by zerohedge.com
WHEN THE RED QUEEN IS AFTER YOUR HEAD
When Zig turns to Zag and the Red Queen is after your head then
extraordinary care is necessitated. To quote Holmes, "The game is afoot"
on the Continent.
I have been asked, with some frequency, why the bondholders have not been tagged in the Cyprus fiasco.
That answer is simple. Most of Cyprus's bonds are pledged as collateral
at the ECB or in the Target2 financing program. Then one may also ask
why the bonds of the two large Cypriot banks are not being hit. The
answer is the same; most are held as collateral at the ECB or Target2.
In both cases, remember uncounted liabilities, the government of Cyprus
has guaranteed the debt. Consequently if the two Cyprus banks default it
is of small matter as the sovereign has guaranteed the debt. However if
the country defaults and leaves the European Union then it will matter
and matter significantly as the tiny country of Cyprus would wipe out
the entire equity capital of the European Central Bank. While
it is not a matter of public record it is estimated that Cyprus has
guaranteed about $11.6 billion of collateral at the ECB.
On
Friday Cyprus made provisions for the re-structuring of its banks. They
also imposed capital controls. However what they have not done yet is
decide how they will reach the funding demanded by Europe. That decision
was postponed until after a meeting with the Troika that will take
place today and a meeting of the EU Finance Ministers that will take
place on Sunday.
The last go-round on this issue, as you may recall, resulted in not one single vote for the imposition of the expropriation of people's bank accounts or what Europe misguidedly calls a tax.
Taxes are legislated, paid from people's checkbooks and not removed
from their bank accounts by a government. Taking money from a citizen's
bank account by fiat is little more than theft as it is delineated as
private property and is the person's own money and not a bond or stock
or a security of some sort with the normal risks appended to any sort of
an investment. Even in the case of a bank closure where there is a
bankruptcy proceeding there is the "due process of law" where decisions
are made by the Judiciary and not mandated by a session of Parliament.
Further, not all of the deposits in Cyprus are in troubled banks.
There is UBS, several Israeli banks, a number of French banks et al
that are not troubled and still Europe wants to demand that the bank
accounts in those relatively healthy banks have depositor's money taken
out of them to pay for the woes of the government.
Equally troubling to me has been the European process.
The ECB gave Cyprus four days to come up with the funding demanded by
Germany before they turn off the lending to Cyprus. I am reminded of Mr.
Draghi's, "We will do whatever it takes" speech but this was not what I
had thought it meant. The word "bullied" comes to mind as well as the word "vengeance."
There is some discussion to be had about deposit guarantees as part of
this drama but, setting that aside for a moment, to even take one Euro
from a person's bank account strikes me as a precedent that will have
long lasting effects on all the people in Europe as the seizure of
private property is no longer protected by law. Then to offer shares in
a bankrupt institution as compensation is an attendance at the Theatre
of the Absurd while I wonder how they are going to force UBS or BNP to
issue shares for the money taken from those banks.
In the Press,
on this Saturday morning, they are discussing a European proposal to
expropriate 25% of all bank accounts in the entire country of Cyprus to
help pay the bills. This would be from normal citizens, Russians, other
foreigners, British expats, American corporations and any one at all
with money in any Cyprus bank. This would include not just the
banks of Cyprus but also the French, Swiss, Emirates and Israeli banks
et al with offices there. There is a long history of bank
robbery in the world but this is one heist that makes John Dillinger or
Jessie James a small fry by comparison.
(Reuters) German
Chancellor Angela Merkel told lawmakers that while she wanted to keep
Cyprus in the euro zone, it must first recognize it had no future as an
offshore financial center.
Given what Europe is
attempting to do to Cyprus she might as well have said, "that it must
first recognize that it had no future" and left it there. Bank
accounts expropriated, a future expropriated and the reputation of the
European Union tossed into the Rhine and drowning.
I think that about sums it up.
No comments:
Post a Comment