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Euro Value Slides - And Europe Is Faced With Mounting Debt Crisis

CARLO PIOVANO   05/ 6/10 05:54 PM ET   AP

Euro Debt Crisis

LONDON — As Europe works to douse its government debt crisis the flames just keep spreading, with the euro and U.S. stocks sinking Thursday along with confidence that politicians and central bankers can act fast enough to save the continent from an economic tailspin.

Those fears sparked extreme turbulence on Wall Street, as the Dow Jones industrial average lost almost 1,000 points in a sudden dive mid-afternoon New York time. There were reports a trading error hastened the selling.

Down almost 9 percent at one point, the Dow recovered to end off 3.2 percent. European stock markets had already closed by the time of New York's violent drop, ending with more modest losses. Britain's FTSE 100 index fell or 1.5 percent, while Germany's DAX ended down 0.8 percent. The CAC-40 in France was off 2.2 percent.

U.S. markets fell even after lawmakers approved drastic austerity cuts Thursday needed to secure international rescue loans worth euro110 billion ($140 billion).

Europe's top central banker downplayed the risks of contagion – but ratings agency Moody's rattled markets by warning that banks in Portugal, Italy, Spain, Ireland and Britain could all be hurt by a widening debt crisis.

The euro sagged 1.7 percent to $1.2607 after ratings agency Moody's warned that banks in Portugal, Italy, Spain, Ireland and Britain could all be hurt debt crisis, and after European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet offered no new measures against the debt troubles. It was as high as $1.51 late last year.

Nerves were further frayed by an ominous rise in Spain's borrowing costs at a debt auction – a clear sign of fear as investors demand higher rates from borrowers they consider riskier.

European leaders acknowledged they were at a difficult point in their struggle to contain the debt crisis. They have agreed to join with the International Monetary Fund to bail out Greece with euro110 billion in loans over three years, but fears of more trouble have not subsided.

That money is expected to reach Greece in time for it to make a May 19 debt payment it says it can't make without the help.

But its longer term prospects for avoiding bankruptcy are uncertain, and other governments with weak finances are facing debt downgrades and seeing their borrowing costs creep up as markets see them as riskier.

Those worries have pushed down stocks and raised fears that Greece is just the leading edge of another phase of the world financial turmoil, this time focused on government debt instead of banks or mortgages.

After months of delays in which Greece's debt crisis threatened to spiral out of control, European leaders are now stressing their willingness to act in support of their 11-year-old project in sharing a currency.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy wrote in a letter published in daily Le Monde Thursday that they were "fully committed to preserve the solidity, stability and unity of the euro zone."

They called for giving new teeth to the basic rules underpinning the euro – rules that mandate limits on government spending but which have been treated as an honor system and flouted for years by European governments.

"For economic and monetary union to remain a success story, dealing with this crisis alone will not suffice. We need to go further in drawing all the lessons and in taking all necessary measures to avoid a repetition of a crisis of this kind," the letter says.

They call for "reinforcing fiscal surveillance within the euro area, including by providing for more effective sanctions" against those who violate deficit limits.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said the governments that use the euro must "avoid under any circumstances the bankruptcy of Greece because the consequences would be unforeseeable and irresponsible." The German parliament was getting ready to vote Friday on Germany's share of the Greek bailout.

The concern is that more bailouts and financial pain for banks are in the offing, as well as more stress on Europe's project of economic and political integration.

European Central Bank President Trichet played down contagion fears after the bank left interest rates unchanged at 1 percent. "Portugal and Greece are not on the same boat, and this is very visible when you look at the facts and figures," he told reporters after the rate decision in Lisbon. "Portugal is not Greece. Spain is not Greece."

Trichet unveiled no new measures to fight the contagion, stressing governments needed to get their budgets in shape.

EU Industrial Commissioner Antonio Tajani, an Italian, rejected Moody's assessment of his home country – an increasingly common stance for European officials frustrated by a string of downgrades that have fed the crisis mood.

"One needs to be serious and prudent when making these judgments," he said in Brussels.

France was expected to approve its bailout commitment Thursday while Parliament in Germany, where the rescue package is unpopular, is expected to vote Friday. Chancellor Angela Merkel's governing coalition appeared to have the votes to pass it, with even opposition politicians signaling support.

Despite market speculation to the contrary, the ECB said Thursday that it did not discuss buying government bonds in the markets as a way of easing the debt crisis. Trichet unveiled no new crisis measures, but held out the possibility that the bank was "permanently on the alert and capable of taking the appropriate decisions even if they are unconventional."

The ECB has already dropped the minimum rating requirement for banks to use Greek bonds to get short-term central bank credits, key support for Greece and the banking system in case Greece's credit is downgraded further.

An improvement in market sentiment will be needed if borrowing costs are to be kept in check – Spain's latest 5-year bonds were issued at an interest rate of 3.58 percent, up from 2.84 percent in the last auction as recently as March.

Moody's warning on contagion came only a day after it put Portugal on watch for a possible downgrade of its sovereign debt and a week after rival Standard & Poor's downgraded Greece's government bonds to junk status.

Moody's said the banking systems of Portugal, Italy, Spain, Ireland and Britain all face challenges of different types, but warned that "contagion risk could dilute these differences and impose very real, common threats on all of them."

___

Associated Press writers Pan Pylas in London, Angela Charlton in Paris, Elena Becatoros in Athens, Colleen Barry in Milan and David Rising and Verena Schmitt-Roschmann in Berlin contributed to this report.

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LONDON — As Europe works to douse its government debt crisis the flames just keep spreading, with the euro and U.S. stocks sinking Thursday along with confidence that politicians and central ban...
LONDON — As Europe works to douse its government debt crisis the flames just keep spreading, with the euro and U.S. stocks sinking Thursday along with confidence that politicians and central ban...
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10:45 AM on 05/14/2010
The European Bazooka which led to a massive short covering rally on Monday has been proven a complete waste in just 5 days. Reports of political and social fissures within the European Union and more importantly the prospect of slow growth in the whole region due to fiscal cuts has led to the Euro falling even below the level of last week.This despite the raison de etre of the bailout being the “defence of the Euro” .Read more at http://www.greenworldinvestor.com
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrJJ
02:16 PM on 05/09/2010
German state vote curbs Merkel's power

BERLIN – Angela Merkel's center-right alliance lost a key election in Germany's most populous state on Sunday, costing the chancellor her majority in the upper house of parliament and curbing her government's power, projections showed.

The state election in North Rhine-Westphalia — the first electoral test since Merkel's second term started last October — had loomed over European efforts to tackle the Greek debt crisis.

Merkel initially held out on agreeing to aid for cash-strapped Athens, prompting German opposition parties to accuse her of avoiding an unpopular decision in the election run-up.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100509/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_germany_election
sarabono
Oldie but Goody
01:07 AM on 05/08/2010
Continental Europe has to much Government and Government Debt relative to GDP. This debt has been accumulated due to overly generous entitlement programs that become harder to pay for over time as benefits are increased to keep the benefit granting politicians in power. (We are heading down the same road.)

There are really only two strong European economy's of significance. Germany and to a much less extent, France.

The real question over the next period is can the Euro survive? Will Germany bail out Spain, Portugal and possibly others. I doubt it.

Are the Europeans up to dealing with a period of economic pain as there socialists entitlement programs become unaffordable? I believe there is a very good chance they will not be able to stomach the pain. I believe the Euro, and the huge government agency called the EU, could flounder and break up rather quickly. If this does happen, it will be short and swift over a matter of a couple of weeks and will present many additional problems for the US, banks and the world's trading system.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sposton
right to tell what they don't want to hear
01:03 PM on 05/07/2010
You can bet your last dollar that the hedge funds are not stopping with Greece. They are not done - the biggest gains are yet to be made with Spain, Portugal, Italy,...UK...USA?
12:55 PM on 05/07/2010
Me thinks the Germans will profit from the Greeks loss.
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Cipo
Political atheist
11:55 AM on 05/09/2010
Absolutely they will, and evidently so will the military contractors. Take a read here:
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\05\08\story_8-5-2010_pg4_9
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07:36 PM on 05/06/2010
Booked my trip to Europe. Italy, Spain and Germany. Great time to shop.
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04:23 PM on 05/06/2010
So. Were should I put my money and not have it stolen from the bankers in office.
conservo
Tea Partier, Atheist, Libertarian, Objectivist
12:55 PM on 05/07/2010
Gold.
sarabono
Oldie but Goody
12:45 AM on 05/08/2010
Gold,(GLD) and Mint Gold Coins, Silver,(SLV) Oil Trusts (like BPT) and Nat Gas Transmission and Service Co's like EPD
10:46 AM on 05/06/2010
The Euro is perpetuating teh problem to a large degree. And I say this as an avid supporter of the euro when it was introduced. The reality we are now seeing is that the Euro was basically a form of subsdiy for the perpetual parasite of Europe Germany. Previously, the drachma would have just depreciated to the point that the bottom line healed because Greece's tourism and even exports picked up because of the enhanced buying power, and the internal depreciation would have been less noticeable except for imports. Under the current system, Greece is stuck with an inflexible currency that cannot depreciate, so it has to cut top line amounts instead.
02:16 PM on 05/06/2010
Clueless in Chicago
01:08 PM on 05/07/2010
"Under the current system, Greece is stuck with an inflexible currency that cannot depreciate,"

You hear this over and over again, but it's simply not true. The implication is that the Euro is not a "real" currency, that cannot depreciate. But in fact the Euro actually is already depreciating, exactly the way other currencies do. It will have the exact same effect.

The reality is that the debts have nothing whatsoever to do with the euro. Debt is debt. It doesn't matter in the least whether it's measured in drachmas or euros or dollars or pounds. Borrowing money always leads to troubles, regardless of the currency it's borrowed in. The UK doesn't have the euro, yet it's situation is going to much worse than Greece's. Just wait and see.
10:40 AM on 05/06/2010
If it spreads and comes back here, we as a nation are doomed.
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jcaunter
Profile: schizoid, INTJ, IQ145
03:14 PM on 05/06/2010
Change "if" to "when" and you will have an accurate statement there.
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Y3rMawm
veni, vidi, bibi.
04:36 PM on 05/06/2010
Yeah. It appears that the singularity of debt has Europe firmly in it's crushing gravitational grasp, and will eat the EU before it pulls us in.
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spinns17
TEAMSTER
10:30 AM on 05/06/2010
http://www.auditthefed.com/
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piul05
Can I have a biscuit yet?
10:25 AM on 05/06/2010
Rating agencies play a large part in the unfolding of financial crises. They are hardly innocent observers in the speculative game.

Even right-wing, unregulated markets apologists such as the European Commission President, Durão Barroso, are now coming round to the same obvious conclusion.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/b08aeefc-5854-11df-9eaf-00144feab49a.html?nclick_check=1
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10:17 AM on 05/06/2010
It's pretty transparent that a successful European currency is the only viable threat to American currency hegemony ... and that bankers who "PWN" the US Congress certainly do not want their magic printing-press to grind to a halt.

The version of "multi-national trade" that was fostered upon us all: (a) is not "trade," and (b) embraces the idea of "multiple nations" only to the extent of arguing that "no nation's" LAWS actually apply to it.

It does not take a crystal ball for either the People of Europe or the People of America to understand quite clearly that a high crime has been committed against them, and that this high crime continues without apology or relief.

It also does not take a crystal ball to trace this contagion to its source: the United States of America. The path leads through New York City, of course, but then it turns almost directly South, until it winds up in Washington, DC. To a group of about 650 people who, through their unabashed willingness to be corrupted, have to-a-man become accomplices and perpetrators of international crime. Crime against the world, and crime against the people of their own Nation.

It is very foolish to assume that things will continue as they are.
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11:48 AM on 05/06/2010
You are definitely correct. Between the combined ineptitude & greed of our leaders, the outcome will continue to get worse. They have neither a clue not concern. They are rich & hand the poor.