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2012 Global Stockmarket Crash (Read 18038 times)
it_is_the_light
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #30 - Jun 12th, 2012 at 7:31pm
 
The former head of the Vatican Bank has become the Papacy’s Enemy Number One, after police discovered a trove of documents exposing financial misdeeds in the Holy See. The banker now reportedly fears for his life.
Earlier this week police conducted a dawn raid on the house and office of Ettore Gotti Tedeschi. Investigators say they were looking for evidence in a graft case against defense and aerospace firm Finmeccanica, which was formerly run by a close friend of Gotti Tedeschi.
Instead, as it turns out, police stumbled upon an entirely different find.
They discovered 47 binders containing private communication exposing the opaque inner workings of the secretive Holy See.  They included financial documents, details of money transfers and confidential internal reports – all prepared by Gotti Tedeschi to build a convincing expose of corruption in the Vatican.



A renowned economics professor and head of the Italian branch of the giant Bank of Santander Gotti Tedeschi took what turned out to be a poisoned chalice of a job in 2009, when he became the President of the Institute for Works of Religion, the formal name for the Bank of Vatican.

http://www.infowars.com/former-gods-banker-could-blitz-vatican-with-cache-of-sec...
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #31 - Jun 13th, 2012 at 4:41am
 
http://www.infowars.com/vatican-and-israel-to-sign-economic-agreement/

Vatican and Israel to Sign Economic Agreement

...

Times of India
June 12, 2012
JERUSALEM: The Vatican is about to “indirectly recognize” Israel’s annexation of East Jerusalem, seen by many Palestinians as the future capital of their independent state, a media report today on Monday.
This would be done if the draft of an economic agreement between the Jewish state and the Holy See, containing no distinction between sovereign Israel and the territories occupied by it in 1967, is approved by the two sides, Ha’aretz online reported.
The lack of a preamble containing such a distinction is at the center of heightened tension between Palestinian Christian denominations and the Palestine Liberation Organisation ( PLO) and the Vatican, it said.
Palestinian sources told the Israeli daily that the agreement would mean “indirect recognition” of Israeli annexation of East Jerusalem and of the imposition of Israeli law in part of the West Bank.
France, which has special standing as custodian of holy Christian sites and Christian communities, is also said to be concerned at the apparent latent recognition of the annexation and the economic implications for the communities, and particularly its Christian institutions in the country and the people who are part of them, the report said.
Contrary to the Palestinian concern, a “well informed source” is quoted as saying that “there is nothing in the agreement to harm the rights of the Palestinians,” and that the agreement was made with the sovereign State of Israel in its internationally recognized identity, and therefore there was no need for a clarifying preamble.
The Bilateral Permanent Working Commission between the Holy See and the State of Israel is to meet in Rome today and tomorrow to continue with talks held in Jerusalem last week, addressing matters of disagreement.

Negotiations toward an agreement on the fiscal status of Catholic institutions in Israel have been underway for 13 years, 11 more than the original two years allocated in what is known as the “fundamental agreement”.
The signing of that accord by Israel and the Vatican on December 30, 1993 had led to the establishment of diplomatic relations between the Vatican and Israel.
Over the past few months, NGOs and members of various Christian denominations in Israel have begun to receive details about the draft agreement, which has been presented to them as a lapse and a failure by the Vatican, the daily said.
The people who informed Palestinian Christians and NGOs of their concerns preferred not to approach the Palestinian Authority (PA) immediately because they did not believe that PA could act on its own in this diplomatic and legal realm.
Members of the Christian community in Jerusalem and the West Bank have held a number of emergency meetings recently and have contacted the Vatican to make clear that the agreement under discussion is not merely a fiscal and a technical agreement, and that a lack of distinction between occupied territory and Israeli territory could have severe implications, Ha’aretz said.
The legal agreement, known as the ‘Legal Personality Agreement’ was signed on November 10, 1997, but never ratified by Israel, it said.
Meetings on fiscal issues, which relate to property rights, actions involving property by church bodies, and Issues of taxation and tax exemption, began in 1999 and have still not been concluded.
The parties decided to exclude a list, known as “Schedule 1″, of institutions on both sides of the Green Line from the text of that agreement, with regard to which they felt they would not be able to resolve differences soon.
Among the sites and institutions on the list are those in which ownership and possession are in dispute, such as properties that Israel has expropriated or whose owners were declared absentees and the Church wants to take possession of again, or sites that Israel has declared open to the public and the Church believes should remain in the private sphere.
A draft of the agreement, dated January 25, 2012, which Ha’aretz has said to have obtained, appears to address Israeli law in a general way, without relating to or alluding to Israel’s status as an occupying power according to international law, the report said.
The same is the case with regard to sites in East Jerusalem.
A Palestinian lawyer, who reflects the position of the Palestinian Christian denominations with regard to the agreement now being formulated, told Ha’aretz that in bilateral agreements with Israel there is a clause defining what is meant by “Israel” from which a distinction clearly emerges between the two sides of the Green Line.
The term “Israeli law” without any kind of codicil or restriction, is a dangerous precedent and implies recognition of the annexation of East Jerusalem and Israeli civil rule over areas of the West Bank (where a number of the sites on Schedule 1 are located), the lawyer was quoted as saying.
A well informed source quoted by the daily rejected the interpretation saying that the agreement contains no geographical reference to any institution it mentions and there are no negotiations underway over the status of institutions in East Jerusalem.
He said that the agreement recognises that “the Vatican has some obligations but [also] some immunities because of the special character of the Church and religion”.
A Foreign Ministry official, not familiar with the draft, said that the Vatican’s position is clear and is known to the ministry and has not changed – “The Vatican does not recognise Israeli sovereignty beyond the Green Line”.
The secretary general of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, Ekemeleddin Ihsanoglu, is said to have written a letter to Archbishop Dominque Mamberti, who is the secretary for relations with states of the Holy See.
The archbishop reportedly answered in early May that “the eventual agreement will not represent a change in the position of the Holy See”.
“The Church, with particular attention to fiscal questions, is asking the State of Israel to treat her institutions in a fair manner, wherever the State of Israel exercised its authority de facto without taking into consideration or determining whether it does so as a sovereign state or as an occupying state, thus without entering into the political aspect of the question,” Mamberti wrote.
He said that the Church remains “extraneous to all merely temporal or political conflicts…Unless the contending parties or the international institutions make concordant appeal to its mission of peace”.
The response has only increased the concerns of local Christians denominations over what they see as erosion of the Church’s position.
A number of Palestinian Christians have complained that the Church and the spiritual authority of the Vatican should have taken into consideration the special situation of Christians under Israeli occupation, and it has not done so, the report said.
As a state the Vatican is obligated to international law, and it did not take this into account in formulating the accord with Israel, they said.
The draft to be discussed over the next few days has undergone changes since January 2012, but Palestinian sources believe that these changes are not dramatic.
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #32 - Jun 13th, 2012 at 6:25pm
 
http://www.thestar.com/business/article/1209373--eu-plans-for-greek-exit-could-i...

...


EU plans for Greek exit could include ATM withdrawal limits, capital controls

Luke Baker
Reuters

BRUSSELS—European finance officials have discussed as a worst-case scenario limiting the size of withdrawals from ATM machines, imposing border checks and introducing capital controls in at least Greece should Athens decide to leave the euro.

EU officials have told Reuters the ideas are part of a range of contingency plans. They emphasized that the discussions were merely about being prepared for any eventuality rather than planning for something they expect to happen—no one Reuters has spoken to expects Greece to leave the single currency area.

Belgium’s finance minister, Steve Vanackere, said at the end of May that it was a basic function of each euro zone member state to be prepared for problems. These discussions appear to be in that vein.

But with increased political uncertainty in Greece following the inconclusive election on May 6 and ahead of a second election on June 17, there is now an increased need to have contingencies in place, the EU sources said.

The discussions have taken place in conference calls over the past six weeks, as concerns have grown that a radical-left coalition, SYRIZA, may win the second election, increasing the risk that Greece could renege on its EU/IMF bailout and therefore move closer to abandoning the currency.

No decisions have been taken on the calls, but members of the Eurogroup Working Group, which consists of euro zone deputy finance ministers and heads of treasury departments, have discussed the options in some detail, the sources said.

As well as limiting cash withdrawals and imposing capital controls, they have discussed the possibility of suspending the Schengen agreement, which allows for visa-free travel among 26 countries, including most of the European Union.

“Contingency planning is underway for a scenario under which Greece leaves,” one of the sources, who has been involved in the conference calls, said. “Limited cash withdrawals from ATMs and limited movement of capital have been considered and analyzed.”

Another source confirmed the discussions, including that the suspension of Schengen was among the options raised.

“These are not political discussions, these are discussions among finance experts who need to be prepared for any eventuality,” the second source said. “It is sensible planning, that is all, planning for the worst-case scenario.”

The first official said it was still being examined whether there was a legal basis for such extreme measures.

“The Bank of Greece is not aware of any such plans,” a central bank spokesman in Athens told Reuters when asked about the sources’ comments.

The vast majority of Greeks—some surveys have indicated 75 to 80 percent—like the euro and want to retain the currency, something Greek politicians are aware of and which may dissuade them from pushing the country too close to the brink.

However, SYRIZA is expected to win or come a strong second on June 17. Alexis Tsipras, the party’s 37-year-old leader, has said he plans to tear up or heavily renegotiate the 130-billion-euro bailout agreed with the EU and IMF. The EU and IMF have said they are not prepared to renegotiate.

If those differences cannot be resolved, the threat of the country leaving or being forced out of the euro will remain, and hence the need for contingencies to be in place.

Switzerland said last month it was considering introducing capital controls if the euro falls apart.

In a conference call on May 21, the Eurogroup Working Group told euro zone member states that they should each have a plan in place if Greece were to leave the currency.

Belgium’s Vanackere said two days after that call that it was a basic function of each euro zone member state to be prepared for any eventuality.

“All the contingency plans (for Greece) come back to the same thing: to be responsible as a government is to foresee even what you hope to avoid,” he told reporters.

“We must insist on efforts to avoid an exit scenario but that doesn’t mean we are not preparing for eventualities.


http://www.tradearabia.com/news/CM_218897.html

Oil plunges on EU debt crisis impact
London: Tue, 12 Jun 2012

Crude oil futures fell below $98 a barrel on Tuesday, extending losses due to fears that the euro zone debt crisis will worsen and hurt the global economy, threatening growth in oil demand.

Optimism over a bailout for Spain's troubled banks faded because of concerns about the package's impact on public debt, while uncertainty surrounding elections in Greece on Sunday compounded worries the financial crisis in Europe will deepen.

European shares turned negative on Tuesday and the euro was flat, little changed at $1.2504 .

Brent crude futures slipped 76 cents to $97.33 by 0954 GMT. Earlier in the session, prices fell as low as $96.62 a barrel, close to this year's low of $95.63 struck on June 4.

US oil was down 52 cents at $82.18 a barrel after hitting a one-year low at $81.07.
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #33 - Jun 14th, 2012 at 7:18pm
 
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/06/13/246095/greeks-withdraw-money-ahead-of-ke...

Greeks withdraw money ahead of key election

...
A man makes a transaction at an ATM machine outside a bank branch in central Athens on May 24, 2012.

Greeks are withdrawing money out of the banks and stockpiling foodstuff ahead of a key parliamentary election on Sunday that many think will force the country out of the eurozone.


According to Greek bankers, some 800 million euros (1 billion dollars) were being drawn out from major banks daily, Reuters reported on Wednesday.

Retailers said people are buying pasta and canned goods in case of shortages as concerns of returning to the drachma were fueled by rumors that Alexis Tsipras, the leader of the leftist SYRIZA party, may win the election.

The latest published opinion polls show that the SYRIZA party, which opposes the 130 billion euros (160 billion dollars) bailout, is running close with the conservative New Democracy party, which backs the rescue deal.

However, some other unpublished "secret polls" suggest that SYRIZA will get a thumping victory.

On Tuesday, Tsipras said, if elected in Sunday's election, he would scrap the country’s bailout deal with the European Union and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

"The bailout deal is already in the past. It will be history for good on Monday," he declared.

Greece is the epicenter of the eurozone debt crisis and is experiencing its fifth year of recession. One in every five Greek workers is unemployed, banks are in a shaky position, and pensions and salaries have been slashed by up to 40 percent.

Latest statistics show that the Greek economy has lost 6.2 percent in the first quarter of 2012. Greece could go bankrupt by the end of June if international lenders refuse to prop the country up with the 130 billion euros bailout fund to keep it afloat and inside the eurozone.

GJH/AS/HN
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #34 - Jun 15th, 2012 at 6:28am
 
Greece will be the first card to fall, then the whole deck will collapse on top of it. Goodbye capitalism, hello new sustainable economy, after a couple of decades of misery.

Are you ready for it?
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #35 - Jun 16th, 2012 at 5:08am
 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financialcrisis/9335025/Debt-crisis-nervous-w...

Debt crisis: nervous world awaits Greek polling day
The New Democracy party, narrowly favoured to win Sunday's Greek election, knows that the fate of the 17-member eurozone could lie in its hands.

...
Although the promise offers some succour to the international community, there is widespread concern that if the radical Leftist coalition Syriza triumphs it will precipitate Greece's exit from the single currency. That could endanger Spain, Italy and others, further weaken the region's hobbled banks and lead to a worldwide credit crunch, reminiscent of the 2008 crisis

By Alex Spillius, in Athens7:22PM BST 15 Jun 2012


With the world watching nervously, the party has vowed to pursue the major reform required by the country's colossal bailout agreements, while also pledging to ease deeply unpopular austerity measures.
Although the promise offers some succour to the international community, there is widespread concern that if the radical Leftist coalition Syriza triumphs it will precipitate Greece's exit from the single currency. That could endanger Spain, Italy and others, further weaken the region's hobbled banks and lead to a worldwide credit crunch, reminiscent of the 2008 crisis.
Investors in the US welcomed reports that central banks were acting to head off a deeper European debt crisis, but there was more bad news for the Greeks as Carrefour, Europe's biggest retailer, said it was pulling out of the country after making estimated losses of €40m (£32.3m) last year.
French bank Crédit Agriocole has meanwhile moved to take direct control of its Albanian, Bulgarian and Romanian units from its Greek bank Emporiki in order to minimise the impact from any Greek exit from the euro.
The finance ministry has reportedly admitted that Greece only has money left to pay salaries and pensions until late July, and state revenue is officially €666m short of a target €18.8bn for the first five months of the year.
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Without the next tranche of its €130bn bailout Greece could soon default – whoever wins that remains a possibility.
No party is likely to win outright. The final public polls, published on June 4, showed that New Democracy was leading Syriza by two percentage points.
Private polling conducted since suggests that gap has widened a touch.
That would leave New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras able to form a coalition with the fast-diminishing socialist party Pasok and a smaller grouping, the Democratic Left.
None of the parties was able to lead a government after the May 6 election.
Dimitrios Tsmocos, a senior economic aide to Mr Samaras, said a victory for Syriza and its young leader Alexis Tsipras would "transform the Greek economy into a lunar landscape".
Yet New Democracy is also seeking to end many of the harsh cuts contained in the memorandums of understanding between Greece and the European Commission, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank, which have propelled Syriza's astonishing rise into second place from a party that polled 4pc in 2009.
"The difference is we are seeking a mutually-agreed time extension of the memorandum, not a unilateral abrogation of signed obligations," Mr Tsmocos told The Daily Telegraph.
Greece has so far performed woefully in meeting the memorandum's requirements for economic liberalisation that might have provided encouragement of a recovery.
But troika officials concentrated more on the imposition of large horizontal cuts to pensions and public sector wages, as well as tax hikes, which have helped impoverish millions.
Deepening misery and a sense of a society coming apart are palpable. The riots that scarred the capital's centre for 18 months may have abated, but soup kitchens are overrun, businesses are closing and even the once infamous traffic jams have receded.
Voluntary medical clinics are providing free life-saving drugs every day to hundreds of patients who have lost their health insurance, usually because they have exceeded a year of unemployment.
"This is a state of war, people can't get their basic needs," said Athanassios Kaproassos, an industrial designer who volunteers at the MKIE clinic in southern Athens.
"We have pensioners coming here who have 500 euros to live on and their medication is 300 a month. It is just incredible this is happening in Greece, a modern country in Europe."
Despite Germany's public unwillingness to cut the Greeks any slack, Mr Tsmocos and his party are convinced that "Europe's ears are open" to a more "pro-growth" approach.
"I think the Germans have realized that the fiscal medicine was too strong for the patient and are now reconsidering.
"The question is, is there enough time for Greece and the rest of southern Europe?" he asked.
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #36 - Jun 17th, 2012 at 11:05am
 
http://www.news.com.au/business/greek-spanish-savings-flee-eurozone-crisis/story...

Greek, Spanish savings flee eurozone crisis

...

SAVERS across Europe are fleeing the continent's debt crisis.
In Europe's most economically stricken countries, people are taking their money out of their banks as a way to protect their savings from the continent's growing financial storm.

Worried that their savings could be devalued, or that banks are on the verge of collapse and that governments cannot make good on deposit insurance, people in Greece, Spain and beyond are withdrawing euros by the billions - behavior that is magnifying their countries' financial stresses. The money is being hoarded at home or deposited in banks in more stable economies.

In Greece and Spain, two of the hardest-hit by the debt crisis in the 17 countries that use the euro, savers and businesses are already pulling money out of banks. They are either worried that their money could be converted into a new currency at a much lower value or because their bank might be on the verge of collapse.

It's a steady bank "jog" at the moment than a full-bore run. But it threatens to undermine the finances of those countries' already-stressed lenders. And if it does turn into a full bank run after Greece's crucial election on Sunday, it could hasten financial disaster in Europe and help spread turmoil around the world.

Since the Greek debt crisis broke in late 2009, deposits have fallen by 30 percent cent, as savers have slowly pulled some 72 billion  Euros ($90.24 billion) from local lenders, with total household and corporate deposits standing at 165.9 billion Euros ($207.94 billion) in April, according to the latest data from the Bank of Greece.

Spanish deposits have fallen about six percent over the past year. They dipped suddenly in April by about ?3.1 billion, or 1.8 percent, to ?1.624 trillion as problems with the country's troubled banks stated to grow to alarming proportions.

This is despite the fact that deposits are guaranteed by the government up to 100,000 Euro across the Eurozone.

Spain's financial turmoil quickly worsened in late May, when the country's second-largest lender announced it needed capital of 19 billion  Euros to stay afloat. Bankia denied reports of a rush by its customers to withdraw but the bailout scared Spaniards who assumed their money was safe.

Bankia client Rosa Monsivais panicked and decided she had to move her savings from Bankia to one she thought would be safer. She chose a foreign bank with Spanish operations, the Dutch owned ING bank.

It took longer than she thought, leading to anxious days until she knew her money was in her new account.

"It scared me a little. I took all my money out and put it in ING," Ms Monsivais, a 41-year-old graphic artist, who would not say how much money she moved said. "But it took a full week to do this kind of transaction, I was reading the newspaper each day and it worried me."

The money across Europe is headed different places. Some has simply been withdrawn and spent out of urgent need as people lose their jobs due to recessions. Some is winding up in bank accounts or invested in countries that are more stable such as Germany. The rest is being invested in property or bonds being issued by other eurozone countries.

In the UK, the eurozone crisis was seen as one factor pushing up central London house price, according to Knight Frank, a real estate agency dealing in high-end property.

"While it looks very much that the surge in Greek buyers has fallen off sharply since the beginning of the year - those who had the funds to buy have done so - we are now seeing a noticeable uptick in interest from France, Italy, Spain and even German-based purchasers looking at the prime London market," the company said in its Prime Central London Index report.

Meanwhile, some money appears to be simply hoarded at home, despite the risk of theft. Last month, police in Athens arrested a gang that specialised in breaking into basement storage spaces under apartment blocks, netting a rich haul in stashed cash and valuables.

"What the average Greek has in mind is to secure the euros they currently hold," Theodore Krintas, managing director at Attica Wealth Management said. "That has been going on for a long time, and will continue as long as the uncertainty increases concerning Greece's position in the near future in the eurozone and the European Union."

Tomorrow's vote could determine whether Greece stays in the euro or leaves in chaos. Since 2010, Greece has been dependent on two bailouts totalling 240 billion Euro in loans to pay its bills. In return, the government had to promise to make deep spending cuts to lower its deficit. That has helped put the country in a deep recession. Leading political figures have called for renegotiating or rejecting the bailout deal, which could lead to a payment cutoff from mistrustful eurozone governments and the IMF.

A bailout cutoff could lead to a complete collapse of government finances. And a euro exit so the country will have to print its own money to pay bills or recapitalize banks.

A large-scale bank run in Greece could further wreck government finances and push the country closer to leaving the euro. The country could either quit the single currency in order to introduce a devalued currency that would improve its economic competitiveness, or because it has no choice but to print its own currency to recapitalise banks or pay government salaries.

So far it's been a trickle rather than a flood in Greece, underlining its slow-motion nature. Many people have kept their deposits because they don't believe Greece will leave the euro.

It's not just in the financially troubled countries that savers are worried. Wealthy Germans are concerned that inflation will surge if Europe's central bank has to step in and spend huge amounts of money propping up the single currency. So they are putting more money into their own country's high-end real-estate in hopes their investment will keep its value.

Well-heeled Spaniards have been moving money to Switzerland and the U.S. for months amid mounting worries about Spain and the safety of the eurozone, said Bruce Goslin, managing director for Europe, the Middle East and Africa for K2 Intelligence consulting group.

"We're not money managers but we deal a lot with clients who are looking for intelligence," Mr Goslin said. "As we are circulating and talking to people, some things are becoming clear. Everyone says 'There is nothing going on in Spain, the economy is contracting so fast we're going to have to go out of Spain.'"

Spain's banking problems come from the collapse of a real estate boom. Banks that made reckless loans are not being paid back and are seeing the value of the properties they invested in tumbling. This is making the country's banking system increasingly financially insecure - heightening savers' fears that their money is not safe.

Fernando Encinar, head of research at real estate website Idealista.com, said some wealthy people who didn't have money to buy during the boom were now taking advantage of prices that have fallen 26 percent in four years, he said.

"Someone who has 200,000 Euro in the bank is looking for property to buy because they prefer property than having it in the bank," he said. "This was happening before Bankia but Bankia and all the trouble in Spain has accelerated it."

Many Spaniards can't move money abroad because times are so tough, Vincent Forest at the Economist Intelligence Unit. said With unemployment now at nearly 25 per cent, Spaniards with jobs and savings are increasingly helping out less fortunate relatives.

"Most Spaniards have huge savings, but they have someone in the family who needs money and isn't earning anything. They won't just say I've got a few thousand euros and I will put it in Germany: They can't," Mr Forest said.

Many Italians - some of Europe's most devoted savers - are also moving money. They are worried that their government will be the next to fall victim to the crisis through its heavy debt load. That's even though Italy's banks, government finances and economy are in better shape than Spain's.

Some 60,000 to 70,000 small investors have bought property abroad, mostly in Germany but also on the Spanish islands, in the last three months, for a total investment of 400 million Euro on an annual basis, Paolo Righi, president of the Italian Federation of Real Estate Professionals said. "They are looking for certain investments," Mr Righi said.

Ruth Stirati, who runs a business helping Italians buy property in Berlin, said she gets about 10 emails a day asking about properties.

"Over the last two or three weeks, there has been a new panic," she said. "They have a thousand fears: That the banks won't have money, that the euro will fail. It is without substance, their doubts. But they worry there will be one strong euro in Germany, and one that is weak.'

Wealthy Germans aren't worried about seeing their money disappear due to collapsing banks but they are concerned that their savings will be eaten away through inflation. As a result, they are putting money into real estate - at home.

Even though inflation currently is moderate at 2.2 percent in May, there has been a lot of talk about the risk of rising prices in Germany's media. There is speculation that inflation could jump if the European Central Bank has to take drastic measures to keep the eurozone from breaking up - such as printing large amounts of money to buy government bonds and cover bankrupt governments' financing needs.

The current EU treaty bars that. But that hasn't stopped German newspaper headlines warning about possible inflation to come.

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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #37 - Jun 17th, 2012 at 11:26pm
 
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #38 - Jun 17th, 2012 at 11:54pm
 
it_is_the_light wrote on Jun 17th, 2012 at 11:26pm:


There is no risk about it and it is not just Europe!
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #39 - Jun 21st, 2012 at 4:56am
 
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/06/20/247181/greeks-queue-for-food-handouts/

Starving Greeks queue for food handouts amid economic crisis

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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #40 - Jun 21st, 2012 at 6:59am
 
It's that time again. Ben Bernanke must decide whether to put some fresh new money into the economy or to hold off, this will be quantitative easing number3.

The trouble seems to be that they get through the money fairly quickly, it never seems to stimulate  like it's supposed to and next thing you know they're doing it all over again.
............................................................

Bernanke Playing Markets Like A Fiddle: Extend The Twist, Save QE3

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke made it clear that a third round of quantitative easing remains on the table, and that his main concern will be labor markets going forward.  The Chairman recognized the risk posed by the European sovereign debt crisis, rejecting any possibility that Fed will step in to buy sovereign bonds, while telling reporters that he is in constant communication with ECB chief Mario Draghi.  Bernanke also asked Congress for a little help jump-starting the economy, and told them to solve the so-called fiscal cliff problem before it gets worse.

“I wouldn’t accept the proposition that the Fed has no more ammunition,” he said, later adding “at this point we still have considerable scope to do more and we are prepared to do more.”

http://www.forbes.com/sites/afontevecchia/2012/06/20/bernanke-playing-markets-li...
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"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace." Hendrix
andrei said: Great isn't it? Seeing boatloads of what is nothing more than human garbage turn up.....
 
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #41 - Jun 23rd, 2012 at 10:51pm
 
http://www.news.com.au/world/new-greek-pm-finance-minister-in-hospital/story-e6f...

New Greek PM, finance minister in hospital

...

GREECE'S new Prime Minister and Finance Minister were both in hospitals today, being treated for different ailments less than three days after a government was formed in the crisis-struck country.
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, 61, was undergoing eye surgery to repair the early stages of a detached retina discovered during what his office said was a routine eye test yesterday. The surgery was expected to last an hour, and a hospital announcement on his condition was to be issued at about midday.
Although Samaras returned to his office yesterday afternoon after his eye check, a meeting of his conservative party's newly elected deputies that had been planned for last night was canceled.
Finance Minister Vassilis Rapanos, 65, remained in a private clinic after being rushed to hospital yesterday suffering from intense abdominal pain, nausea, dizziness, sweating and weakness. The cause of his symptoms was not immediately clear, and he was undergoing tests.
Mr Rapanos, who was named to the post on Thursday, has not been sworn in to office yet. His swearing in ceremony had been scheduled for Friday evening, but was postponed due to his illness.
The hospital said on Friday that his condition had stabilized but that he would remain there for further tests. It was unclear how long he would need to be hospitalized.
Samaras was sworn in as Greece's fourth prime minister in eight months Wednesday, ending a protracted political crisis that had raised fears of Greece being forced to leave the eurozone and spreading the financial crisis across Europe.
His New Democracy party came first in June 17 elections, but without enough votes to form a government on its own. After three days of negotiations, he formed a coalition government with long-time socialist PASOK party rivals, and the small Democratic Left party.
The Government has pledged to keep Greece within Europe's joint currency and broadly stick to the terms of its international bailout from other European countries and the International Monetary Fund. But it has said it will seek to renegotiate some of the conditions of its rescue loans.
Greece has been dependent on billions of euros of rescue loans since May 2010, after it became locked out of the international borrowing market by sky-high interest rates following years of profligate spending and poor fiscal management.
In return, it imposed harsh austerity measures, including slashing spending on everything from healthcare to education, cutting salaries and pensions and repeatedly raising taxes.
But it has still struggled to meet its fiscal targets, and the measures have plunged the country into a deep recession, now in its fifth year, and have sent unemployment soaring to above 22 per cent.
Mr Samaras faces his first test to his pledges to renegotiate some of the bailout terms next week, when he is due to go to Brussels for a European Union summit on June 28-29.


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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #42 - Jun 28th, 2012 at 7:21pm
 
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2012/06/27/248180/us-city-to-file-for-bankruptcy-so...

Stockton to become largest US city to declare bankruptcy

...

The city of Stockton in the US state of California is set to become the largest American city ever to declare bankruptcy as the financial troubles of the US deepen.


A formal bankruptcy filing may come as early as Wednesday following the failure of negotiations between Stockton's officials and creditors.

The northern Californian city, which has more than USD 700 million in debt, was ranked as America's most miserable town in 2010.

The river port city of 300,000 has suffered a plunge in revenues with the collapse of its housing market.

The city has over USD 300 million in outstanding debt, plus USD 450 million in health insurance and pension liabilities for city pensioners. Stockton's financial woes have been blamed on the 2009 US housing market crash.

In October 2011, a court rejected the filing of bankruptcy by Harrisburg, a city of nearly 50,000, due to the fact that a state law prohibited municipalities of a certain size from seeking legal protection from creditors.

DB/GHN/HJL
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ॐ May Much LOVE and CHRISTS LIGHT be upon and within us all.... namasté ▲ - : )  ╰დ╮ॐ╭დ╯
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #43 - Jun 29th, 2012 at 9:26am
 
http://www.infowars.com/ecb-banksters-introduce-new-concept-negative-interest-ra...

ECB Banksters Introduce New Concept: Negative Interest Rates

Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
June 27, 2012
It’s a sure sign fractional reserve banking is on the rocks. It looks like European Central Bank President Mario Draghi will cut ECB interest rates below zero.
In other words, instead of realizing a return by holding money in a bank – albeit at a miniscule 0.25% as the Fed currently does – the ECB will charge institutional customers to use their money.
Go figure.
But here’s the logic, according to Bloomberg:
If the deposit rate was cut to zero or lower, it would discourage banks from parking excess liquidity with the ECB overnight, potentially prompting them to lend the cash instead. Almost 800 billion euros ($1 trillion) is being deposited with the ECB each day.
On the other hand, a deposit rate cut could hurt banks’ profitability by lowering money-market rates, potentially hampering credit supply to companies and households and reducing banks’ incentive to lend to other financial institutions.
In fact, the blood sucking vampire squid – otherwise known as Goldman Sachs – admits this scheme is nothing more than smoke and mirrors designed to boost short term confidence. “By demonstrating its willingness to play a part in sustaining the euro, the ECB may hope to boost confidence in the current fragile environment,” Goldman explains.
“Nothing like the smell of desperation in the morning,” remarks SilverDoctors.com.
Or something worse – a big flat red flag indicating that the bond market is dead in the water and the global economy is headed for uncharted territory.
Back in August of 2011, the usually prescient Zero Hedge made the following comment when the Bank of New York announced it would charge institutional clients to hold their money:
This is nothing short of outright terrorism to get everyone out of cash and into fiat-based ponzi products. Such as Short Term Bills. Indeed, as was reported earlier the 3 Month bill just hit zero. But you ain’t seen nothing yet. As Credit Suisse strategist Ira Jersey reports, courtesy of Bloomberg,  “If this is true then we’re likely to see short-end interest rates actually go negative. By what degree depends on who else follows and how much money is involved.” Cue unpredictable consequences of a totally broken bond market. What happens next will likely make the market dislocations following Lehman like a breezy walk in the park.
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Re: 2012 Global Stockmarket Crash
Reply #44 - Jun 30th, 2012 at 3:02am
 


JP Morgan's 9 Billion Trading Loss

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