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Friday, November 25, 2011

Italian two-year Bond Yields above 7.8%

by Calculated Risk on 11/25/2011 09:13:00 AM

From the WSJ: Italian Yields Jump After Poor Auction

Italian two-year and five-year government-bond yields soared to euro-era highs Friday as investors began giving up on the euro zone's ability to break the political gridlock that is blocking a more decisive response to the currency bloc's debt crisis ... The Italian treasury sold €8 billion ($10.67 billion) of six-month treasury bills and €2 billion of 24-month zero-coupon bonds. The six-month paper carried an average yield of 6.5%, sharply up from the 3.5% rate paid at its October auction.
The Italian 2 year yield is up to 7.84%. Ouch. The 5 year yield is at 7.8%.

Note: I've added the table of links to European bond yields below the first post.

Update: From Reuters: Moody's cuts Hungary to "junk," government sees attack
Moody's lowered Hungary's sovereign rating by one notch to Ba1, just below investment grade, with a negative outlook, hours after rival Standard & Poor's held fire on a flagged downgrade after Budapest said it would seek international aid. ... It also came after [Prime Minister Viktor] Orban relaunched aid talks this week with the International Monetary Fund, a dramatic reversal after he cut cooperation with the Fund short last year after sweeping a 2010 election on a vow to regain "economic sovereignty."

Thursday, November 24, 2011

More Europe

by Calculated Risk on 11/24/2011 06:47:00 PM

NOTE: I've added a link below the first post for the table of links to European Bond Yields.

More on Europe ...

From the WSJ: ECB Considers Longer Bank Loans

The European Central Bank ... may extend loans to banks at maturities of two or three years, according to people familiar with the matter. The longest maturity at present is 13 months.
This would be for banks - with haircuts on collateral - and not countries.

From the Telegraph: Germany unmoved by French pleas for more ECB action
Ms Merkel instead used a three-way summit with France and Italy in Strasbourg to insist that new treaty powers to intervene and punish sinner states remained the key focus of Europe's rescue efforts. She said: "The countries who don't keep to the stability pact have to be punished – those who contravene it need to be penalised. We need to make sure this doesn't happen again."

Even suggestions that the ECB could extend longer loans to countries over a period of up to three years appeared to be ruled out. Ms Merkel said: "The ECB is independent, the modification of the treaty does not concern the ECB, which is dealing with monetary policy and financial stability. We are worried about a fiscal policy. It's a very different chapter. It has nothing to do with the European bank."

Happy Thanksgiving!

by Calculated Risk on 11/24/2011 03:31:00 PM

A few housekeeping notes for a holiday ...

• For anyone accessing Calculatedriskblog via an iPad, I'm trying out some new software with a customized tablet layout. The layout is from Onswipe. I'll be adding smart phone software soon ...

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For those looking for all current graphs, just click on "graph galleries" below the first post or in the menu bar.

The graph galleries are grouped by category:
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Enjoy!

• And on European bond yields: Below is a table for several European bond yields (links to Bloomberg).

Check out the Belgian and Portuguese graphs. Ouch.

Greece2 Year5 Year10 Year
Portugal2 Year5 Year10 Year
Ireland2 Year5 Year10 Year
Spain2 Year5 Year10 Year
Italy2 Year5 Year10 Year
Belgium2 Year5 Year10 Year
France2 Year5 Year10 Year
Germany2 Year5 Year10 Year


Thanks to all for reading. Have a great Thanksgiving!

Europe: On the Strasbourg meeting today

by Calculated Risk on 11/24/2011 10:56:00 AM

From Bloomberg: Germany, France to Propose Treaty Adjustments on Fiscal Rules (ht Brian)

Germany and France said they will make proposals to amend European treaties in coming days to impose greater fiscal discipline on euro-area countries ...

The initiative announced today at a meeting in Strasbourg, France, involving German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti ...

The planned treaty changes prepared for a Dec. 9 European summit involve “the question of a fiscal union, that is a deepened political cooperation,” Merkel told reporters after the meeting over lunch. “It’s not about a quid pro quo. It’s about overcoming the defects in the euro zone’s construction, step by step.”

Merkel won backing on demanding changes to treaties as a prerequisite to discussing the issuance of common euro bonds.
From Bloomberg: Merkel Rejects Euro Bonds After Failed Auction ‘Wake-Up Call’
German Chancellor Angela Merkel again ruled out joint euro-area borrowing and an expanded role for the European Central Bank in fighting the debt crisis. ... Euro bonds are “not needed and not appropriate,” Merkel said today at a press conference
More from the WSJ: Leaders to Propose EU Treaty Changes

Thanksgiving morning reading: Mostly Europe

by Calculated Risk on 11/24/2011 09:02:00 AM

• From the Athens News: Papademos says Samaras letter 'satisfactory'

The standoff over Antonis Samaras’ refusal to sign a written commitment that he backs austerity measures seems to have come to an end, after Prime Minister Lucas Papademos told the cabinet on Thursday that international lenders had reacted positively to the letter that the New Democracy leader sent to the country’s lenders yesterday.

"Papademos said the content of the letter was satisfactory. There is an initial positive response to it (from abroad)," a minister who attended the meeting told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
• From the WSJ: Portugal Hit by Downgrade and Strike
Fitch, which matched Moody's Investors Service's move in July to place Portugal in junk territory, lowered its rating one notch, to double-B-plus from triple-B-minus, and warned further downgrades were possible because a recession in the country will increase challenges for the government to comply with its austerity plans. It maintained a negative outlook.

"The country's large fiscal imbalances, high indebtedness across all sectors, and adverse macroeconomic outlook mean the sovereign's credit profile is no longer consistent with an investment-grade rating," Fitch said. "However, Fitch judges the government's commitment to the program to be strong."
• From the Financial Times: France pushes hard on ECB intervention The FT reports that Nicolas Sarkozy, Italy's Mario Monti, and Angela Merkel are meeting in Strasbourg today - and Sarkokzy is expected to push for ECB intervention.

• Something else to watch from the NY Times: Economic Trouble in the West Shows Signs of Catching Up With Asia
Within the last few weeks ... cracks have emerged in the region’s mighty economies, and analysts and policy makers have become more concerned about the painful disruption that could spill into Asia as the situation in Europe continues to deteriorate and the United States’ growth remains subdued.

Exports from Asia have been softening for months as demand in Europe, in particular, has slowed.
• And on German bonds:

From Paul Krugman: The Apocalypse Trade
the big story: German bonds are now being priced as a risky asset — what the FT calls the “apocalypse trade“. The interest rate on bunds, at 2.21% as I write this, is still very low by historical standards. But it’s above the rate on UK bonds (2.17%) and way above the rate on US bonds (1.88%).

The way to see this is that the market is in effect pricing in a real possibility of eurozone collapse.
And from the FT Alphaville: Borrowing costs in the United States of Europe
[L]et’s assume we get a Eurobond as envisaged by President Barroso. What would that yield? Some 4 per cent perhaps. Lower?

Viewed in this context one can understand why investors were reluctant to buy German paper with a 1.98 per cent coupon. Why not wait and pick up double the yield on German-backed Eurobonds.

The glib answer to that question is because it will never happen. Germany will never allow it.

However, this story, which ran on Reuters overnight, suggests that Eurobonds are not completely verboten, especially if Germany could force through treaty changes to enforce budgetary discipline in the eurozone.