Tuesday, March 27, 2012

This just won't end well because it can't end well....

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/its-official-fed-now-buying-european-government-bonds


It's Official - The Fed Is Now Buying European Government Bonds

Tyler Durden's picture




As if the 'risk-less' dollar-swaps the Fed has extended to any and every major central bank were not enough, William Dudley just unashamedly admitted that the Fed now holds 'a very small amount of European Sovereign Debt'. Explaining this position, as Bloomberg notes:
  • *DUDLEY: FED HOLDS OVERSEAS SOVEREIGN DEBT TO MANAGE RESERVES
  • *DUDLEY: HIGH BAR FOR ADDITIONAL PURCHASES OF EUROPE DEBT
Dudley, testifying to a House panel, noted that he doesn't see more efforts by the Fed to buffer the US from Europe's tempests and believes European banks are deleveraging in an orderly manner. So not only is the US taxpayer bailing out Europe via the IMF (as wenoted here a week ago using Greece as an intermediary) and the Fed is providing limitless USD swap lines but now we join the ECB in monetizing European government bonds - something we warned might happen back in December 2010. As for being a small amount - wasn't MF Global's holding relatively small too? And aren't we getting a little full from all this buying?

and....

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/germany-final-frontier-whose-true-debtgdp-now-140

Germany: The Final Frontier... Whose True Debt/GDP Is Now 140%

Tyler Durden's picture




From Mark Grant, Author of Out of the Box And Onto Wall Street
Germany: The Final Frontier
“It always looks darkest just before it gets totally black.”
-Peanuts
Data Mining
Over the last several weeks I have tried to bring a more accurate picture of the debts of a number of nations to you. There has been no bias and the figures have stood on their own merit. The statistical component of the European Union, Eurostat, is quite clear; they do not count guarantees or contingent liabilities as part of any nation’s debt. We might all note that if Nestle or IBM or General Electric did this they would find their senior executives jailed for Fraud but never mind; this is the methodology of the EU which quite obviously masks the truth. The problem then is not the simple math used to obtain a more accurate debt to GDP ratio but in digging out the various guarantees, contingent liabilities and obligations of any member nation of the European Union. “Time consuming” would be the accurate words because you have to sleuth around like Sherlock Holmes to come up with the data. Yes, it is all there somewhere or another but it is nowhere all together and so must be found.
In the case of all of the countries that I have examined to date it has been on a stand-alone basis; meaning NOT inclusive of their obligations for the EU, the ECB or various other European institutions which would only increase their actual debt to GDP ratios. For the nations examined to date I concentrated on their guarantees; bank guarantees, regional guarantees, derivatives guaranteed by the sovereign, the debts of various institutions with sovereign guarantees and so forth. Each examination has been country specific because each nation has different policies. Yesterday in Boston I met with the very bright folks at Standish Mellon and promised them a more accurate appraisal of not a troubled country but of the leading country in the European Union, Germany, and so I deliver as promised.
Here we find not the usual issues with the periphery nations but obligations and guarantees for the entire European construct. The analysis of Germany, past their stated GDP and their stated debt to GDP ratio is really a study of the EU/ECB themselves to determine the size and the liabilities that are born by their largest economic member so that we can fully assess the financial condition of Germany and not blindly accept what is officially put out in the Press.
Germany
German Gross Domestic Product (GDP):                                   $3.2 trillion
Official German Sovereign Debt:                                               $2.618 trillion
Percentage of Liabilities at the European Union:                          27%In the case of all of the countries that I have examined to date it has been on a stand-alone basis; meaning NOT inclusive of their obligations for the EU, the ECB or various other European institutions which would only increase their actual debt to GDP ratios. For the nations examined to date I concentrated on their guarantees; bank guarantees, regional guarantees, derivatives guaranteed by the sovereign, the debts of various institutions with sovereign guarantees and so forth. Each examination has been country specific because each nation has different policies. Yesterday in Boston I met with the very bright folks at Standish Mellon and promised them a more accurate appraisal of not a troubled country but of the leading country in the European Union, Germany, and so I deliver as promised.
Here we find not the usual issues with the periphery nations but obligations and guarantees for the entire European construct. The analysis of Germany, past their stated GDP and their stated debt to GDP ratio is really a study of the EU/ECB themselves to determine the size and the liabilities that are born by their largest economic member so that we can fully assess the financial condition of Germany and not blindly accept what is officially put out in the Press.
Germany
German Gross Domestic Product (GDP):                                   $3.2 trillion
Official German Sovereign Debt:                                               $2.618 trillion
Percentage of Liabilities at the European Union:                          27%Percentage of Liabilities at the ECB                                           18.94%
Germany’s Percentage of the ECB Debt ($4 trillion)                   $757.6 billion
German annual cost for the EU budget                                     $46.36 billion
German Guarantees for the Stabilization Funds                         $280.6 billion
German Guarantees for the Macro Financial Assistance Fund     $211.14 billion
German Target-2 Liabilities                                                     $656 billion
German Guarantee for the EIB Debt                                       $157.29 billion
Sovereign Guarantee for KFW                                                 $588 billion
Total German Sovereign Debt & Guarantees                            $5.315 trillion
Official debt to GDP Ratio                                                             81.8%
Actual German Debt to GDP Ratio                                            139.8%
So there you have it; place your bets.

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