Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
Doomed. Doomed. Doomed.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/07/business/in-europe-anxious-market-shifts-focus-to-italy.html?hp
Catastrophic tipping point approaching.
Italy is a rapidly aging country with a low birth rate, so somebody please tell me how their debt situation is ever going to get better? It seems like the moneylenders are starting to wake up to the mathematical problem.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/07/business/in-europe-anxious-market-shifts-focus-to-italy.html?hp
Among fresh warning signs, Italy’s cost of borrowing has jumped to the highest rate since the country adopted the euro. Others signs include pressures building in the plumbing of Europe’s banking system. While those pressures are not yet at the levels experienced during the 2008 financial crisis, when some markets in the United States froze altogether, they are high enough to cause worry, analysts say.
. . .
European banks are likely to remain wary about lending to one another, analysts predict, and investors will continue to require high interest rates on the billions of euros in loans Italy needs each month to keep its economy afloat.
The yield on 10-year Italian notes has surpassed that on Spanish debt, reaching 6.35 percent on Friday after leaders at a meeting of the Group of 20 nations failed to come up with details on how to stop the European crisis from spreading. The rising yield is troubling because once the interest rates on the debt of the bailed out countries Greece and Portugal surpassed 7 percent they shot up far higher, requiring those countries to turn to outside sources of financing. Rates on their debt remain in double digits.
. . .
The latest rate “is a warning,” said Mark McCormick, currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman. “Seven percent would be a point of no return."
Catastrophic tipping point approaching.
Italy is a rapidly aging country with a low birth rate, so somebody please tell me how their debt situation is ever going to get better? It seems like the moneylenders are starting to wake up to the mathematical problem.