somethings wrong!

Tag Archive for Spain

A Summer to Remember…in Spain!

What could possibly go wrong in Spain?

Perhaps we should ask what could go right?

Super Mario Draghi is trying to stuff money down that other not so super Mariano’s throat but that Mariano (Rajoy), the Spanish Prime Minister is having trouble digesting the significant loss of sovereignty that comes with Super Mario’s freshly printed paper.

You see…the deal goes like this.   We’ll bail you out with our funny money but you have to let us tell you how to spend it….both now and in the foreseeable future.  Basically Spain will be “under new management”.

Because of Super Mario’s recent “whatever it takes” pronouncement, Spanish 10 year bonds are currently around 5.7% but could quickly spike back up to their recent highs above the dangerous 7% mark, especially if the markets see Mariano choking and spitting out Super Mario’s offer.

Meanwhile, the auditors Deloitte, KPMG, PwC and Ernst & Young are due to present their full reports on the capital needs of Spain’s financial sector in September. The findings of this report will be used to determine the exact amount the Spanish banking sector will need to borrow from the EZ’s bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF).

What a fun job that must be?  Why, they were having so much fun they needed a few extra months to get it done.  It was originally due in June.  There must be much to see in those lovely banks.

What will they say?  Or more appropriately…how much will they say…the banks need?

They hope it will be less, rather than more, after they quarantine the worst of the distressed assets into the much reviewed and revered “Bad Bank”.

http://zeenews.india.com/business/news/international/spanish-government-approves-bad-bank-for-toxic-assets_59320.html

Hey…wait a minute…didn’t we already go down this road with that recently constructed Spanish monstrosity known as Bankia.

At Bankia, the financial geniuses took 7 regional savings banks (known as Cajas) and consolidated them into what was then effectively a “Bad Bank”…although they tried to pass 7 ugly sisters off as one beautiful damsel in just a touch of distress.

Initially they said that they would make over 320 million in profit from transforming these ugly country sisters into a national beauty.

Apparently they needed more plastic surgery than the bankocrats originally planned because the 320 mill in profit soon turned into a 4.3 billion loss (we’re talking euros here).  Since then they have continued to apply financial makeup like no one’s business but Bankia is unfortunately still very ugly.

Woops….there goes another 6 billion, just announced yesterday.  Pig lipstick must be very expensive these days.

http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/09/10/spain-frob-idINL5E8KAIY920120910

In June this year, the Eurocrats said that the first bad bank (aka Princess Bankia) was not bad enough and in addition to another badder bank, the whole banking system might need an injection.

30 billion was mentioned as a useful number.  Within no time at all…a week or so…that number had ballooned to 100 billion.  By September, we are talking more like 300 billion.  A simple question…when does this madness stop?

So, back to our sparring partners, Mario and Mariano.

Maybe not so super Mariano Rajoy does not want to lift the Spanish veil for Super Mario to see the faded beauty that was once Spain’s economy.

Perhaps he is scared of what really lies beneath.  After all, his first beauty, Bankia, was not so pretty after all.  Perhaps the whole system, from Andalucia to Catalona, is rotten beyond salvation. Rotten beyond even the best facelift and the tightest tummy tuck.

And with Spanish unemployment now looking to rival that of Greece, it is only a matter of time until the Molotov cocktails start to be shaken.

If all of that is not bad enough, the truly scary part is the tremendous flight of capital from Spain, despite what basically amounts to recently imposed capital controls.  Capital goes where it is treated best and fairest.  Spanish capital is scared, very scared.  It is making a run for the border!

Spain is in deep doggy dodo and will need more than bad banks and plastic surgery.

It will need a full scale bailout.  Fortunately, Super Mario is up to the job…as long as Senor Rajoy is prepared to fully lift the veil.  Ultimately, not so super Mariano will have no choice and the full ugliness that is Spain will be revealed.

As they say, the pain of Spain will soon be plain.

But it will be poor little Greece who inadvertently suffers the consequences of a Spanish bailout, as they get thrown out of the EZ limo and under the default bus…an example of what happens to those who won’t play ball.

That is why they need a Troika.  One drives the limo, one opens the door and the third does the pushing.  Remember, they are driving around Greece this September, too.

A September to remember? In Germany.

The German constitutional court is due to vote on the legality of the ESM (the successor to the EFSF) and the fiscal compact on September 12.

What in heck does that mean?

Well…the EFSF is the European Financial Stability Facility, of course. It’s one of those spivs…we mean SPVs…Special Purpose Vehicles…that financial engineers like to build for bureaucrats to hide all sorts of complex shenanigans (read…money printing). They figure that if it’s sophisticated enough, people will believe that it makes sense…or at least give up trying to figure it out. You can read more…if you dare…here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Financial_Stability_Facility

So what is the ESM then? ESM stands for European Stability Mechanism.

Don’t you love how they come up with these solid sounding names, designed to invoke confidence and awe. We like to take the opposite definition and believe that anything deemed “stable” by bureaucrats is probably inherently “unstable” and anything that they describe as mechanical will probably break down.

But here’s a more erudite description:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Stability_Mechanism

Basically, from what our simple minds can gather, it’s a big bucket into which nations which are already technically bankrupt all agree to contribute funds that they don’t have, to support a cause that they don’t believe in.

The obvious stand out from the pauper crowd in Euroland is Germany, which must have its constitutional court opine on the constitutionality of contributing before it can ratify the agreement.

Germany’s ratification is critical to keep the ESM from sputtering off into the annals of bureaucratic ignomy.

What will the court rule? We don’t know much of anything about the German constitutional court but we do know that courts are not as impartial as they used to be. Obamacare anyone?

So we suspect that they will deem the ESM to be valid and legal because there is such prevailing political pressure to do so. But if they don’t, the EZ policy makers, who are already emotionally committed to spending the money (by purchasing sovereign debt in the primary markets), will have to do some mighty quick tap dancing.

So expect things to get interesting as the September 12 court decision draws near.

Victor VIX may even wake up for this one.

As an aside, things truly mechanical in Germany are slowing down as well and the German economy is borderline recessionary. If they slip across that dangerous border, the average Germans, being more astute and austere than many of their southern neighbors, will trim their spending immediately, if not sooner.

That means they will buy less olives from Greece and Spain, less wine from Italy and less cheese from France. This will not bode well for those economies that are already teetering on disaster.

Speaking of which….tomorrow…we’ll take a look at what’s coming up in September for that poster child of economic disasters…Greece.