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16-Nation Currency May Be Headed For Disintegration


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HOLA441

Yikes!

The euro fell to its lowest level since the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. on concern that the 16-nation currency may be headed for disintegration.

The shared currency fell for a fourth week versus the dollar and a third week versus the yen, the longest losing streaks since February, as German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that Europe is in a “very, very serious situation” despite a rescue package for the region’s most indebted nations. European Central Bank Governing Council member Axel Weber speaks on financial-market regulation next week in Berlin.

“We went through a massive liquidation trade in Europe and risk-taking positions were wiped out across the board,” said Sebastien Galy, a currency strategist at BN Paribas SA in New York. “The markets are trying to figure out what the consequences are for growth. There are massive uncertainties and that will keep the downward pressure on the euro.”

The euro fell 3.1 percent to $1.2358 this week, from $1.2755 on May 7. It traded as low as $1.2354 yesterday, the weakest since October 2008. The common currency dropped 2.1 percent to 114.38 yen, from 116.81 last week. The dollar traded at 92.47 yen after gaining 1 percent last week, the first weekly gain since the five days ended April 23.

‘A Sham, A Chimera’

European policy makers last week unveiled a loan package worth almost $1 trillion and a program of bond purchases in an effort to contain a sovereign-debt crisis that has threatened to shatter confidence in the euro. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said the move wasn’t supported by all 22 of the bank’s Governing Council members.

The ECB said it will intervene in government and private bond markets “to ensure depth and liquidity in those market segments which are dysfunctional,” and central banks in Germany, Italy and France began buying government bonds yesterday. The ECB restarted a dollar-swap line with the Federal Reserve.

By resorting to what some economists have called the “nuclear option,” the ECB may open itself to the charge it’s undermining its independence by helping governments plug budget holes.

“The ECB’s supposed ‘independence’ has now been shown to be nothing more than a sham, a chimera, a will-o’-the-wisp,” Dennis Gartman, a Suffolk, Virginia-based economist and hedge- fund manager, said in his daily Gartman Letter on May 10. “In the end the ECB and the euro will be punished for this decision to stand down from what had previously been considered sacred.”

Success Not Guaranteed

The greenback rose against Australia’s dollar and Norway’s krone, as oil and commodities retreated, damping demand for currencies linked to growth.

The Aussie fell 0.2 percent to 88.64 U.S. cents and the krone declined 0.4 percent to 6.2465 per dollar on speculation investors reversed carry trades that had profited from Australia’s 4.5 percent central bank rate and Norway’s 2.115 one-month deposit rate.

The benchmark rate of zero to 0.25 percent in the U.S. makes the dollar a popular funding currency for such trades. Such strategies lose money as the funding currency gains because it costs more to repay the loan.

Crude oil for June delivery fell 4.1 percent last week and the Reuters/Jeffries CRB Index of 19 commodities fell 2.8 percent yesterday. Norway is the world’s sixth largest oil exporter. Australia is the world’s biggest iron ore exporter.

Gold for immediate delivery yesterday reached an all-time high of $1,249.40 an ounce in New York as investors sought to hedge against Europe’s debt crisis.

Merkel, speaking yesterday at a panel discussion by Phoenix television, said that success is not yet guaranteed. Asked about disagreements with European Union partners, she said that “some arguments are worth it,” without elaborating.

‘The Euro Is Doomed’

The German chancellor’s comments followed a report from El Pais that French President Nicolas Sarkozy threatened to pull out of the euro unless Merkel agreed to back the European Union’s bailout plan at a meeting last weekend in Brussels, citing comments Spain’s Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero made at a meeting of socialist politicians. The Madrid- based newspaper didn’t say how it obtained the information. Aides to Sarkozy, Merkel and Zapatero all denied the report.

“The euro is doomed,” said Andrew Wilkinson, senior market analyst at Interactive Brokers Group LLC in Greenwich, Connecticut. “It’s like a clown without its makeup. The strains among the partners are becoming clear and it’s becoming harder to see global growth not being threatened by this.”

‘Head Through Parity’

The euro has lost 9 percent this year, according to Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Indices. The dollar has gained 7.2 percent and the yen has advanced 7.9 percent.

The euro “can easily head through parity” with the U.S. dollar under a “hard landing” recovery scenario from the European deficit crisis, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.

The forecast for the shared currency was reduced to $1.14 for the middle of next year, Alan Ruskin, head of foreign- exchange strategy at RBS Securities in Stamford, Connecticut, wrote in a note on May 13. The euro could test the key level of $1.1650 by year-end, he said.

The pound slid 1.8 percent to $1.4536, its third weekly decline versus the dollar, amid speculation that the U.K.’s governing coalition may collapse by year-end.

The U.K.’s Prime Minister David Cameron and his coalition partner, Nick Clegg, will “have a major problem keeping the left wing of the Liberal Democrats and the right wing” of the Conservatives in line, and a new election may be called before year-end, former Bank of England member David Blanchflower wrote in a Bloomberg News column on May 13.

The pound has dropped 2.8 percent against the dollar since May 11, when the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats formed a coalition government five days after elections failed to provide a clear winner.

The 'party' is just getting started.

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HOLA442

I hope the eussr collapses with it, unlike some:

If the euro collapses, Merkel warned, "then Europe and the idea of European union will fail." In her speech to guests gathered to honor this year's recipient of the award, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, Merkel called on Europeans to come together, saying that deeper coordination of economic and finance policies is needed.

"We have a common currency, but no common political and economic union," she said. "And this is exactly what we must change. To achieve this -- therein lies the opportunity of the crisis."

European governments, she said, promised their citizens stability for the common currency, the euro, "and we must keep that promise." But not the promise of a referendum, or the promise to accept the vote of the people (Eire.... "No"..... so just keep asking and when you get a "yes", stop asking..... is that disgusting or what??)

Read the rest of the old hag's delusions here: http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,694696,00.html

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HOLA443

Yawn, this has been discussed to death here on HPC already and no, the euro won't collapse (at least not until the globalist mafia decides it's time to introduce a global currency, which will mean dollar/pound/euro will all be forced to collapse first).

And your article is 3 days old (which is a lifetime these days with fast changing events)!

Edited by wise_eagle
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HOLA447

EUR/USD has been rallying the past 2 days

gold is down $25 from it's peak

everything is back to normal , no cause for alarm

market up, market down.

panic and good news hourly on doomberg TV.

IMHO, what would really help things is closing 5000 news channels all competing for headlines.

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HOLA4410

I hope the eussr collapses with it, unlike some:

If the euro collapses, Merkel warned, "then Europe and the idea of European union will fail." In her speech to guests gathered to honor this year's recipient of the award, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, Merkel called on Europeans to come together, saying that deeper coordination of economic and finance policies is needed.

"We have a common currency, but no common political and economic union," she said. "And this is exactly what we must change. To achieve this -- therein lies the opportunity of the crisis."

if they stopped trying to centralise absolutely everything,tax it,regulate it and just stick to a few basic trade principles then it might work.

BUT.

1) all nations need to keep their national sovereignty

2) Parish/state law can sometimes overrule federal law

3) common currency should be treated for what it truly is,a means of exchange of goods/services....and nothing more....no political wranglings.

4)People are individuals,not part of a grand collective unless by CONSENT.

..if the CONSENT bit comes back as a NO,then amendments need to be made....not bullying people until they submit.

this is why the US succeeds,and the euro in it's present guise will not.

if the EU were to adopt a more "US" mode of government then it might work,but not the other way around.

Edited by oracle
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HOLA4413

The Greece situation has been dealt with terribly, a total fudge driven by an irrational desire to keep the status quo in the euro zone. Until the real problem is dealt with the euro will be on a downward trajectory and sterling will follow at least in the short to medium term. Problems in the eurozone will clearly effect our growth / economy as well.

That being said the USD is hardly rock solid, running a trillion dollar deficit and the printing presses going full speed ahead. No gold and hard assets are on the up.

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