http://www.zerohedge.com/news/scam-trek-caption-contest
Europe, the final fun-tear...
Global Systemic Risk At 3 Month Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/23/2012 15:24 -0400
In a little over a month, the risk of the 30 most systemically important global banks has jumped an impressive 45%. At 235bps, the FSB30 stands just shy of the peak levels that were seen in the initial March 2009 crisis moment - though remains below Q4 2011 peak crisis levels. Perhaps, despite all the protestations of 'zee stabilitee', self-sustaining record-profit-margin-driven recovery, and Chinese soft-landing, the vicious circles of austerity in Europe (and perhaps the US) and financials squandering their newly-found liquidity (and certainly not capital) is becoming too large to ignore?
What is intriguing is how absolutely end-of-the-world the situation felt heading into Q1 2009 and yet - with banks' risk considerably higher now, we have become so much more 'used' to this state of chaos that our anchoring bias says - all is well?
and....
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/jeremy-warner/9221874/What-next-for-the-euro-if-France-rejects-austerity.html
At a time when the UK Government is imposing another £16bn of spending cuts, is abolishing pensioner tax reliefs, and is apparently so financially stretched that it needs to tax warm pasties, it has somehow managed to find an additional £10bn to bail out the eurozone. This from a prime minister who declares himself a "eurosceptic". Is it any wonder that the Tories are trailing in the polls?
I've found myself genuinely torn by the debate around new loans to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). On the one hand, I'm a supporter of multilateral solutions, and find the spectacle of so many countries, some of them quite poor, coming together to create a bigger and more credible financial safety net both noble and inspiring.
Britain was one of the founding fathers of the IMF, and whatever the rights and wrongs of the euro, our future is vitally dependent on a stable and prosperous Europe. It would have seemed isolationist and almost gratuitously self-destructive to have stayed out while so many others were participating.
There is also something in the Treasury argument that this is not real money, since all commitments to the IMF come from the foreign exchange reserves and remain largely unused. The additional funds are billed as merely a contingency which could not in any case have been used for alternative, public spending purposes. With luck, it will cost nothing to have participated.
But I also substantially agree with the reservations expressed by the two major refuseniks, the United States and Canada. There is no obvious need for more IMF funding outside the growing likelihood of further eurozone bailouts. We have no idea on what terms the IMF might lend, but what we do know is that the eurozone is struggling to find politically acceptable solutions to its crisis, which, to the contrary, looks ever more intractable.



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