Greece and Why It's A World Wide House of Cards
I have come to believe that the most evil and sinister Too Big To Fail bank of all time is Goldman Sachs. If ever a bank turned fraud into an art form it is Goldman Sachs. That Hank Paulson sanctioned that fraud as CEO of GS and subsequently landed a job stealing a trillion or so from American tax payers- has often been the subject of this blog.
If you asked 100 people in America about the problems in Greece- very few would know anything nor would they care. So I snipped this piece because it lays it out quite nicely. Granted it's Greenspan- who apparently learned how to use more precise speech at some point after leaving the FED gig to our new and current resident genius, Bernanke.
Like every financial crime scene, Goldman Sachs left it's fingerprints in Greece.
In an interview with Bloomberg Mr Greenspan said the "chances of Greece not defaulting are very small".
His comments came as Greece’s prime minister George Papandreou's failed to win support for more austerity measures to help address its debt problems.
Mr Greenspan told Bloomberg the chances of Greece defaulting are now "so high that you almost have to say there’s no way out," which could put pressure on some US banks.
He argued Greece's debt crisis had the potential to push the US into another recession, as without it the probability of a recession "is quite low".
"There's no momentum in the system that suggests to me that we are about to go into a double-dip," he said. Mr Greenspan said the US's debt issue is becoming "horrendously dangerous" and said that he doubts lawmakers have another year or two to solve it.
He added that the US recovery is being hindered by apprehension among businesses over the long term outlook, and claimed there is nothing more for the Fed policymakers to do.
His comments come as traders feared Greece could become Europe's "Lehman's moment".
Neil Mackinnon, an economist at VTB Capital in London and a former Treasury official, told the Daily Telegraph: "The probability of a eurozone Lehman moment is increasing. The markets have moved from simply pricing in a high probability of a Greek debt default to looking at a scenario of it becoming disorderly and of contagion spreading to other economies like Portugal, like Ireland, and maybe Spain, Italy and Belgium."
Mr Greenspan was once credited as "the greatest central banker who ever lived" but has since been blamed for contributing to the US financial crisis by keeping interest rates low for too long. Mr Greenspan founded consulting firm Greenspan Associates after leaving the Federal Reserve.
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If you asked 100 people in America about the problems in Greece- very few would know anything nor would they care. So I snipped this piece because it lays it out quite nicely. Granted it's Greenspan- who apparently learned how to use more precise speech at some point after leaving the FED gig to our new and current resident genius, Bernanke.
Like every financial crime scene, Goldman Sachs left it's fingerprints in Greece.
Greenspan: The 'almost certain' Greece default could cause US double-dip
- Story by: by Nyree Stewart
- Magazine: InvestmentAdviser
- Published Friday , June 17, 2011
In an interview with Bloomberg Mr Greenspan said the "chances of Greece not defaulting are very small".
His comments came as Greece’s prime minister George Papandreou's failed to win support for more austerity measures to help address its debt problems.
Mr Greenspan told Bloomberg the chances of Greece defaulting are now "so high that you almost have to say there’s no way out," which could put pressure on some US banks.
He argued Greece's debt crisis had the potential to push the US into another recession, as without it the probability of a recession "is quite low".
"There's no momentum in the system that suggests to me that we are about to go into a double-dip," he said. Mr Greenspan said the US's debt issue is becoming "horrendously dangerous" and said that he doubts lawmakers have another year or two to solve it.
He added that the US recovery is being hindered by apprehension among businesses over the long term outlook, and claimed there is nothing more for the Fed policymakers to do.
His comments come as traders feared Greece could become Europe's "Lehman's moment".
Neil Mackinnon, an economist at VTB Capital in London and a former Treasury official, told the Daily Telegraph: "The probability of a eurozone Lehman moment is increasing. The markets have moved from simply pricing in a high probability of a Greek debt default to looking at a scenario of it becoming disorderly and of contagion spreading to other economies like Portugal, like Ireland, and maybe Spain, Italy and Belgium."
Mr Greenspan was once credited as "the greatest central banker who ever lived" but has since been blamed for contributing to the US financial crisis by keeping interest rates low for too long. Mr Greenspan founded consulting firm Greenspan Associates after leaving the Federal Reserve.
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And what are Greek depositors doing with their euros? You can see the massive exodus of euros
enter Switzerland as they convert their troubled euros into Swiss francs:
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