Tags
Bailout, Banking Crisis, Brian Cowen, CDS, CDS Swaps, Elections, Fianna Fail, Hyperinflation, Iceland, Ireland, Taoiseach, Trinity College Dublin, WTF is Next?
The announcement by Brian Cowen that he was resigning as the leader of the Fianna Fail party, but is going to stay on as Taoiseach (Prime Minister) until the March 11 election, has put the Irish bailout into question. The November bailout of the Irish economy consisted of a series of different financing packages being combined into a larger total.
The first funds available under the bailout were provided by the raiding of the Irish retirement fund by its bankers. The next steps were to be funded by the EU and IMF funding sources, once the people of Ireland were legally subjected to the bailout requirements. The bailout never made it to a full vote before the collapse of the Fianna Fáil party.
This leaves Ireland in the unique position of being able to reclaim its future, by denying its past. The citizens of Ireland have not accepted the bailout. The coalition is not expected to be able to put the matter to a vote before the election.
“All we know is we are going to get an election on or before March 11 but that is about it,” said Micheal Marsh, professor of politics at Trinity College Dublin, calling the events of the past week “bizarre.”
“If the conditions in which all of this was going on were not so serious it really would be farcical.”
The people are clear they plan on voting for anyone who will fight the bailout. This makes the chances of a post-election bail out vote of acceptance unlikely. If the Bailout fails to be voted on in the coming days, it may never make it to a vote.
The Irish people are overwhelmingly against the loss of their Sovereignty because bankers were allowed to take outsized risk. The fact that these same bankers were allowed to book extremely large bonuses for bankrupting the nation is at the core of the problem.
The Iceland solution, the iceberg in the European bailout process, is becoming harder and harder to ignore as a solution to the problems of a Sovereign state. Iceland has managed to abandon its banks, right size its economy, and regain organic growth.
“We’re at an important turning point in many ways,” Finance Minister Steingrimur J. Sigfusson said. “We’re mainly trying to present our own case, which we think is good enough to make a convincing story that Iceland is a safe place to lend money to.”
“The economy is turning to growth and we think it’s about time to start seriously preparing to make a move on the international financial markets,” he said. “The long-term developments have been very favorable and the CDS on Iceland is now lower, or around the same, as it was well before the banking crisis.”
Today, Iceland’s Sovereign CDS swaps are at levels before the crisis. They have dropped below the level of Portugal and Spain. The nation had its first organic growth in the last two years, from July through September.
CDS on Iceland’s five-year debt traded at 310 basis points on Jan. 10, compared with 359.6 for Spain and 650 for Portugal, according to CMA data available on Bloomberg.
Iceland is sitting on large FX reserves, and due to its small number of actual citizens, it is in no need for actual funding. The first bond offering since the crisis will be small in size, but large in symbolic terms. Iceland will be fully rehabilitated; no one can say the same about any of the EU states following the proscribed internal deflation approach.
Iceland has embraced hard pain upfront, abandoned its overleveraged banks, and has weathered the storm. It is growing again, and is able to fund itself. These events are a beacon to any nation that could follow the same path.
The only question about Ireland today, is if they are going to stay debt slaves of their banks, or are they going to embrace a return of Sovereignty to the Emerald Island.
H/T TD @ Zerohedge
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When I wrote this, I believed there was an additional vote of approval necessary for the release of the bailout funds. In further reading, it appears all necessary legal votes have been taken.
I was wrong.
Jack H Barnes
It was the Finance bill I was thinking of when I wrote this article. I was under the mistaken belief it was necessary for the bailouts to be released.
You forgot to mention that Ireland financed its 2010 budget by printing “fake” euros, to the tune of 25% of its needs!
This was reported in a few blogs (Mish…), but not in mainstream medias. Go figure…
Having said that, let’s hope that the next Irsh government will “see the light”, default on the national debt, and thus force the EU to get its head out of its a..!
Arrogant Germans, French and others need to see their big banks take a dive and realize that they were not smarter and better than those they are trying to punish now.
Actually, I was one of the first articles on the E printing story, a day before Mish did his version.
Mine was published Monday, his was on Tuesday.
Best,
Jack
Jack, things are crumbling by the minute in Ireland. The Green Party just pulled out of the government. Don’t see how Cowen can survive even another week. Elections will now come sooner than March and the mandate to the winner will be, to redo the bailout so that bankers at least share the pain. Interesting times.
I’ll be curious to see how the euro opens on Sunday night. The Chinese and Mr. Trichet were able to engineer a pretty nice short squeeze the last 2 weeks, w/short really throwing in the towel on Friday.
Steve,
The story is moving at near light speed, but the latest that I am aware of is as follows…
The election could be moved forward to middle of February, if the finance bill passes quickly, it could also be pushed past the March 11th deadline as the time to seek passage is not in the time formula.
Cowen is supposed to start to name new replacement ministers for the missing greens, but he has to have a majority in the DIAL as I understand it, which he doesn’t have now. The Irish appear to have found a solution where nothing moves forward and nothing can happen.
Cowen should have resigned his P.M. role when he resigned his party leadership. You can not be worthy for your nation, if you are not worthy for your own party.
The Chinese slamming into the Euro FX market last week, helping to crush the overhanging shorts, has the Euro in a net long position now. My only regret is that I didnt buy Euro puts on Friday in the last minutes of the market.
I will be looking to buy FXE puts tomorrow with a nice long hold time. I also want to go long Popcorn futures. This looks like it has the makings for a double header.
Here’s a thought…I was reading the piece on ZH by Hugh Hendry and noticed his reference to the 1920′s and how the politicos dealt with things then. He says that following WW1, it was felt that the public had already been hurt too badly for more austerity programs. What is not mentioned is that this was pretty much at the end of the Western culture’s Age of Revolution. Starting with the the American Revolution, and followed by the French Revolution, things had been shaky in Western European societies. The traditional monarchies had been falling by the wayside. Violent revolution had become a multi-generational fear. And the Russian Revolution was still working itself out during the 1920′s. Since the end of WW2, however, there has been quite a reduction of popular uprisings that topple nations in the west. There have been a few, with China being the prime example…but China isn’t/wasn’t really thought of as a western nation anyway. The others, like Cuba, have been small peripheral nations that are bit players on the world stage. But the main stars of this play have been pretty stable as far as the relationship between public and governments have been concerned. This could change. The mismanagement of nations economies and the effects it will have on the public could easily start of new wave of revolution similar to what the 18th and 19th Centuries saw. Only instead of the revolutions being focused on representative governments, it will be focused on economic malfeasance.
This kind of conjecture has been going around for awhile, now, so this is nothing new. What I hadn’t seen is a possible view that a historian might take in the future about this period.
Derek, I think of this Era as Pax Americana. The era of the western peace. If you look around the world, no one has their own military at home anymore.
The US via the UN, has redeployed everyone elses armies as peacekeepers. Its a through back to the old Alexander the Great strategy of conquer, hold & move. Move everyone else around so no one is at home to formant real complaints about your approach.
Today, Western Nations no longer keep large standing armies at home to defend the homeland. Communist nations are the last of this breed.