Previously on MoreLiver’s:
Current Specials
Correspondent David P.
provides a list based on a simple but powerful precept: follow the smart money…
Slovenia, Portugal, Malta, and then Spain. Though Spain and Italy are considered core E.U. nations, we should
probably differentiate between political and financial cores and peripheries.
Should a self-reinforcing crisis of liquidity, solvency and loss of trust
gather momentum, Italy's debt situation could reach critical mass, regardless of its political
status as a core nation. Similar political and financial crises could arise in
The Netherlands and France, too, though these crises will probably not be triggered
by an exit of core-EU mobile capital.
The European
Parliament will seek greater protection for depositors of crisis-hit banks in
the wake of the Cyprus bailout as it weighs changes to proposals aimed at taking taxpayers off
the hook for future rescues.
Slovenia Must
Handle Its Banking Crisis! – PIIE
Sometimes an international bailout is necessary, but for Slovenia only if it manages its banking crisis poorly. The right approach should be to close Nova Kreditna Banka Maribor d.d. The other three big state banks could possibly be restructured, cleaned up, or otherwise closed down as well.
Sometimes an international bailout is necessary, but for Slovenia only if it manages its banking crisis poorly. The right approach should be to close Nova Kreditna Banka Maribor d.d. The other three big state banks could possibly be restructured, cleaned up, or otherwise closed down as well.
Slovenia will solve
its problems on its own just like Ireland did, just like Greece did, just like
Portugal did, just like Spain did, just like Cyprus did: Under duress, with
threats of eurozone expulsion if the nannycrats in Brussels are not pleased.
The likelihood that
Spain will miss its public deficit target this year leaves its sovereign rating
at risk of slipping below investment grade, credit agency Moody's said on
Tuesday.
Austria joins Luxembourg for EU bank secrecy
talks – BB
Austria will join Luxembourg for talks with the European Union on how to
crack down on cross-border tax cheats, Chancellor Werner Faymann said on
Tuesday, signaling an easing of Vienna's hardline stance on coveted bank secrecy.
I had expected that
the data flow would argue for the Fed to postpone tapering off QE purchases
until late this year. The Fed seems to
have a different view, thinking that the data flow argues for ending QE by the
end of this year. My expectation is that
the Fed is being overly optimistic and will find that summer is too early to
being tapering off QE. That seems to be
the message from the bond market as well; yields aren't exactly soaring.
Job Openings and Nonfarm Payrolls – Calculated
Risk
…it appears job
openings leads non-farm payroll at turning points.
Quality, clear
communication is a very powerful tool for central banks because it influences
expectations. This column presents new research on central-bank communications,
using a formal measure of clarity – the ‘Flesch-Kincaid grade level’. The
picture is varied: there are significant and persistent differences in clarity
over time and across countries. However – and worryingly – the financial crisis
is associated with unclear communication for some central banks.