Last year I wrote "The "Believe In Germany Bailing The EU" Trade: Go Long Magic Wand Raw Materials & Harry Potter Paraphernalia"
wherein I warned of both the risk in Germany as a save all, and the
risks posed to European FIRE sector companies (and insurers in
particular) as a result of this belief in magic over math.
Well,
now Bloomberg reports that Poland has literally confiscated private
pension manager's (read insurance companies) bonds with essentially no
compensation, ex., they stole them, as per Bloomgerg - Poland to Cancel Bonds From Pension Funds in System Revamp:
Poland will take over and cancel government bonds held
by its privately managed pension funds, stopping short of fully
“nationalizing” the system as it seeks to curb public debt, Prime
Minister Donald Tusk said.
Whaaaat!!!??? Cancel bonds? Outright theft! Listem carefully here.
It's not as if I didn't tell you so. Now, what happens to those
insurers whose pension funds under management were robbed? Again,
revisit "The "Believe In Germany Bailing The EU" Trade: Go Long Magic Wand Raw Materials & Harry Potter Paraphernalia". This plain as day and easy to see coming, and there's a lot more coming!
Remember my many warnings this year on the Irish and EU banking system:
If
I Provide Proof That The Entire Irish Banking System Is A Sham, Does It
Set Up A Much Needed System Reboot? Let's Go For It...), the chances of there being any recovery is somewhere between zilch and nil, give or take a euro or two - reference LGD 100+: What's the Possibility of Certain European Banks Having a Loss Given Default Approaching 100%? and The Anatomy of a Serial European Banking Collapse to
realize that once a counter party driven bank run starts, there may be
less than nothing to divy up in the end. Lehman Brothers' US creditors
received roughly 10 to 40 cents on the dollar, but after 5 years of
wrangling, the European International arm was full repaid. Hey, do you
feel lucky with your life savings? Even if you do feel lucky, you'll
still need 5 years to spare and a ton of cash for legal fees.
However,
some member states have not ruled out the possibility that insured
deposits, i.e. deposits under €100,000, would be forced to bear losses
in the event of a bank collapse even though these deposits would be
likely to be protected by the deposit guarantee scheme.
As stated earlier, this ain't AAA coverage!
This
year Jeroen Dijsselbloem, head of the group of 17 euro zone finance
ministers, said that losses on bondholders and depositors could form
part of future bank bailouts as euro zone officials seek to move the
burden of bailouts away from taxpayers – as was the case in the Irish
bailout – and on to private investors.
The
European Commission argues that this switch from so-called “bailouts”
to “bail-ins” would result in an allocation of losses that would not be
worse than the losses that shareholders and creditors would have
suffered in regular insolvency proceedings that apply to other private
companies.
Ahem,
that non-sense only works on the uneducated and/or the unassuming. The
major difference is that creditors that would be subject to regular
dissolution proceedings AND that are unsecured, would demand
considerably higher rates of return. A borderline solvent bank whose
officers AND regulators admit publicly is in need of additional capital
infusions after receiving three thus far, and 96% losses in its publicly
traded equity, would have to borrow money at 18%, not 2% - and that's
being generous. See the bank deposit rate calculator below.
While
the inclusion of large savers in future bank bailouts is now widely
accepted, significant differences still remain between member states.
While
the new rules governing bank resolution were first intended to come
into place in 2018, since the Cypriot bailout there have been calls from
senior EU figures such as European Central Bank president Mario Draghi
and EU economics affairs commissioner Olli Rehn to introduce the new
regime as early as 2015.
The Irish presidency of the European Council is hoping to reach a common position by the end of next month.
The
little app below calculates what return you should expect to receive to
take on the risk of a potential 40% haircut. The second tab offers what
recent Cyprus bank rates were. Do you see a disparity???
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The
video below was the result of a collaborative effort to bring
Mr.Middleton to Ireland through a crowdfunded campaign. While the effort
fell through, we have recycled some of the material to ascertain
interest in his visiting Ireland on an independent basis. If you're
Irish, from Ireland or simply find this financial/ethical malarkey
disagreeable and would be interested in seeing Reggie Middleton visit
Ireland to disseminate his research, create new resarch, hold town hall
style discussions on how to "occupy the banks" or simply have a good,
old-fashioned breaking of the bread, let us know of your willingness to
contribute to a crowdfunded project on Indiegogo. If there is enough
interest to make this happen, we will create a project to fund Reggie's
trip and create saleable research. Let Reggie know directly by
contacting him via email: reggie at boombustblog dot com
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Sunday, September 8, 2013
Exactly As I Warned, "Cyprusization" Goes Mainstream! Ireland On Tap, Next Up For Citizen Fund Confiscation (Again)
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