Italiako, Alemaniako… eta EB-ko bankuaz hitz bi

Hasiera gisa, ikus Italiako banku krisiaz hitz bi (Mitchell-en eskutik)

Italiako bankuez

(1) M. Renzi eta DB:

A Furious Italian Prime Minister Slams Deutsche Bank As Europe’s Most Insolvent Bank

(2) Gobernuaren kolapsoaz:

Italian Government Collapse More Than Just A Possibility”

(3) The Italian job:

Italy’s teetering banks will be Europe’s next crisis

http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21701756-italys-teetering-banks-will-be-europes-next-crisis-italian-job?fsrc=scn/tw/te/pe/ed/theitalianjob

(4) IMF warms:

IMF Warns Of “Global Contagion” From Italy’s Bank Crisis; Forecasts Two-Decade Long Recession

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-07-11/imf-warns-global-contagion-italian-bank-crisis-forecasts-two-decade-long-recession

(5) Contagion from Italy?:

Who’s Most Afraid of Contagion from Italy’s Bank Meltdown?

French and German banks

http://wolfstreet.com/2016/07/10/contagion-from-italian-banking-meltdown-apart-french-german-banks/

Alemaniako bankuez

(a) Employment, Bank losses, German Banks:

http://moslereconomics.com/2016/07/08/employment-bank-losses-german-banks/

(b) 29 mila milioi:

Europe’s Bank Crisis Arrives In Germany: €29 Billion Bremen Landesbank On The Verge Of Failure

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-07-07/europes-bank-crisis-arrives-germany-%E2%82%AC29-billion-bremen-landesbank-verge-failure

(c) Chart: The Epic Collapse of Deutsche Bank:

http://www.visualcapitalist.com/chart-epic-collapse-deutsche-bank/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=SocialWarfare

(d) Deutsche Bank:

Deutsche Bank’s Chief Economist Calls For €150 Billion Bailout Of European Banks

Europa

Europe’s Economic Crisis Has Spread from the Periphery to the Core

Irtenbidea?

Warren Mosler, berriz: (in Warren Mosler-ek Italiako bankugintzaz):

Warren B. Mosler@wbmosler

@netbacker Italian bank crisis ends only after the ECB directly or indirectly ‘writes the check’ http://www.epicoalition.org/docs/rites_of_passage.htm …

2016 uzt. 7

Iruzkinak (5)

  • joseba

    Could Italy Bring Down The Euro?

    “International banks have lent Italy more than €500 billion, according to Die Welt, which reports that French banks alone hold €250 billion of Italian debt. German banks hold €84 billion of Italian bonds. The only question, according to analysts, is whether taxpayers or bondholders will be left holding the tab.

    Wolfgang Münchau of the Financial Times warned of the consequences of a disorderly Italian exit from the euro:

    “An Italian exit from the single currency would trigger the total collapse of the eurozone within a very short period. It would probably lead to the most violent economic shock in history, dwarfing the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy in 2008 and the 1929 Wall Street crash.”

    As Ambrose Evans-Pritchard of the Telegraph has pointed out, however, Italy must choose between the euro and its own economic survival. Leaving the euro “may be the only way to avert a catastrophic deindustrialization of the country before it is too late.””

  • joseba

    Italy’s banking crisis

    http://www.erensep.org/index.php/en/articles/economy/193-italy-s-banking-crisis

    “In short, the European Banking Union has been unable to guarantee that Italy can overcome the financial crisis in which it seems to sink. Italy provides us with yet another example of a major problem in the euro zone: the conflict between the Brussels-imposed rules and the national policies’ actual needs and demands. It is basically a problem of national sovereignty and therefore of democracy.

    At the same time, it is the manifestation of a conflict between creditors (Germany) and debtors (Italy)…”

  • joseba

    Italy doesn’t have a banking crisis; it has a euro crisis

    http://www.marketwatch.com/story/italy-doesnt-have-a-banking-crisis-it-has-a-euro-crisis-2016-07-21

    “Italy’s biggest problem is slow growth since joining the euro
    … Italy doesn’t really have a banking crisis at all. It has a currency crisis. The euro EURUSD, -0.0272%  sucked the demand out of the economy and killed growth. The result? Bad debts have soared. Now it is stopping the government from bailing out its financial sector.
    (…)
    Italian banks have been managed in a perfectly prudent and sensible manner. The problem is that the economy has got so much smaller. Growth has hit a wall, and it appears impossible to revive it. In 2015, the Italian economy expanded by less than 1%. In fact, Italy’s economy is still 8% smaller than it was before the 2008 crash, and no bigger than it was back in 1999 when it joined the euro. (…)
    … Italy has is a euro crisis, not a banking crisis. The single currency has destroyed the competitiveness of what, 20 years ago, was a perfectly healthy manufacturing sector. It has sucked demand out of the economy, and hammed consumer spending.

    Right now, the ECB and the eurozone finance ministers are operating as if this were a banking crisis like any other. Fix the banks, stop the irresponsible lending, and everything will be OK again. But that is simply not true.
    Even if the banks are fixed this time around, in a stagnant economy they will just run into trouble again in a few years time.
    Italy is trapped in the worst of all possible worlds — and it has become a vivid lesson in how dysfunctional the euro has become.”

    Italia izan liteke lehena Eurexit praktikan jartzeko.

    DTM-koek esan dutenez, zenbat eta lehenago irten eurogunetik, hobe.

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