Home » Posts tagged 'ecb' (Page 30)

Tag Archives: ecb

Olduvai
Click on image to purchase

Content

Olduvai III: Catacylsm
Click on image to purchase

Post categories

Post Archives by Category

ECB Pulls The Trigger: Blocks Funding To Greece Via Debt Collateral – Full Statement

ECB Pulls The Trigger: Blocks Funding To Greece Via Debt Collateral – Full Statement Just what the market had hoped would not happen… *ECB SAYS IT LIFTS WAIVER ON GREEK GOVERNMENT DEBT AS COLLATERAL *ECB SAYS IT CAN’T ASSUME SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION OF GREECE REVIEW What this means simply is that since Greek banks are now […]

Continue Reading →

How Much Longer Can Central Banks Push Bonds to Absurdity?

How Much Longer Can Central Banks Push Bonds to Absurdity? Central banks around the world have fallen all over each other lowering their benchmark interest rates. On Tuesday, the Reserve Bank of Australia was the latest, cutting its cash rate to an all-time low of 2.25%. It didn’t mince words: “A lower exchange rate is […]

Continue Reading →

Chaos, Fear, Panic Descend on EU’s Hallowed Halls of Power

Chaos, Fear, Panic Descend on EU’s Hallowed Halls of Power According to Greek private broadcaster Mega TV, “You just killed the Troika” were the parting words that Eurogroup Chief Jeroen Dijsselbloem whispered into the right ear of Greece’s new Finance Minister Yannis Varoufakis at the end of what was clearly a tense meeting. Varoufakis’ response […]

Continue Reading →

More euro-tragedy

More euro-tragedy Despite the uncertainties ahead of the Greek general election, the European Central Bank (ECB) went ahead and announced quantitative easing (QE) of €60bn per month from March to at least September 2016. What makes this interesting is the mounting evidence that QE does not bring about economic recovery. Even Jaime Caruana, General Manager […]

Continue Reading →

ECB Threatens Athens With Bank Funding Cutoff If No Deal In One Month: February 28 Is Now D-Day For Greece

ECB Threatens Athens With Bank Funding Cutoff If No Deal In One Month: February 28 Is Now D-Day For Greece As Deutsche Bank’s George Saravelos politely puts it, “Developments since the Greek election on Sunday have moved very fast.” And indeed, so far the new Tsipras cabinet, and here we focus on the words and […]

Continue Reading →

ECB Euro QE Won’t Succeed

ECB Euro QE Won’t Succeed The European Central Bank (ECB) leaked the information beforehand to test the waters and this time followed through on their promise: Money printing galore in the form of 60 billion euros per month ($69 billion). ECB president Mario Draghi has been talking about it since 2012 and now finally got […]

Continue Reading →

ECB Threatens Athens With Bank Funding Cutoff If No Deal In One Month: February 28 Is Now D-Day For Greece

ECB Threatens Athens With Bank Funding Cutoff If No Deal In One Month: February 28 Is Now D-Day For Greece As Deutsche Bank’s George Saravelos politely puts it, “Developments since the Greek election on Sunday have moved very fast.” And indeed, so far the new Tsipras cabinet, and here we focus on the words and […]

Continue Reading →

The Lemmings of QE

The Lemmings of QE NEW HAVEN – Predictably, the European Central Bank has joined the world’s other major monetary authorities in the greatest experiment in the history of central banking. By now, the pattern is all too familiar. First, central banks take the conventional policy rate down to the dreaded “zero bound.” Facing continued economic […]

Continue Reading →

Greece at the Crossroads: the Oligarchs Blew It

Greece at the Crossroads: the Oligarchs Blew It Once one oligarchy falls, it will threaten to topple a long line of oligarch dominoes. A great many narratives invoking Greece are being tossed around, but only one really encapsulates the unvarnished truth: the Oligarchs blew it. The oligarchs in both Greece and the European Union/ECB had the […]

Continue Reading →

Greek election: It’s really up to the ECB and EU now

Greek election: It’s really up to the ECB and EU now The result was worse than expected whatever the final outcome – the anti-austerity vote is massive, but it could be an empty gesture as Greece in reality has little choice: Comply with the Troika or leave the EUR. I doubt the later will happen […]

Continue Reading →

More reasons for the financial markets to worry

More reasons for the financial markets to worry Five tests of unity that the eurozone will face this week. In the wake of Sunday’s election in Greece, the unity of the eurozone will come under close scrutiny this week. The financial markets were already in a state of excitement over the launch of quantitative easing […]

Continue Reading →

Freedom, Where Are You? Not in America or Europe

Freedom, Where Are You? Not in America or Europe When the former Goldman Sachs executive who runs the European Central Bank (ECB) announced that he was going to print 720 billion euros annually with which to purchase bad debts from the politically connected big banks, the euro sank and the stock market and Swiss france shot […]

Continue Reading →

“QE Benefits Mostly The Wealthy” JPMorgan Admits, And Lists 8 Ways ECB’s QE Will Hurt Everyone Else

“QE Benefits Mostly The Wealthy” JPMorgan Admits, And Lists 8 Ways ECB’s QE Will Hurt Everyone Else Over the past 48 hours, the world has been bombarded with a relentless array of soundbites, originating either at the ECB, or – inexplicably – out of Greece, the place which has been explicitly isolated by Frankfurt, that […]

Continue Reading →

All eyes on Fed, Greece after ECB fires bazooka

All eyes on Fed, Greece after ECB fires bazooka PARIS (Reuters) – After the surprises from central banks which rocked markets at the start of the year, the U.S. Federal Reserve will be watched as closely as ever this week to see that it doesn’t stray from its own policy path. The atmosphere will already be […]

Continue Reading →

Carney Says QE Can Encourage Excessive Risk-Taking in Markets

Carney Says QE Can Encourage Excessive Risk-Taking in Markets Bank of England Governor Mark Carney warned easy monetary policy could prompt excessive risk-taking in financial markets. Two days after the European Central Bank announced a 1.1 trillion-euro ($1.23 trillion) quantitative-easing program, Carney said six years of sustained monetary stimulus was justified on an economic basis, […]

Continue Reading →

Olduvai IV: Courage
Click on image to read excerpts

Olduvai II: Exodus
Click on image to purchase

Click on image to purchase @ FriesenPress