Bad Financial News Keeps Pouring In: 14 Facts That Just Might Scare
the Living Daylights Out of You
Economic Collapse
Blog
Will the bad
financial news ever stop? A lot of people in the financial world
were hoping for a much better fourth quarter after an absolutely
disastrous third quarter. Well, if Monday was any indication, October
could end up being a really rough month for global financial markets.
So much bad financial news keeps pouring in that it really is a
challenge to try to keep track of it all. Greece seems to get closer
to defaulting on their debts with each passing day, and it appears
that Germany is not going to contribute any more bailout money beyond
what they have already committed to. Major banks on both sides of
the Atlantic are on the verge of collapse, and investors all over
the world are afraid that we may have another "Lehman Brothers moment"
soon. Shares of American Airlines dropped a staggering 33 percent
on Monday as rumors that they will soon be entering bankruptcy swirled.
Yes, things certainly are getting interesting. Back in 2008, the
governments of the western world saved the financial system with
gigantic bailouts that were absolutely unprecedented. If the financial
system crashes again at some point in the coming weeks or months,
will the political will for more bank bailouts be there? If not,
what is going to happen to the banking system?
On both sides
of the Atlantic, the big banks are highly leveraged, they have taken
on a ton of risk and they are very deeply exposed to derivatives.
It is as if virtually nobody learned any lessons during the financial
crisis of 2008. Once again we are facing a situation where if a
couple of financial dominoes fall it could send dozens of others
tumbling to the ground.
Some very significant
things happened on Monday. But the media has gotten so used to reporting
on tremendous financial instability that Monday's events mostly
got brushed to the side. Instead, Amanda Knox captured most of the
headlines.
But the reality
is that some really, really monumental stuff has been going down.
The following
are 14 facts that just might scare the living daylights out of you....
#1
On Monday, the Dow was down 258 points. Lately it seems as though
the Dow has been going up or down by several hundred points almost
every single day, and that much volatility is not a good sign for
the health of the financial system.
#2
Shares of Wall Street banking giant Morgan Stanley fell by another
8 percent on Monday. Overall, shares of Morgan Stanley have declined
by
more than 50 percent since February.
#3
Bank of America stock dropped down to $5.53 a share on Monday. Just
a few years ago, it was trading for
more than $50 a share.
#4
There are reports that Goldman Sachs may actually show a loss for
the third quarter of 2011 and that yearly bonuses for employees
may
be slashed to next to nothing. Yes, not too many people are
going to have sympathy for Goldman Sachs, but this just shows how
bad things are getting out there for the big Wall Street banks.
#5
Normally Goldman Sachs is quite upbeat, but lately they have been
coming out with some really frightening reports. For example, a
new report from Goldman Sachs declares that there is a 40 percent
chance that we are entering a "Great
Stagnation".
#6
Shares of European banking giant Dexia plunged by
about 10 percent on Monday on rumors that it will soon need
a significant bailout. The stocks of major banks all across Europe
have been getting absolutely hammered for weeks.
#7
Shares of American Airlines fell
by 33 percent on Monday on rumors that the airline is about
to enter bankruptcy. Amazingly, trading in the stock was stopped
7 different times on Monday.
#8
It is being reported that approximately 240
pilots for American Airlines have retired in the last two months
alone. All of those pilots are retiring so that they can shield
their pensions from the upcoming bankruptcy filing.
#9
Nearly the entire airline industry got hit really hard on Monday.
Shares of United Continental, U.S. Airways and Delta were
all down more than 10 percent.
#10
Overall, U.S. stocks fell by
14 percent during the third quarter of 2011, and now the fourth
quarter is off to a very rocky start.
#11
The incoming head of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, has
publicly admitted that major European banks are having "funding
problems". Just like back in 2008, we are rapidly heading for
a giant "credit crunch".
#12
A shocking new Bloomberg survey has found that approximately one
out of every three international investors expects a "global
economic meltdown" within the next 12 months, and 70
percent of them believe that the global economy is "deteriorating".
Perhaps they have been reading The
Economic Collapse Blog too much.
#13
Financial markets in Europe were rocked on Monday when it was revealed
that Greece is
not going to hit the deficit reduction targets set for it either
this year or next year despite all of the severe austerity measures
that have already been implemented. Needless to say, a lot of financial
authorities in Europe were very displeased by this news.
#14
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble is publicly declaring
that Germany will
not contribute any more money to the European bailout fund.
The truth is
that the political will for more bailouts has totally dried up in
Germany.
The recent
vote by the Bundestag to approve money for the European rescue fund
should not be misinterpreted.
That vote simply
approved money that was part of a deal that was agreed to over two
months ago.
What is more
important is what many major German politicians said after the vote.
Essentially, the overwhelming consensus is that Germany is done
contributing money. Once the money is gone from the current bailout
pool (which is not anywhere close to what is really needed), there
will be no more money from Germany.
That means
that the era of the bailouts in Europe is drawing to a close.
In a recent
editorial, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard described the situation in Germany
in
this manner....
The furious
debate over the erosion of German fiscal sovereignty and democracy
– as well as the escalating costs of the EU rescue machinery –
has made it absolutely clear that the Bundestag will not prop
up the ruins of monetary union for much longer.
Horst
Seehofer, the leader of Bavaria’s Social Christians, said his
party would go "this far, and no further".
Let that last
phrase sink in.
Basically,
what politicians all over Germany are saying is that Germany has
now done all that it is going to do.
The implications
of this are huge.
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
recognized this in
his editorial. In fact, the usually reserved journalist actually
used all caps for six straight sentences and broke out some very
strong language that is very uncharacteristic for him....
Repeat
after me:
THERE
WILL BE NO FISCAL UNION.
THERE
WILL BE NO EUROBONDS.
THERE
WILL BE NO DEBT POOL.
THERE
WILL BE NO EU TREASURY.
THERE
WILL BE NO FISCAL TRANSFERS IN PERPETUITY.
THERE
WILL BE A STABILITY UNION – OR NO MONETARY UNION.
Get used
to it. This is the political reality of Europe, since nothing
of importance can be done without Germany. All else is wishful
thinking, clutching at straws, and evasion. If this means the
euro will shed some members or blow apart – as it almost certainly
does – then the rest of the world must prepare for the day.
Basically,
this is his way of saying that "the sky is falling" and that the
financial system of Europe is doomed.
If you have
followed the writing of Ambrose Evans-Pritchard for any length of
time, then you know that he is one of the most respected financial
journalists in the world and that he is not prone to indulge in
much "doom and gloom". For him to say what he did is very significant.
But even if
there were no financial problems in Europe, the United States would
probably be slipping into another recession anyway.
Right now our
economy is a total mess, and all kinds of people are coming out
of the woodwork and are trying to take credit for
"calling" the upcoming recession.
Some of the
pronouncements are so bold that you would think that some half-crazed
blogger wrote them. For example, just check out the following quote
from a report recently put out by
the Economic Cycle Research Institute....
"Here's
what ECRI's recession call really says: If you think this is a
bad economy, you haven't seen anything yet."
But do the
American people really need some experts to tell them that we are
going into another recession?
The American
people know what is going on.
According to
one recent poll, 90
percent of the American people believe that economic conditions
in the United States are "poor". According to another recent poll,
80
percent of the American people believe that we are actually
in a recession right now.
So perhaps
the American people are actually ahead of most of the so-called
"experts".
In
any event, economic conditions in the United States continue to
get worse. The average
American family is having a harder and harder time getting to
the end of each month. According to a Harris Interactive survey
taken near the end of last year, 77
percent of all Americans are now living paycheck to paycheck.
In 2007, the same survey found that only 43 percent of Americans
were living paycheck to paycheck.
At least Barack
Obama is not talking so much about an "economic recovery" these
days. When asked recently if Americans are better off today than
they were four years ago, Obama said
the following....
"Well,
I don't think they're better off than they were four years ago."
Finally,
something that we can all agree with Barack Obama about.
Sadly,
things are about to get even worse.
Pay close attention
to all of the bad financial news that keeps pouring in.
Just like in
2008, something really big is happening.
When the current
bailout fund in Europe runs out in a few months, things could really
start to unravel.
If Greece (or
any other eurozone nation for that matter) defaults, it could set
off a chain of financial events so catastrophic that it just might
scare the living daylights out of all of us.
Let us hope
for the best, but let us also prepare for the worst.
Tremendous
fear and panic has gripped the financial world, and the underlying
problems causing this crisis are not going to be solved any time
soon.
We are about
to enter unprecedented territory.
Hold on tight.
Reprinted
with permission from the Economic
Collapse Blog.
October
5, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 Economic
Collapse Blog
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