Tag Archives: Greece

The euro crisis reaches the core

Greece, as it turns out, was the Eurozone’s canary. The canary was resuscitated and a small rescue mechanism was set up to revive a further canary or two – but beyond this the warning was ignored. The miners kept on working. They convinced themselves that this was the canary’s problem. Continue reading

Posted in Economic News, Fresh Perspectives | Tagged Debt, Greece, Stock Market, The Euro | 1 Comment

The Contagion Risk of Europe

About the only thing there was seeming consensus on in Europe was that Greece will eventually default. The question is when. European leaders, along with the IMF, have caved and will give Greece €12 billion to tide them over while they debate on finding €70-100 sometime late next month. Continue reading

Posted in Economic News, Fresh Perspectives | Tagged Greece, The Euro, The Fed | Leave a comment

When The Fed Speaks, Housing Listens

Especially since the 1990′s, home prices have largely been driven, directly or indirectly, by the actions of The Fed. The Greenspan Fed enabled the Credit and Housing Bubbles, and the Bernanke Fed is doing everything it can to keep them inflated, extending and pretending, hoping the fundamental core economy will eventually catch up.
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Posted in Banking and Finance, Economic News, Foreclosures and Short Sales, The Daily Hotsheet | Tagged Bernanke, Deflation, Foreclosures, Greece, greenspan, Home Prices, Inflation, QE2, QE3, Shadow Inventory, The Fed | 7 Comments

A Random Walk Through the Minefield

In the last 48 hours, so much news has come out of Europe that has me frankly shaking my head. It is a strange game of brinksmanship they are playing, and it is one we should be paying attention to (as if the brinkmanship played by US politicians over the debt ceiling is not enough). This week we look at what seems to be European leaders taking random walks through the minefield at the very heart of the European Experiment. Continue reading

Posted in Economic News, Fresh Perspectives | Tagged Debt, GDP, Greece, Greek Default, Interest Rates, Ireland, Portugal, Spain, The Euro, The Fed | Leave a comment

Kicking the Can to the End of the Road

I am asked all the time what my biggest worry is, and I quickly answer, the European Sovereign Debt Crisis. Of course, then we have to think about the Japanese Sovereign Debt Crisis, followed by the one in the US; but today we will focus on Europe. The biggest bubble in history is the bubble of government debt. It is a bubble in a world full of pins. It will take a great deal of luck and crisis management to keep it afloat, without wreaking havoc on the financial system and markets of the world. Continue reading

Posted in Economic News, Fresh Perspectives | Tagged Debt, GDP, Greece, Ireland, Unemployment | Leave a comment