks. But to do what?  Hey, let’s not be impertinent! Don’t ask, don’t tell has become the omerta of the global banking system and its news-media lackeys.  And anyway, it’s not the purposes to which such “money” will be put that we are supposed to think about – only that the “money” itself is there – in this case materialized, somehow, by 17 European countries most of which are themselves bankrupt. We’re not referring to just the PIIGS, either.  Has anyone taken a close look at France’s books lately?

The Seattle Times headlined the story thus:  “Bailout for Spain’s Banks Buys Time for Europe”. That’s a gutsy way to slant the story on a Saturday night, considering that the world’s stock markets would be voting their confidence, or lack thereof, in less than 24 hours.  Suppose stocks open flat-to-down in Asia, and then Europe follows with a thud? There goes a hundred-and-twenty-five bil, as fleetingly impressive as a shower of white sparks on the Fourth of July.  Our gut feeling is that the “news” concerning Spain should have been staged on Sunday to give Europe’s spinmeisters more bang for their digital buck. The story was half-baked already, since markets rallied last week on speculation that Spain’s increasingly dire financial situation would coax forth yet another boatload of shut-up money. We should think ten boatloads would have been better, since the sums required these days to impress the public for more than a day or two have ratcheted into the trillions of euros.  One could argue that The Powers That Be are not talking about bailing out all of Europe, only Spain.  But do they think us so stupid as to believe that each new crisis involves just one country alone, or that  a paltry $125 billion will buy more than a few nanos’ worth of relief?

  • Bam_Man June 11, 2012, 8:11 pm

    But, but, but didn’t ALL these Spanish banks (including Bankia) pass their “Stress Tests” with flying colors less than a year ago?

    Haven’t heard much mention of that in the mainstream media. I wonder why?

    • Seawolf June 11, 2012, 10:12 pm

      That was before the rather quite run on the banks that has been going on over the last year. Less deposits = less capital. Don’t keep more money in a bank than you can afford to lose.
      Here are a couple of sentences from a reuters story yesterday.
      “We’re very close to junk bonds and we’ll end up in the junk,” Jose Carlos Diez, chief economist at Intermoney in Madrid, said on Spanish television.

      “In this situation, the key is to look at the reaction of investors and see if capital flight stops … If the process doesn’t stop, there will be more funding problems and what we will see is a bailout that is starting small become a big one.”

  • Buster June 11, 2012, 5:55 pm

    This latest bailout is great news Rick!….Another huge pile of cash to sit in Bankers digital vaults to collect interest on via the central Banksters! Thank goodness for that….I was beginning to worry that sales in luxury yachts & Villas were about to dry up. The Spanish sheeple can at least get back to worrying about their own hopeless plight again now.
    Shortly I will be seeing for myself how things are going down there & will try to report back if any thing’s changed since my last visit. I know that there have been quite a few property sales on the Costas lately, since the weaker Euro has made it easier for jobless UK residents to downsize & live off the savings. Some are letting their homes in the UK & renting cheaper homes in Spain.
    With no end in sight to the austerity (read ‘asset transfer to Banksters through limiting access to money for the sheeple’) it’s a race to the bottom. It seems that for many people, time spent looking for jobs would be better spent moving ‘down-market’, downsizing or becoming self sufficient, but most of all getting as far away from debt as possible.
    I will be attempting this myself over the next year or so & will see how it works out in practice.

  • fallingman June 11, 2012, 5:42 pm

    “Suppose stocks open flat-to-down in Asia, and then Europe follows with a thud? There goes a hundred-and-twenty-five bil, as fleetingly impressive as a shower of white sparks on the Fourth of July.”

    Now that’s good writing…and prescient. You have a gift sir.

  • Mark Uzick June 11, 2012, 2:34 pm

    With all the justifiable negativity toward the EU the FRN has risen against the euro as if the USA is a safe-haven from debt problems, when, in truth, the USA is in worse shape than the EU in almost every measure.

    I think it may be time to buy calls on FXE.

    • John Jay June 11, 2012, 5:39 pm

      All the world leaders lie, cover up, and obfuscate to such an extent that the truth would very likely shock even the most jaded of cynics. I see no solutions, only consequences. That is true for both economics and politics worldwide.

    • Robert June 11, 2012, 10:09 pm

      JJ-

      “I see no solutions, only consequences.”

      The only solution I see is to adhere to a clear and cogent understanding OF the consequences, whatever they may be…

      Staying one step ahead of the steam roller may be stressful, but it’s not nearly so bad as looking down and realizing one of your shoes is untied.

  • John Jay June 11, 2012, 5:15 am

    Does their money come from the same place the Federal Reserve’s money comes from? The Twilight Zone?
    It would seem the entire world is using the “Farmville” economic model.
    What could go wrong?

    • Robert June 11, 2012, 10:04 pm

      And to think there are people who think the thesis behind “Farmville” wasn’t a precognitive exercise…

      The interesting dynamic is that Farmville is most frequented and played by urbanite social media addicts; and so they are abandoning the theaters and other urban social gathering centers in order to spend more time engaged in a virtual social exercise…. fascinating.

      Social networks have become the new urban architecture, the “town square” if you will.

      So it comes as no surprise that social networks are also a frontier where communal experiments like Farmville flourish. FarmVille does what nothing else has- it brings together a massive number of people globally to grow and share food. As an experiment in community, Farmville may be considered a success, but it can only be a limited success, due to the persistent nag that there is no practical model to carry what we learn in a virtual world into the real environment that we ultimately must rely on in order to sustain our biological beings.

      In the virtual Farmville, we grow, trade, and share with each other. In the real world- we kill our neighbors and rape their women.

      Again, fascinating.

    • Mark Uzick June 12, 2012, 12:29 pm

      Robert: In the virtual Farmville, we grow, trade, and share with each other. In the real world- we kill our neighbors and rape their women.

      Nice dark humor!

      But you know that, if you’re feeling less cynical, it’s just as easy to reverse the comparison between the real and virtual worlds: just pick a violent game to contrast with a market-based society.

  • Rich June 11, 2012, 2:22 am

    Don’t ask don’t tell omerta re France indeed.
    What I like about you Rick is that you are generally comfortably ahead of the crowd.

    Mazel tov…