Saturday, March 3, 2012

ECB watch....

http://harveyorgan.blogspot.com/2012/03/ecb-record-depositsmoodys-lowers-greek.html


Nothing Is But What Is Not*

The events my old colleague and I talked about back in 2002 that we anticipated that would blow our minds are happening now.  ISDA - controlled by the issuing banks - has determined that the Greek bond deal has not resulted in an even of default event though the new bonds being issued will result in about a 35% recovery rate - initially.  When Greece hits the wall again these bonds will be worthless.  And the corruption, fraud and crime at MF Global will go unprosecuted.  Jon Corzine will walk away with little more than slight embarrassment.  In fact, at Wall Street "elitist" cocktail parties, getting away with the theft of billions like this is probably awarded a high degree of social status.  This stuff blows my mind...
*This is a quote from Shakespeare's "Macbeth," Act 1, Scene 3.  For me this famous and much discussed line from the play pretty much encapsulates and describes the realities of our political and economic system.  Let's look at one of Bernanke's comments yesterday from his Humphrey Hawkins testimony.  Bernanke defended the Fed's massive currency swap [sic, bailout] of the EU banking system by stating that "the ECB is well capitalized."  Hmmm...let's take a look at the EU balance sheet (data source from zerohedge, it's accurate].   On a "book" basis after the latest LTRO operation, the ECB has $3 trillion in "assets."  The large portion of these "assets" are direct liabilities of ECB counterparties - national Central Banks and gold lease obligations.  Supporting this garbage is $82.2 billion in net capital.  That's a leverage ratio of nearly 37 to 1.  Banana Republic-esque.  A bona fide mark to market of the ECB "assets" would completely wipe out that net capital and the ECB would be in an unequivocal position of insolvency, but for its ability to print money. Unequivocal.  It certainly is not "well capitalized."  Bernanke stated under oath in front of Congress that the ECB is "well capitalized."  It is not.  Nothing is but what is not.  You can peruse the ECB balance sheet HERE.  Zerohedge has nice leverage chart HERECuriously, no one has said anything about the "Gold and gold receivables" asset account on the ECB balance sheet.  The key term is "receivables."  Unbeknownst to many, and in affirmation of the massive Central Bank gold leasing program used to try and keep a lid on the price of gold, several years ago the BIS changed its accounting rules and permitted Central Banks to account for gold leased out as a "receivable" and part of the gold asset account, rather than as a "lease receivable."  Any accountant and financial analyst will tell you that a lease receivable is not of the same quality of asset as the actual asset.  But what is even more deceptive about this re-classification of leased out gold is it eliminates the fact that the gold lease receivable is actually a counterparty liability.  Given the poor credit quality of the EU member banks, the gold lease receivables on the ECB balance sheet are therefore very poor in quality.  They certainly are not worth face value.  Nothing is but what is not...

And one more point about this gold leasing business.  No one really knows for sure how much of the ECB's gold is actually leased out.  Based on the collective observations of several well respected market analysts who have looked at this issue for close to 20 years, it is likely that most of the ECB's gold is leased out.  But lets assume only 1/2 of it is leased and the lessees ultimately default on those leases and are unable to return the gold that was leased out and sold (perhaps some to Venezuela, who recently took physical possession of its 200 tonnes of gold - now you know why).  You can see that the claim that a gold "receivable" can be valued at face value is quite questionable.  For me this underscores that fact that the entire asset quality of the ECB's (and the U.S. Fed's) balance sheet is like not what it appears to be on paper.  Nothing is but what is not...

One more interesting tidbit I want to get out of my "in" box.  Many of you have seen this already but many have not.  A big source of irritation for me has been the way the media, Wall Street and politicians have been focusing everyone's attention on Greece/Europe and making it seem like that's the problem we have.  Keep your eye on the ball, not the shell-game operator.  I think this chart will settle the issue for anyone who cares to look at the truth.  It turns out that on a per capital basis, the United States has the highest amount of debt per capita of any country in the world:  LINK  I think that statistic pretty much speaks for itself and it highlights for me why the real problem facing our system is us.  It turns out the China, the U.S's largest creditor by far, agrees with my assessment.  Per this WSJ article, China is starting to shift its foreign reserves away from the U.S. dollar:  LINK.   We know per the revised TIC data that China dumped over $100 billion in U.S. Treasury holdings in December.  This is not good.  And it further underscores the fact that Bernanke's attempt to deflect the probability of more QE3 yesterday was total bullshit.  I'm still waiting for someone, anyone, to explain to me how the U.S. Treasury can possibly fund the Government's spending in 2012 without a significant amount of money printing...





One last note.  Mission accomplished yesterday.  I surmised that if yesterday's silver hit was just another run of the mill manipulation operation by JP Morgan, that we would see a massive reduction in the open interest of the March silver contract, of which very little would be accounted for by delivery notices.  It turns out that the open interest in silver in total declined by 1039 contracts.  Of that, March silver o/i actually declined by 1081 contracts.  Of that, only 160 of the March decline was accounted for my delivery notices. JP Morgan's silver market operation thus achieved its goal by substantially reducing the amount of silver that might have stood for delivery.  Forget rule of law in this country.  It's dead.  This illegal manipulation will go on until the Comex eventually defaults.  Obama was supposed supposed to reform Wall Street corruption and restore rule of law.  Not only has he NOT fulfilled this campaign promise, he enables the widespread corruption and looting.  Nothing is but what is not...


and ECB data set forth for the gold and gold receivable data...



28 February 2012 - Consolidated financial statement of the Eurosystem as at 24 February 2012

Items not related to monetary policy operations

In the week ending 24 February 2012 gold and gold receivables (asset item 1) remained unchanged.
The net position of the Eurosystem in foreign currency (asset items 2 and 3 minus liability items 7, 8 and 9) decreased by EUR 0.3 billion to EUR 277.1 billion on account of customer and portfolio transactions and US dollar liquidity-providing operations (see below).
US dollar liquidity operations
Value dateType of transactionMaturing amountNew amount
23 February 20127-day US dollar liquidity-providing reverse transactionUSD 3.7 billionUSD 3.6 billion
The liquidity-providing transactions were conducted by the Eurosystem in connection with the temporary reciprocal currency arrangement (swap line) that the European Central Bank has with the Federal Reserve System.
The holdings by the Eurosystem of marketable securities other than those held for monetary policy purposes (asset item 7.2) increased by EUR 1.2 billion to EUR 342.9 billion. Banknotes in circulation (liability item 1) decreased by EUR 2.0 billion to EUR 867.4 billion. Liabilities to general government (liability item 5.1) increased by EUR 41.8 billion to EUR 142.2 billion.

Items related to monetary policy operations

The Eurosystem’s net lending to credit institutions (asset item 5 minus liability items 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5 and 4) decreased by EUR 1.6 billion to EUR 120.0 billion. On Wednesday, 22 February 2012, a main refinancing operation of EUR 142.8 billion matured and a new one of EUR 166.5 billion was settled. On the same day, fixed-term deposits in an amount of EUR 219.5 billion matured and new deposits were collected in the same amount, with a maturity of one week.
Recourse to the marginal lending facility (asset item 5.5) was EUR 1.0 billion (compared with EUR 1.4 billion in the previous week), while recourse to thedeposit facility (liability item 2.2) was EUR 477.3 billion (compared with EUR 454.4 billion in the preceding week).
The holdings by the Eurosystem of securities held for monetary policy purposes (asset item 7.1) increased by EUR 0.6 billion to EUR 283.6 billion. This increase was the result of settled purchases under the second covered bond purchase programme. Therefore, in the week ending 24 February 2012 the value of accumulated purchases under the Securities Markets Programme amounted to EUR 219.3 billion, while those of the portfolios held under the first and second covered bond purchase programmes totalled EUR 57.2 billion and EUR 7.1 billion respectively. All three portfolios are accounted for on a held-to-maturity basis.

Current accounts of euro area credit institutions

As a result of all transactions, the current account position of credit institutions with the Eurosystem (liability item 2.1) decreased by EUR 38.8 billion to EUR 93.7 billion.
Assets (EUR millions)BalanceDifference compared with last week due to transactions
Totals/sub-totals may not add up, due to rounding
 
1Gold and gold receivables423,4450
 
2Claims on non-euro area residents denominated in foreign currency245,278−526
 2.1Receivables from the IMF85,5170
 2.2Balances with banks and security investments, external loans and other external assets159,761−526
 
3Claims on euro area residents denominated in foreign currency99,874245
 
4Claims on non-euro area residents denominated in euro23,801289
 4.1Balances with banks, security investments and loans23,801289
 4.2Claims arising from the credit facility under ERM II00
 
5Lending to euro area credit institutions related to monetary policy operations denominated in euro819,68223,350
 5.1Main refinancing operations166,49023,739
 5.2Longer-term refinancing operations652,0970
 5.3Fine-tuning reverse operations00
 5.4Structural reverse operations00
 5.5Marginal lending facility1,020−416
 5.6Credits related to margin calls7527
 
6Other claims on euro area credit institutions denominated in euro64,663−4,533
 
7Securities of euro area residents denominated in euro626,4741,795
 7.1Securities held for monetary policy purposes283,609580
 7.2Other securities342,8651,215
 
8General government debt denominated in euro31,1760
 
9Other assets358,2058,717
 
Total assets2,692,59829,337
 
Liabilities (EUR millions)BalanceDifference compared with last week due to transactions
Totals/sub-totals may not add up, due to rounding
 
1Banknotes in circulation867,396−1,958
 
2Liabilities to euro area credit institutions related to monetary policy operations denominated in euro793,399−13,801
 2.1Current accounts (covering the minimum reserve system)93,676−38,797
 2.2Deposit facility477,32422,968
 2.3Fixed-term deposits219,5000
 2.4Fine-tuning reverse operations00
 2.5Deposits related to margin calls2,8992,028
 
3Other liabilities to euro area credit institutions denominated in euro2,329398
 
4Debt certificates issued00
 
5Liabilities to other euro area residents denominated in euro153,64043,069
 5.1General government142,23841,772
 5.2Other liabilities11,4021,297
 
6Liabilities to non-euro area residents denominated in euro115,851−2,306
 
7Liabilities to euro area residents denominated in foreign currency4,77169
 
8Liabilities to non-euro area residents denominated in foreign currency7,337−64
 8.1Deposits, balances and other liabilities7,337−64
 8.2Liabilities arising from the credit facility under ERM II00
 
9Counterpart of special drawing rights allocated by the IMF55,9420
 
10Other liabilities215,9143,598
 
11Revaluation accounts394,0290
 
12Capital and reserves81,990333
 
2,692,59829,337



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