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Ireland Plans Return to Debt Markets for First Time in Two Years
Tuesday, July 3, 2012 - 10:38am | 372Ireland is set to return to the sovereign debt markets on Thursday. The nation will hold its first debt auction since September 2010. Ireland is currently one of three nations in the Troika's bailout program. In 2008, Ireland's six largest banks lost over $125 billion due to souring property loans...
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PIIGS Nations: Not Just Good At Accumulating Debt, but Pretty Good at Soccer Too
Monday, June 11, 2012 - 3:42pm | 500As the UEFA European Championship, commonly known as Euro 2012, continues through the first matches of the group stage, an interesting pattern arises. Of all sixteen nations in the tournament, only three nations, the Czech Republic, Italy, and Ireland, have not defaulted since the year 1300....
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The Pain in Spain and the Private Sector Subordination Continues in the Latest Sovereign Bailout
Monday, June 11, 2012 - 9:32am | 613As the European Debt Crisis has now taken down its fourth nation, now batting .800 or four out of five, let us discuss the bailout that may not be as stellar as originally thought. As I wrote on Friday, a European TARP could not work, and so the question became of what shape would the Spanish bank...
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Benzinga Market Primer: Monday, June 11
Monday, June 11, 2012 - 7:26am | 678Good morning on this Monday, and it is a good Monday as we wake up to see a sea of green. Stock futures and other risk assets are up overnight as the Eurogroup agreed to a bailout package of the Spanish banks overnight and Chinese data was not as bad as expected following the surprise rate cuts...
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Is Your Bank About to Get Greeked?
Tuesday, June 5, 2012 - 12:36pm | 338Update: EU preparing bailout of Spanish banks through EFSF/ESM mechanism Well the good news for US savers, the answer is most likely no; so long as that bank is not a foreign bank. However, with sovereign finances deteriorating quickly and Spain today saying that it needs help in funding itself, a...
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The Real Deal on Wall Street: The Vortex of European Euphoria
Tuesday, January 24, 2012 - 7:56am | 301Investor, trader, watcher of the market from afar - we are three weeks into 2012 and the European Union is still…the European Union. Greece has not moved to readopt the drachma as a means to devalue its way out of its financial troubles. France and Spain have had relatively successful debt...
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Are Consumer Sentiment Numbers Meaningless?
Tuesday, January 17, 2012 - 12:51pm | 1194Traders across the globe are trying to figure one thing out right now: is Europe healing or not? Despite poor macroeconomic data, European citizens appear to be positive about the economy. Could these consumers be dead wrong about their economy? According to surveys, German citizens' economic...
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Can Germany's Employers Turn Europe Around?
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 - 8:54am | 760Throughout the second half of 2011, investors watched the sovereign debt crisis in Europe slowly deteriorate. Multiple weaker countries have buckled and are now relying on a bailout package administered by the European Financial Stability Facility. In order to complete the bailout fund, debt...
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German Finance Minister Pushes for EU Treaty Changes
Monday, November 28, 2011 - 9:12am | 477German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said the European Union needs to quickly enact treaty changes in order to better deal with the eurozone financial crisis. The German Finance Minister said that a treaty change was needed so that the European Union could have veto power over the budgets of...
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Markets Tumble as Deflation Rises
Thursday, November 17, 2011 - 4:59pm | 644On Thursday afternoon the equity markets and some commodities cratered. Silver was absolutely pummeled, dropping nearly 7% while Treasuries rallied. Trouble emanating from Europe may have been the primary catalyst behind the downward move, as the yields on bonds in Italy and Spain continued to...
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ETFs for Europe Speculations
Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - 7:46am | 689Hardly a day passes without some news from Europe these days that could potentially move markets. Whether it's Greece backing down on a holding a referendum, Italy's Berlusconi finally resigning, or EFSF buying its own bond due to lack of demand, there's no shortage of drama for the saga....
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Italy Slowly Becoming Greece 2.0
Wednesday, November 9, 2011 - 3:18pm | 507It looks like Europe has finally drawn a line in the sand for bailouts. Just on the other side of that line is Italy. According to Reuters, Europe has no plans at this time to rescue Italy, despite the fact that Italy's debt costs have risen above the level where they could reasonably be expected...
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Sequel to Fellini's 8 1/2: The Italian Bond Market
Wednesday, November 9, 2011 - 11:14am | 856"8 1/2" was a great movie, but having bond yields approach that number is downright scary. Last night, the London Clearing House disrupted markets even further than they already are by raising margins on Italian debt, sending yields on Italian, and French debt soaring. The yield on Italian ten...
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The Debt Dominoes Are Falling One By One
Tuesday, November 1, 2011 - 1:06pm | 932Back in July, I wrote about the debt dominoes starting to fall, but no one was caring that much. The article related to the problems in the U.S., where we eventually saw S&P downgrade U.S. debt. Yet, the issue of a debt domino is easily just as applicable to Europe as well. Last week, when...
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Italy Needs an Offer it Can't Refuse
Friday, October 28, 2011 - 11:14am | 754Everyone and their brother was euphoric yesterday, as equity markets acted like Europe had solved its problems overnight. Sorry to be the bearer of bad bad news, but it did not. There were no concrete details on how the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) will be leveraged, how the...