Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Remember this post:

From Paul Kedrosky:

"
Readings 02/18/09
  • Greenspan backs bank nationalization (FT)
  • Germany, France may face bailouts of other EU nations (Bloomberg)
  • A look at the Canadian oil sands (National Geographic Magazine)
  • Marc Faber OpEd says same things as usual about easy-money and the global financial crisis (WSJ)
  • December TIC data shows lower foreign Treasury demand, but more corporate bond demand (Setser)
  • Roubini OpEd reiterates his argument that bank nationalization is inevitable (WSJ)
  • The Nationalization Train Has Left The Station (Mish)
Me:

Paul,

Remember this post:

http://paul.kedrosky.com/archives/2009/02/13/germ...

[Updated] German 10-Year Bond Auction Fails for Second Time

This is such an interesting story, which is why I'm surprised it hasn't gotten more play

I wrote this:
According to my views, this should be a signal that there is a diminution in the fear and aversion to risk. This could also be a sign that Greece's bonds are actually backed by all the other Eurozone countries implicitly. I don't know, but it certainly seems that somebody is tired of getting paid nothing
for buying bonds. Since it's a 10 yr bond, it could also be that buyers feel that inflation will be back by then, so they don't want to be getting nothing for ten years, although there is some risk now.

I'm posting this because I'd really like to hear some ideas.

Now Evans-Pritchard:

"Ultimately, the European Central Bank could purchase bonds from vulnerable countries in the open market. That would amount to a full monetary bail-out, and the de facto creation of an EU debt union.
Such proposals have been anathema to Germany in the past. "

So, maybe we have an answer. Smart investors are betting that Greece's bonds are going to be backed by the EU. Good work on bringing the issue of the bond sales to our attention, even if I'm wrong.

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