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2015/01/30

A Letter To Germany


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A Letter To Germany

I know that this may sound a little odd, but I read a great article about the Greek loans from the ECB and the angst it's causing - penned by the new Greek Prime Minister. Of course if one is honest, these are loans from Germany (the only strong country in the EU) to Greece, thus the direct nature of the following letter that was read here: http://syriza.net.gr/index.php/en/pressroom/253-open-letter-to-the-german-readers-that-which-you-were-never-told-about-greece

Most of you, dear Handesblatt readers, will have formed a preconception of what this article is about before you actually read it. I am imploring you not to succumb to such preconceptions. Prejudice was never a good guide, especially during periods when an economic crisis reinforces stereotypes and breeds biggotry, nationalism, even violence.

In 2010, the Greek state ceased to be able to service its debt. Unfortunately, European officials decided to pretend that this problem could be overcome by means of the largest loan in history on condition of fiscal austerity that would, with mathematical precision, shrink the national income from which both new and old loans must be paid. An insolvency problem was thus dealt with as if it were a case of illiquidity.

In other words, Europe adopted the tactics of the least reputable bankers who refuse to acknowledge bad loans, preferring to grant new ones to the insolvent entity so as to pretend that the original loan is performing while extending the bankruptcy into the future. Nothing more than common sense was required to see that the application of the 'extend and pretend' tactic would lead my country to a tragic state. That instead of Greece's stabilization, Europe was creating the circumstances for a self-reinforcing crisis that undermines the foundations of Europe itself.

My party, and I personally, disagreed fiercely with the May 2010 loan agreement not because you, the citizens of Germany, did not give us enough money but because you gave us much, much more than you should have and our government accepted far, far more than it had a right to. Money that would, in any case, neither help the people of Greece (as it was being thrown into the black hole of an unsustainable debt) nor prevent the ballooning of Greek government debt, at great expense to the Greek and German taxpayer.

Indeed, even before a full year had gone by, from 2011 onwards, our predictions were confirmed. The combination of gigantic new loans and stringent government spending cuts that depressed incomes not only failed to rein the debt in but, also, punished the weakest of citizens turning people who had hitherto been living a measured, modest life into paupers and beggars, denying them above all else their dignity. The collapse of incomes pushed thousands of firms into bankruptcy boosting the oligopolistic power of surviving large firms. Thus, prices have been falling but more slowly than wages and salaries, pushing down overall demand for goods and services and crushing nominal incomes while debts continue their inexorable rise. In this setting, the deficit of hope accelerated uncontrollably and, before we knew it, the 'serpent's egg' hatched – the result being neo-Nazis patrolling our neighbourhoods, spreading their message of hatred.

Despite the evident failure of the 'extend and pretend' logic, it is still being implemented to this day. The second Greek 'bailout', enacted in the Spring of 2012, added another huge loan on the weakened shoulders of the Greek taxpayers, "haircut" our social security funds, and financed a ruthless new cleptocracy.

Respected commentators have been referring of recent to Greece's stabilization, even of signs of growth. Alas, 'Greek-covery' is but a mirage which we must put to rest as soon as possible. The recent modest rise of real GDP, to the tune of 0.7%, signals not the end of recession (as has been proclaimed) but, rather, its continuation. Think about it: The same official sources report, for the same quarter, an inflation rate of -1.80%, i.e. deflation. Which means that the 0.7% rise in real GDP was due to a negative growth rate of nominal GDP! In other words, all that happened is that prices declined faster than nominal national income. Not exactly a cause for proclaiming the end of six years of recession!

Allow me to submit to you that this sorry attempt to recruit a new version of 'Greek statistics', in order to declare the ongoing Greek crisis over, is an insult to all Europeans who, at long last, deserve the truth about Greece and about Europe. So, let me be frank: Greece's debt is currently unsustainable and U, especially while Greece is being subjected to continuous fiscal waterboarding. The insistence in these dead-end policies, and in the denial of simple arithmetic, costs the German taxpayer dearly while, at once, condemning to a proud European nation to permanent indignity. What is even worse: In this manner, before long the Germans turn against the Greeks, the Greeks against the Germans and, unsurprisingly, the European Ideal suffers catastrophic losses.

Germany, and in particular the hard-working German workers, have nothing to fear from a SYRIZA victory. The opposite holds. Our task is not to confront our partners. It is not to secure larger loans or, equivalently, the right to higher deficits. Our target is, rather, the country's stabilization, balanced budgets and, of course, the end of the grand squeeze of the weaker Greek taxpayers in the context of a loan agreement that is simply unenforceable. We are committed to end 'extend and pretend' logic not against German citizens but with a view to the mutual advantages for all Europeans.

Dear readers, I understand that, behind your 'demand' that our government fulfills all of its 'contractual obligations' hides the fear that, if you let us Greeks some breathing space, we shall return to our bad, old ways. I acknowledge this anxiety. However, let me say that it was not SYRIZA that incubated the cleptocracy which today pretends to strive for 'reforms', as long as these 'reforms' do not affect their ill-gotten privileges. We are ready and willing to introduce major reforms for which we are now seeking a mandate to implement from the Greek electorate, naturally in collaboration with our European partners.

Our task is to bring about a European New Deal within which our people can breathe, create and live in dignity.

A great opportunity for Europe is about to be born in Greece. An opportunity Europe can ill afford to miss.

The letter above will not be well received by many, especially those in the ECB; however, it is an amazing breath of fresh air to hear a politician speak frankly rather than hiding his real intentions in innuendo and fake promises.

I don't know about you, dear reader, but I have certainly had enough with the never-ending sophistry of 99.999999% of politicians. There is no easy way out of Greece's horrible financial situation and Mr. Tsipras is clearly fighting an uphill battle; there will be more pain, but I wish him the best of luck.

Trade well and follow the trend, not the perma-bull OR perma-bear "experts."

Behold the age of infinite moral hazard! On April 2nd, 2009 CONgress forced FASB to suspend rule 157 in favor of deceitful accounting for the TBTF banking mafia.

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The markets rebounded back after a small slide early on, to finish up strong for the session. The major averages rallied hard, and did not look back after it bounced off the lows of the day. While we could see a huge pop on Friday from profit takers, we could also see a hammer from GDP numbers due out before the market open. If we drop early in the session today, I expect buyers to put up a fight. With some major stocks(AMZN, GOOG, V) reporting better than expected numbers, those stocks jumping higher can help fuel the buying. It will be interesting to see if we do slam off the GDP numbers, as I fully expected a bounce today just from a short covering end of the week rally. If we do fail to bounce higher, expect the sellers to continue putting pressure on the markets every time  we rally back. As I mentioned yesterday, this has been the theme of this calender year. With earnings season projected to be the weakest since 2009, we can see why they want to sell the rally. Let's hope the buyers have enough juice to power through the selling.

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TECHNICAL DATA
ES 2008.75/1987.25
POC 1992.75
YM 17,288/17,116
NQ 4156.75/4107.75
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How do past earnings performances figure into a proposed signal now? The short answer is "to some extent". We treat it as one piece of the puzzle. Fact is, we don't have the report in front of us so we have to use any and every piece of information to help us formulate an opinion. Very seldom would we use past earnings as the sole or even predominant factor in generating a signal. We will use it, however, as a confirming piece of information. The best piece of information is how IV is priced. That is the consensus of all the people trading a given equity on the extent of the projected move. It doesn't tell us what direction though. Unusual Option Activity can give us a clue here. If someone comes in shortly before earnings and makes a big directional play, perhaps they know something. For some reason, some equities perform better than others over time. This evidence is a bit anecdotal with a relatively low sample size, but if an equity has positively performed 6 out of the last 8 earnings reports, do we want to try and buck that trend? Also, you want to look at the distribution of the earnings reports as well. Let's just say a given equity has an average move of 5% over the past 8 earnings. If the equity moves +/- 5% each report, this is a lot different than one that moves 0%, +10%, -5%, etc. The first distribution is quite predictive whereas the second really offers no degree of certainly of the extent of the move.

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