Thursday, July 21, 2011

As Rome Burns, The ECB Fiddles


With the heads of Germany and the European Central Bank getting along about as well as Obama and the Tea Party, the European Union is moving quickly towards total political failure. Weeks of disagreement by Europe’s political and financial leaders have let the crisis move far ahead of their discussions.Last week Italy was dragged into the morass when yields on Italian treasury bonds popped above 6%. According to Goldman Sachs analysis, Italy cannot service the debt should yields reach 7%, potentially escalating the European debt crisis to full meltdown.

Austerity packages aren’t going to fix that problem (they might even make it worse by slowing economic growth). Italy needs either a way to grow faster — by ditching the euro and devaluing a revived lira— or pay lower interest rates —by financing some of its debt through Eurozone bonds.

The steep climb in Italian yields is an indication that financial markets have begun to focus on the need for a more far-reaching restructuring of the euro system. Neither of those items appears to be on the agenda for Thursday’s “non-emergency” summit. European leaders still seem to believe that they can “solve” the crisis by kicking the Greek debt problem down the road into 2014, A more accurate metaphor would be rolling the Greek snowball down the mountain, as the problem continues to get bigger as they balk at a real solution.

I think this all means that any relief rally from a new Greek debt package is likely to be short-lived and we will be living this deja vu once again. With Greece able to finance its debts through late August, thanks to a $17 billion payment from the first rescue package, the stalemate could extend into September. Sound a bit familiar? With the U.S. facing a debt ceiling deadline of August 2 it appears the dollar and the euro may take turns as the weakest currency on the planet for at least the next couple of months.

How to invest the meltdown

The question most investors are asking though has little to do with the best solution (i.e. the ECB issuing Eurozone bonds backed by the EU so there is common debt to go along with a common currency). Most investors are wondering how to protect their life savings or perhaps even make a little money while the politicians manufacture solutions to the problems they created.

Beyond what should be obvious by now, gold and silver will most likely be profitable safe havens during the currency turmoil. Shorting large banks is working and will likely continue until such day that real solutions to sovereign debt are found. At that point we can go back to worrying about the banks “assets,” especially those burdensome mortgage loans that just won’t go away. In the meantime, I believe the TIPS of non-Euro and non-US governments might be profitable as even controlled inflation produces reasonable yields in appreciating currencies.

But the crisis promises to ebb and flow as politicians on each side of the Atlantic prove more inept than their counterparts in handling their respective debts. European ineptness causes some dollar strengthening, hurting most stocks and commodities, while America’s politicians seem only capable of tactics, but no strategy, leaving the markets to daily, decide who is most inept.

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