In my long earlier post tonight, I mentioned that the Franco-German-Italian cabal would try to exert pressure on the abstainers to the new fiscal-union treaty changes, but I wasn't sure how they could do that legally.
Well, here's the answer from a quote in the WSJ now about the Franco-German plan update today.
Sarkozy, Merkel Outline Plan for New EU Treaty
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203501304577084001516935854.html
"EU nations that decide to opt out of the fiscal pact proposed by France and Germany risk being stigmatized by investors, who could decide to shun debt issued by countries that have rejected tighter collective discipline, the officials said."
They will let the bond vigilantes do the dirty work for them. They will say that abstainers are not "protected" - sounds like with the mafia - and they must face contagion on their own. The UK and Sweden have defended their currencies before, but do they want to risk standing alone going forward in a bigger EU crisis? Not so fast.
Remember the story of Bear Stearns (BS). At the big-bankers table to discuss a bailout of Long Term Capital - the infamous hedge fund that failed in the 1998 Asian contagion - BS was the only bank that balked at participation in the bailout, even though LTC was their prime-brokerage client and they already made a fortune off them. The nerve. The other bankers warned BS that if and when their turn ever came up, they would vote thumbs down, and they did years later. BS bit the dust and JPM got them for peanuts in the first stages of the 2008 meltdown. BS's share of the LTC bailout was just around 250 million. Penny-wise, pound foolish. The Brits will tread carefully here.
The Brits don't want to sign the new treaty changes and they want a no FTT tax pledge first. Can't blame them, and no harm no foul so far.