May 082012
 
 May 8, 2012  Posted by at 11:24 pm Finance

Mariano Rajoy, Prime Minister of Spain, made a very interesting comment in the Senate today. He told the politicians that virtually EVERYONE in Spain, including banks, corporations and regional governments, have been locked out of credit markets. The only institution that is still able to issue debt, according to Rajoy, is the Spanish Treasury itself. Now, that’s a frightening statement for the leader of a country to make in public – yet what’s even more frightening for the Spanish people, one-fourth of whom are unemployed, is that it can’t be too far from the truth.

Emma-Ross Thomas reports from Madrid for Bloomberg (h/t po1):

Spain Says Treasury Is Only Entity Left Able to Get Funding

 

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said the debt agency is the only borrower left in Spain that can finance itself on markets as banks, companies and regional administrations have been shut out.

 

“Today, the Treasury is practically the only one that finances itself on the markets,” he said in the Senate in Madrid today. Being locked out of debt markets isn’t “theoretical” as it’s “happening to the immense majority of regions, our whole financial sector and most big companies.”

 

Rajoy once again raised the threat of an international bailout as he seeks to convince Spaniards to accept spending cuts even as unemployment approaches 25 percent. His comments also underline the challenge the government faces as it tries to overhaul the banking industry without overburdening public finances.

 

Rajoy, in power since December, declined to answer a question from reporters as he left the Senate on how much public money may be needed to shore up Bankia, the lender with the biggest Spanish asset base and 38 billion euros ($49 billion) of real-estate assets.

 

Alfonso Alonso, the head of Rajoy’s People’s Party in Parliament, said today it seems “obvious” that Bankia will need help cleaning up its balance sheet after the Economy Ministry said it aimed to restructure the lender. Rodrigo Rato said yesterday he was standing aside as chairman of the group and proposed Jose Ignacio Goirigolzarri, former chief operating officer of Banco Bilbao Vizcaya SA (BBVA), as executive chairman.

When you think about it, though, even the Spanish Treasury has been effectively locked out of private credit markets. It has only been able to receive funding at relatively low interest rates (compared to those of, say, Greece) by the good grace of the ECB, which has gifted under-secured cash to the peripheral European banks, which have, in turn, recycled that cash into their government’s debt. At the same time, bond markets have been somewhat placated by the constant expectation that either the EFSF/ESM will acquire enough capital to backstop Italy and Spain, or that the ECB/Germany will relent and agree to directly monetize Eurozone government bonds.

Both of those things are looking extremely unlikely at this point, especially in the wake of the Greek/French elections and the message that systemic austerity will no longer be tolerated. Without the pillars of austerity and “structural adjustment”, there is very little justification for the ECB or Germany to continue backstopping the peripheral finances of the Eurozone. It’s not as if the consumers or businesses in these countries can even afford to buy Germany’s exports anymore, as made all too clear by Rajoy’s comments, and the failure of peripheral banks is all but guaranteed. When a financial institution such as Bankia is bailed out, make no mistake – there will be no one able or willing to bail out the Spanish Treasury.

Home Forums Spain Has Been Shut Out

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  • #8540
    ashvin
    Participant

    Mariano Rajoy, Prime Minister of Spain, made a very interesting comment in the Senate today. He told the politicians that virtually EVERYONE in Spain,
    [See the full post at: Spain Has Been Shut Out]

    #3134
    jal
    Participant

    Is it time to refurbish those antic windmills to generate a cash flow?

    #3135
    Golden Oxen
    Participant

    What is the problem, too much debt, or being tied to the EURO, or both? Debt problems have usually been solved by inflating it away. If the EURO prevents this it will have to be placed in the another idiotic idea waste basket, which it obviously was and still is. A currency without a country is just to silly an idea to allow a worldwide financial collapse. Let’s get back to German Marks, French Francs, Italian Lira etc. as soon as possible please; preferably before we are all standing in a soup line.

    #3136
    william
    Participant

    let the games begin!!!!

    now lets see how long they will be shut out before they realize shutting out of credit will hit the profit bottom line

    #3142
    Nassim
    Participant

    I spent many wonderful vacations in Spain in the 1960’s and 70’s – my parents lived there and I went to school and college in the UK.

    It was great. Everything was so cheap. I got around 50 pesetas per day of pocket money when I was 16 and I could get one almighty powerful Cuba Libre for 30 pesetas – around £0.25 at that time.

    My French Catalunian friends got me into the discos for free much of the time. Their parents had fled Franco’s armies a generation earlier and moved to France – places like Toulouse.

    Maybe the future is to be found in the past?

    #3143
    FrankRichards
    Participant

    Who knows. Maybe this time is for real. It’s not too surprising that it’s Spain, not Ireland. Ireland was sound until it bailed out the banks, while Spain had big hidden debt in the provinces and municipalities. I do wonder why not Portugal first, though.

    I agreed with Stoneleigh that the sucker rally wouldn’t last past 1Q 2010. Despite the TAE pravda, the extra 2.5 years has cost me dearly. I’m responsible for my own choices, and well, 18 months instead of 9, prediction is hard. However, we’re at 27 and the deal isn’t sealed.

    I can also understand the change in emphasis from TAE to live talks. Still, S&I presumably have something to say to honest live questioners about the factor of three and counting, and about what 2 extra years of flat out oil pumping does to the 10 year energy outlook. I doubt I’m the only TAE regular that would like to hear them.

    There are, or were, more readers here than citizens of the average town, and many of us have readers of our own. The current vacation is well deserved, but I suggest strongly that their overall mission would be well served by deferring a session or two with the East Overshoe district council and using the time to cogently post their current thinking here.

    #3145
    jal
    Participant

    In a debt economy, which you would all agree that we have, Those who are not taking on debts, are enemy of the state, unless you are part of the 01%.

    A $10,000 financial transaction by an individual, is to be reported to the gov. to control “money laundering”. Of course, unless companies are considered “individuals”, companies will not be subject to the same scrutiny.
    I seem to remember that the supreme court decided that companies are to have the same rights as an individual. Does that include charges for money laundering.

    #3147
    FrankRichards
    Participant

    @JAL, yes, in theory corporations are subject to the $10k limit. Both corporations and (in theory) individuals can get exemptions for ‘routine’ transactions. The example I saw many years ago was that the Red Sox are not required to file a report after every home game.

    #3152
    TheTrivium4TW
    Participant

    Golden Oxen post=2748 wrote: What is the problem, too much debt, or being tied to the EURO, or both? Debt problems have usually been solved by inflating it away. If the EURO prevents this it will have to be placed in the another idiotic idea waste basket, which it obviously was and still is. A currency without a country is just to silly an idea to allow a worldwide financial collapse. Let’s get back to German Marks, French Francs, Italian Lira etc. as soon as possible please; preferably before we are all standing in a soup line.

    When money *is* debt, you can’t inflate it away. the debt will *always* grow faster than the money creation, by definition.

    They could, however, redefine the money, though. But remember, what occurs depends on where one stands.

    In Argentina, their currency was hyperinflated from the perspective of someone in the Argentinian system. From outside the system (where the banksters dwell, BTW), though, it was actually a deflation. American dollars bought a LOT more in Argentina when the people of Argentina were bankrupted.

    “Collapse” is really a euphemism for a well marketed societal asset stripping operation by the criminal bankster class.

    #3155
    Golden Oxen
    Participant

    Triv, In all honesty this entire European mess is much to confusing and has too many variables and possible outcomes to make analysis possible.
    I cannot understand it hard as I try. It has been my observation that when a country has a sudden sharp devaluation in it’currency, Argentina, Mexico, Brazil, Bolivia etc. after the short term pain of the resultant inflation passes they seem to go along there merry way without constant suffering and misery. This European mess seems to be going in the other direction of a multi decade desire to suffer and inflict punishment. My idea as it was so nicely put by Nassim, “Maybe The Future is to be Found in the Past” Things seemed to work OK without the EURO before so lets try life without it again. Simple idea and I cannot back up the idea with anything but the observation that the current system is not functioning and the older one did, not perfectly of course but it was functional.

    #3156

    Golden Oxen post=2768 wrote: Triv, In all honesty this entire European mess is much to confusing and has too many variables and possible outcomes to make analysis possible.
    I cannot understand it hard as I try. It has been my observation that when a country has a sudden sharp devaluation in it’currency, Argentina, Mexico, Brazil, Bolivia etc. after the short term pain of the resultant inflation passes they seem to go along there merry way without constant suffering and misery. This European mess seems to be going in the other direction of a multi decade desire to suffer and inflict punishment. My idea as it was so nicely put by Nassim, “Maybe The Future is to be Found in the Past” Things seemed to work OK without the EURO before so lets try life without it again. Simple idea and I cannot back up the idea with anything but the observation that the current system is not functioning and the older one did, not perfectly of course but it was functional.

    I think the old system “worked” mainly because there was still so much surplus around of energy and the Industrial Economy was still growing. it was however clearly “inefficient” and there were large differences even back then between the “standard of living” in the PIIGS nations and that of those in Northern Europe. Spain and Italy were very “backward” relative to Germany back then, and the Euro gave them the opportunity through Debt to live more like Germans did. it also gave the Krauts the opportunity to live even BETTER, since they were vendor financing everything they sold to these nations.

    Transition BACK to the old currencies in a time of CONTRACTION is not going to solve any problems here. You wanna see Hyperinflation? You will see it in SPADES the minute that Drachma, Lira and Pesetas are reissued. These notes won’t be worth the paper they are printed on no matter how many Zeros they drop onto the note, and they better set the Printers to use Exponents or they will run out of room. They won’t buy any OIL.

    The currency problem here is not the CAUSE of the problems, it is an EFFECT of the problem of contraction off the Oil Economy and Industrialization. This problem cannot be solved through monetary manipulation of any kind. All that is being done in either case is to shift most of the Pain of the contraction onto the last folks who bought into the game too late.

    It will work its way into the center also of course, but the center will Ringfence as long as possible using the Big Ass Military to force the pain onto the less powerful first.

    RE
    https://www.doomsteaddiner.org

    #3166
    pipefit
    Participant

    I have a friend from Spain that lives here in the USA that I see about every 4 months or so. Over the last several years I would ask him about Spain and Europe, and he seemed to think that things were bad, but not significantly worse than here. Following Spain’s victory in the 2010 World cup soccer tournament, he said that the Spanish people were deliriously happy.

    When I saw him at a party a few days ago, he didn’t wait for me to ask about Spain. He came right out and said that the situation there was horrible. Apparently, the economy has deteriorated significantly over the last 6 months.

    There is no reason they can’t purchase oil. All they need to do is produce something one of the oil exporters wishes to purchase. I don’t think subdivisions of empty houses would fall in that category, nor airports in small cities. Supposedly the soil and climate is almost perfect for growing oranges. Oranges for oil, yeah, that’s the ticket, lol.

    #3170
    skipbreakfast
    Participant

    Yes, Frank, I agree that timing remains the most difficult hurdle. I take a fair bit of “solace” (and of course, an equal measure of horror) from the fact that everything continues to play out exactly as Stoneleigh has suggested. But the timeframe is confounding. This leaves us with a definite risk that TAE’s underlying message is rejected as listeners are worn down by “waiting”. But isn’t that exactly what the banks and governments would want? If they can’t change the direction of the tide, they can slow it down with such determination that we don’t know which way it’s really flowing. Keep in mind that an incredibly long list of indicators continue to pile up suggesting we are in a downward spiral, while the lack of a precipitous “collapse” mixed in with exhausting “positive indicators” make I&S’s job a lot harder! Too many variables. A huge amount of momentum on the side of the status quo (equal in magnitude to the bubble itself). And so we go bankrupt ever so gradually, and then, in theory, very suddenly.

    #3183
    Robin
    Member

    @ RE
    “Spain and Italy were very “backward” relative to Germany back then, and the Euro gave them the opportunity through Debt to live more like Germans did”
    No, Italy wasn’t at all “backwards” before entering the Euro, in fact it was a very prosperous country. The spending power of Italians after entering the Euro was suddenly cut into half, in came the temping jobs, factory closures, outsourcing, Silvio Berlusconi and rising personal debt( many of these things were slowly underway already during the ’90s). I can assure you these past ten years have been the most miserable and depressing in the whole history of the Italian republic.

    #3223
    einhverfr
    Member

    Some thoughts here. First the major selling point for the Euro is that it reduces banking fees for international transactions. For countries that are small like Luxemburg, it is a godsend. The reason why countries like Spain or Greece are hesitant to leave the Eurozone is that leaving carries large financial costs for international businesses.

    Leaving the Eurozone by itself won’t solve any problems. However one thing it does do is open up the door to greater localization of the economy, and from colleagues in Europe, I understand this is already happening.

    The solution is to localize the economies and then leave the Eurozone, but that’s a tough thing to do.

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