Bank
of Spain Confirms Foreigners Dump Spanish Bonds; Spanish Banks
Foolishly Load Up
Anyone
with a clue is dumping Spanish bonds, and the investment community in
Germany, France, and Italy is doing just that, as Spanish banks
foolishly lever up on risk.
1
May, 2012
Via
Google Translate, please consider Bank
of Spain confirmed that foreign capital flees Spanish bonds
The
weight of foreign capital in the total of Spanish government debt has
declined considerably in the first three months of the year, rising
from 50.48% at end-2011 to 37.54% last March. At the same time, the
Spanish bank increases its exposure to domestic bonds to record highs
of more than 170 billion euros.
62
Billion Euro Leakage in Last 3 Months
In
the last three months the international portfolio in bonds and
letters of the State has suffered a leak of nearly 62 billion euros
from 281.439 billion euros down to 219.601 billion euros at March 31.
Spanish
banks increased their exposure to a record of 170.611 million euros,
29.16% of the total compared to 16.93% representing the end of
December.
Specifically,
the weight of the debt portfolio of the state of Spanish banks has
six consecutive months of gains, especially since last November with
the purchase of more than 100,000 million.
This
has been fueled largely soothing the open bar of liquidity held by
the European Central Bank (ECB), which granted a billion euros of
credit to a 1% interest that has helped Spanish banks invest in
bonds.
LTRO
"Helped" Spanish Banks?
Notice
that absurd reference to "help" in the last paragraph
above. There was "help" alright, help by ECB president
Mario Draghi to allow German, French, and Italian banks to dump
Spanish debt hand over fist to fools in Spain.
If
one thought bureaucrats could think, one might think this was Super
Mario's plan from the beginning.
Certified
Crackpot Plan
Who
should pay for the idiocy of loading up on Spanish debt once it
implodes? The answer of course is the banks and the bondholders. But
No!
Harvard
Economics professor Martin Feldstein has hatched a certified crackpot
plan to force risk onto taxpayers. For details, please see Ludicrous
Proposal by Harvard Economics Professor to Force Taxpayers to Buy
Spanish Bonds; Mish's Five-Point Alternative Proposal
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