Global Macro Trading Journal

Quote from Ghost of Cutten:

I'd say it's falling more on the risk of contagion - bank runs spreading from Greece to the next potential EU-exit country e.g. Ireland, Portugal, even Spain and Italy. Why keep your capital in a country that is going to replace the Euro with the economic equivalent of soggy toilet paper?

Capital flight out of 1/3 of the Eurozone, potentially triggering a continent-wide (and potentially global) banking panic is unlikely to be bullish for the currency.

get ready to be called by him on the market value of soggy toilet paper being possibly be higher than a euro note in some circumstances or something like that, lol
 
Quote from Ghost of Cutten:

I'd say it's falling more on the risk of contagion - bank runs spreading from Greece to the next potential EU-exit country e.g. Ireland, Portugal, even Spain and Italy. Why keep your capital in a country that is going to replace the Euro with the economic equivalent of soggy toilet paper?

Capital flight out of 1/3 of the Eurozone, potentially triggering a continent-wide (and potentially global) banking panic is unlikely to be bullish for the currency.

Still not sure where that capital is going exactly... and the greater risk to the fiscal integrity of the euro is not that Greece, Spain et al leave, it's that they stay and get bailed out on a trillion-scale.

Why do you think the Bundesbank is basically saying "Go for it dipshits, we want you to leave:"

The impact of a Greek exit from the eurozone would be substantial but "manageable", Germany's Bundesbank said, raising pressure on Athens to keep its painful economic reforms on track.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...says-Greek-euro-exit-would-be-manageable.html


Quote from Ghost of Cutten:


Capital flight out of 1/3 of the Eurozone, potentially triggering a continent-wide (and potentially global) banking panic is unlikely to be bullish for the currency.

Precisely -- such a scenario would be so horrendous, in fact, that betting odds are on Germany caving at the last minute -- and the ECB unleashing the printing press -- rather than allowing a bank run on the entire continent to take hold.

It's a massive game of chicken... and much what I said before: It's not that a Greek / Spanish / Italy exit is intrinsically bearish for the euro -- given the immediate and long term fiscal improvements such would bring -- but rather that uncertainty and economic disruption surrounding a potential exit, and the potential for a massive liquidity cave-in at the last minute (LTRO to the Nth), is high.
 
Quote from Daal:

get ready to be called by him on the market value of soggy toilet paper being possibly be higher than a euro note in some circumstances or something like that, lol


lol we r not plyn sme gm ur chekrs im chess lmfao
 
Quote from benwm:

France perhaps...OATs very strong this week, and again today.

Yep, and Germany borrowing at zero...

Gillian Tett arguing that the euro zone's inherent advantages as a single currency bloc are basically already shot.

But those flows aren't leaving the euro -- just going elsewhere within the bloc.

As another explanation, one could argue for a general collapse in lending activity and monetary velocity as business conditions seize up -- but that's different than outflow, and arguably self-correcting on resolution / increased export competitiveness as euro declines.
 
I was talking to someone in construction today and he told me our markets are being swamped with Germans willing to work at half the price of minimum wage here and falsely be registered as cleaning staff.

So I guess this makes Germans the new Mexicans.
 
A Grexit so far has been painted as everything from not a challenge to armageddon by the authorities. Its no wonder people are confused
 
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