by Mike Larson | |||||||||||||||||
Remember the "PIIGS" crisis? It's Baaaaaccckkkk!!
The acronym stands for "Portugal, Italy, Ireland,
Greece and Spain." Two to three years ago, stock indices and government
bonds in those countries were tanking, and interest rates were
soaring. The fear? The heavily indebted, economically challenged
countries would default on their debts, unleashing the biggest
sovereign debt crisis in world history.
But then, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi
said enough is enough. He pledged to do "whatever it takes" to keep the
euro-zone bond market from imploding and the European currency union
from fracturing. That stopped the contagion, fueled a multi-quarter
rally in European government bond prices, and sent the euro much
higher.
The problem? None of the underlying, fundamental problems were really fixed! Politicians
couldn't come up with ways to boost European growth. Government debt
loads never fell enough to put default off the table, despite the rally
in bond prices.
And one key cause of the crisis — European "too big to
fail" banks loading up too heavily on the sovereign bonds issued by
their own governments — wasn't dealt with at all. Banks kept gorging on
their own sovereigns' bonds, rather than cut their exposure to a
manageable level.
There's a fairly large Portuguese financial firm called
Espirito Santo Financial Group SA. It owns a quarter of the large
Portuguese bank Banco Espirito Santo SA. There are also other
affiliated companies in the overall group, with the overall structure
so complex it'll make your head spin.
But suffice it to say that investors have been dumping shares and bonds
of virtually all of the bank-linked entities because they're worried
about default risk, accounting shenanigans and more! Things got so bad
earlier today that trading was suspended in both companies.
That didn't stop investors from dumping Portuguese shares overall, though. The main PSI 20 Index
there plunged more than 4 percent on the day, and 12 percent over the
past week. That's the worst decline since the global markets plunged in
August 2011 amid the U.S. debt default.
Not only that, but yields on Portuguese bonds surged
amid fears the government would have to fund yet another bailout. And
that contagion selling spilled over into other PIIGS countries, with
yields on Spanish, Italian and Greek bonds climbing, too.
Now let's get to the heart of the matter: If you don't
own Portuguese bonds, or shares of PIIGS companies that trade here in
the U.S., like Portugal Telecom (Weiss Ratings: PT, C), which just plunged roughly 30 percent in a week, should you be worried?
I think it all depends on whether this turns out to be a
brief brush fire, or something worse. The market action over the next
several days will point the way.
Look, as I said at the outset, none of Europe's
underlying fundamental problems have been solved. The ECB just papered
over them. The problem is that all that papering over in Europe (and
here, for that matter) drove bond prices all over the world to
ridiculously stupid highs ... and yields to ridiculously insane lows.
Stories like this in the Financial Times
tell you why. Unable to get decent yields on low-risk bonds thanks to
the glut of cheap central bank money, investors have been buying every
lousy piece of paper Wall Street can churn out!
They aren't rationally analyzing and drawing a
distinction between one category of lousy bond (Portuguese bank paper)
or another (CCC-rated corporate debt). They're just buying anything and
everything that yields even a percentage point or two more than
low-risk bonds.
That means "correlation risk" is very, very high. Or in
plain English, if investors start dumping Portuguese bonds out of fear
over default, that could quickly lead to selling of other lousy bonds.
That, in turn, would spread contagion throughout the credit markets in
Europe and here. So I will be keeping a very close eye on my wide range
of credit market indicators to see what messages they're sending out
in the days ahead.
Meanwhile, we’re already seeing gold rally on the news.
It exploded by as much as $20 an ounce to $1,341 early on before
pulling back a bit. That’s the highest level since mid-March, and it
looks like a nice “clean” breakout on the charts could be brewing ...
Click for larger version
At the same time, the euro is falling out of bed again.
It sank by more than half a cent against the dollar, and it's nearing
that crucial 1.35 level that would mark a massive breakdown in my book
...
So first, if you haven't already added some gold or gold mining exposure, my question is: What the heck are you waiting for?
Second, I sure hope you took my earlier advice to get out of the euro ... or better yet, position yourself to profit from its decline!
I think the euro is likely headed to the low 1.30s — or even the high
1.20s — and that means there's still a ton of profit potential to be
had.
My Safe Money Report model portfolio has
precise "buy" and "sell" signals for investments that capitalize on
both trends. And I'm pleased to report that my named investments are
starting to move nicely in our favor. You can get my signals and more details here, or by calling us at 800-291-8545.
I'm also interested in your take on the latest
euro-turmoil. Is this the start of something bigger, like in 2011-12? Is
it just a flash in the pan? Have you been making money off the
resulting moves in the gold and currency markets? If so, how?
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Πέμπτη 10 Ιουλίου 2014
Gold Surges, Euro Tanks as “PIIGS” Yields Fly Again!
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