Merkel likes the market discipline being enforced

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By Peter Boockvar - November 25th, 2011, 9:54AM

To the calls from many for the ECB to print euros to buy larger amounts of European bonds and for Germany to accept the issuance of euro bonds, both are resisting for the predominant reason that they want to hold Italian and Spanish feet to the fire and not ease any pressure on them to reform. On the story of Germany becoming more amenable to a euro bond, Merkel thought otherwise as she said it would “level the difference” in interest rates in the region and that “would be a completely wrong signal to ignore those diverging interest rates because they’re an indicator of where work still needs to be done.” Italy sold 6 month bills at a yield of 6.5% vs 3.54% paid last month. Fitch downgraded Portugal’s credit rating yesterday to junk, in line with Moody’s and Moody’s lowered its rating on Hungary to junk, 1 notch below S&P and Fitch. French consumer confidence fell to the lowest since Feb ’09. Germany’s IFO business confidence, out yesterday, unexpectedly rose. The German DAX however is down 10 days in a row as the bund yield rises to a 3 month high. The focus on too much debt in the western world can’t ignore Japan and S&P and the IMF had comments warning them of the state of their balance sheet. The 10 yr JGB yield is back above 1% to a 3 week high.

Comments

Please use the comments to demonstrate your own ignorance, unfamiliarity with empirical data, ability to repeat discredited memes, and lack of respect for scientific knowledge. Also, be sure to create straw men and argue against things I have neither said nor even implied. Any irrelevancies you can mention will also be appreciated. Lastly, kindly forgo all civility in your discourse . . . you are, after all, anonymous.

3 Responses to “Merkel likes the market discipline being enforced”

  1. StrawberryBlonde Says:

    –On the story of Germany becoming more amenable to a euro bond, Merkel thought otherwise as she said it would “level the difference” in interest rates in the region and that “would be a completely wrong signal to ignore those diverging interest rates because they’re an indicator of where work still needs to be done.”
    …I really can’t find any reason to argue with Merkel’s logic on that point.

  2. paulie46 Says:

    Ms. Merkel will soon have to eat these words, as will Mr. Boockvar…

  3. CitizenWhy Says:

    What exactly is the point of having a Euro? It was created with the promise of prosperity for its members, not austerity, punishment, and a system of haves and have-nots, the have-nots possessing none of the economic tools available to countries with their own currencies. Instead Germany holds on the tools and will use them only in Germany’s interests and the interests of its banks.

    The EU now seems to exist only to preserve the Euro and make everyone pay back incompetently managed banks whose outrageous lending practices led to bubbles and collapses.

    Where was this wonderful “market discipline” when the banks were running wild? And why haven’t the banks been disciplined for their bad judgment?

    The EU formula: discipline governments and citizens but by God NEVER discipline the banks. Bah!

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