
Nicolas Sarkozy: Greece should have been denied euro
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-15487269
French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said allowing Greece into the eurozone in 2001 was a "mistake".
He said Greece was "not ready" at the time. But, he added, it could be rescued thanks to Wednesday's EU deal on the euro debt crisis
In response, Greece's foreign minister told the BBC that Athens was not the source of the crisis, and that no country should be made a scapegoat.

dolanbaker wrote:Nicolas Sarkozy: Greece should have been denied euro
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-15487269
French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said allowing Greece into the eurozone in 2001 was a "mistake".
He said Greece was "not ready" at the time. But, he added, it could be rescued thanks to Wednesday's EU deal on the euro debt crisis
In response, Greece's foreign minister told the BBC that Athens was not the source of the crisis, and that no country should be made a scapegoat.
Baaaa


Daniel_Plainview wrote:peripato wrote:Max Rocks!
Speaking of which, have you seen this excellent.two part video with Max Keiser
Those vid's are very good (you get bonus points if you can identify the 6 excerpts of classical music in the two videos). There's no such thing as a free lunch, and all fiat currencies eventually die ... the dollar's days are severely numbered.


China is very likely to contribute to the eurozone’s bail-out fund but the scope of its involvement will depend on European leaders satisfying some key conditions, two senior advisers to the Chinese government have told the Financial Times.
Any Chinese support would depend on contributions from other countries and Beijing must be given strong guarantees on the safety of its investment, according to Li Daokui, an academic member of China’s central bank monetary policy committee, and Yu Yongding, a former member of that committee.
Financial markets reacted with relief hours after a European deal was agreed at a summit aimed at calming the two-year-long sovereign debt crisis. The plan includes recapitalising European banks, making them accept a loss of 50 per cent on their holdings of Greek debt and boosting the firepower of the rescue fund, known as the European Financial Stability Facility.
The S&P 500, which rose 3.4 per cent, is on course for its best monthly gain since October 1974. The FTSE All World stock index gained 4.1 per cent, its best one-day rise since May 2010.
http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/7505d210-00ba-11e1-8590-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1bzYujqhz


peripato wrote:Daniel_Plainview wrote:peripato wrote:Max Rocks!
Speaking of which, have you seen this excellent.two part video with Max Keiser
Those vid's are very good (you get bonus points if you can identify the 6 excerpts of classical music in the two videos). There's no such thing as a free lunch, and all fiat currencies eventually die ... the dollar's days are severely numbered.
Do they include Mahler? I like Mahler.


Spiegel reports that the constitutional court has "issued a temporary injunction banning the nine-person committee in the Bundestag from taking any decisions on the deployment by EFSF of German taxpayer money." In addition to this, the Court also put the whole German fast-track approval process in jeopardy after it expressed "doubts about the legality of a new panel of lawmakers set up by the German parliament to reach quick decisions on the release of funds from the euro bailout mechanism."


, don't bother clicking through to the lame article.

Revi wrote:Mister market seems to think the crisis is over. The price of everything is up about 5% today. Silver is up about 2 bucks, copper about a buck and even oil is up a couple of bucks already. Happy days are here again, unless you are buying heating oil for the winter...


Euro bailout - an animated explanation
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/blog ... xplanation
Are you confused about what the Euro bailout actually is? So were we! Tom Meltzer tries to explain with the help of his animated friends …
Then we are screwed!



Revi wrote:Mister market seems to think the crisis is over. The price of everything is up about 5% today. Silver is up about 2 bucks, copper about a buck and even oil is up a couple of bucks already. Happy days are here again, unless you are buying heating oil for the winter...



DomusAlbion wrote:Revi wrote:Mister market seems to think the crisis is over. The price of everything is up about 5% today. Silver is up about 2 bucks, copper about a buck and even oil is up a couple of bucks already. Happy days are here again, unless you are buying heating oil for the winter...
I don't quite get the ebullience we're seeing in the markets. The fundamentals have not changed or so it seems. The guillotine blade is still on its way down the Euro's neck is in the stocks. I'm confused.





DomusAlbion wrote:Revi wrote:Mister market seems to think the crisis is over. The price of everything is up about 5% today. Silver is up about 2 bucks, copper about a buck and even oil is up a couple of bucks already. Happy days are here again, unless you are buying heating oil for the winter...
I don't quite get the ebullience we're seeing in the markets. The fundamentals have not changed or so it seems. The guillotine blade is still on its way down the Euro's neck is in the stocks. I'm confused.

Italy sold €8bn (£7bn) of 10-year bonds at [a record] 6.06pc, a level seen as unsustainable by analysts, in the first major test of market appetite since European leaders agreed steps to tackle the crisis. Italian leader Silvio Berlusconi is seen as critically weakened and there are doubts he will be able to push through the austerity measures demanded by markets. "[Italy] is still the bête noire of the whole eurozone problem," said Monument Securities strategist Marc Oswald.
In comments that appeared unlikely to calm concerns, Mr Berlusconi issued an extraordinary outburst against the single currency, blaming it for the scrutiny on Italy's finances. He described the euro as a "strange currency" that "has convinced nobody" and claimed that after Germany, Italy had the eurozone's strongest economy. The outburst came just hours after Klaus Regling, chief executive of the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), arrived in Beijing to try to persuade China to help finance the eurozone's bail-out vehicle. China has said there will be no "charity" and Mr Regling warned it would likely take "several weeks" to hammer out a deal.
... In a further complication for the EFSF, Germany's constitutional court suspended the right of a small committee of politicians to approve the bail-out fund's actions. The nine-person group had been given the green light to sanction EFSF matters but its powers were suspended after two German politicians argued it infringed other Bundestag members' rights. Some sources suggested the suspension would curtail the EFSF's power to buy embattled countries' bonds in the market. ...



Greeks angry at the fate of the euro are comparing the German government with the Nazis who occupied the country in the Second World War. Newspaper cartoons have presented modern-day German officials dressed in Nazi uniform, and a street poster depicts Chancellor Angela Merkel dressed as an officer in Hitler’s regime accompanied with the words: ‘Public nuisance.’ She wears a swastika armband bearing the EU stars logo on the outside.
The backlash has been provoked by Germany’s role in driving through painful measures to stop Greece’s debt crisis from spiralling out of control. Greeks are furious at the deal, even though it means the banks will write off 50 per cent of the country’s debt and Socialist prime minister George Papandreou said Greece had ‘avoided a mortal national danger’.
Opposition parties blasted the landmark agreement, with conservatives warning it condemned the country to ‘nine more years of collapse and poverty’. But it is the fury of ordinary Greeks which is raising eyebrows. Greek government officials who agreed to the belt-tightening moves have been portrayed in cartoons giving the Nazi ‘Sieg Heil’ salute. And German visitors flocking to ancient tourist sites are being met with a hostile welcome from some Greeks.
Berlin’s interference has revived historical enmities and evoked comparisons to the massive destruction of Greece at the hands of Hitler’s Germany more than 65 years ago. Cartoons have sprung up depicting the European Union’s ‘troika’ as ferocious soldiers in Second World War uniforms. ...


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