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Monday, July 26, 2010

Europe Bank Stress Test Results - Round 1 - overall not alarming ...

The results of EU stress tests on 91 banks were published on Friday. 7 of them failed, below each country info, only a handful had very min failed the stress test

Austria - 0 failed, 2 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Erste Group, Raiffeisen Zentralbank Oesterreich

Belgium - 0 failed, 2 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: KBC Bank, Dexia

Cyprus - 0 failed, 2 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Marfin Popular Bank, Bank of Cyprus

Denmark - 0 failed, 3 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Danske Bank, Jyske Bank, Sydbank

Finland - 0 failed, 1 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: OP-Pohjola Group

France – 0 failed, 4 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: BNP Paribas, Credit Agricole, BPCE, Societe Generale

Germany - 1 failed, 13 passed
Failed: Hypo Real Estate Group
Passed:
Deutsche Bank , Commerzbank, Landesbank Baden- Wurttemberg, Bayerische Landesbank, DZ Bank, Norddeutsche Landesbank, Deutsche Postbank, WestLB, HSH Nordbank, Landesbank Hessen- Thuringen, Landesbank Berlin, Dekabank Deutsche Girozentrale, WGZ Bank

Greece – 1 failed, 5 passed
Failed: ATEBank
Passed: National Bank of Greece, EFG Eurobank Ergasias , Alpha Bank, Piraeus Bank, TT Hellenic Postbank

Hungary - 0 failed, 2 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: OTP Bank, FHB Jelzalogbank Nyiilvanosan Mukodo

Ireland - 0 failed, 2 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Bank of Ireland, Allied Irish Banks

Italy -0 failed, 5 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Unicredit, Intesa Sanpaolo, Banca Monte Dei Paschi Di Siena, Banco Popolare, Unione Di Banche Italiane

Luxembourg - 0 failed, 2 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Banque Et Caisse D'Epargne De L'Etat, Banque Raiffeisen

Malta - 0 failed, 1 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Bank of Valletta

Netherlands - 0 failed, 4 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: ING Bank, Rabobank Group, Fortis Bank Nederland Holding , SNS Reaal

Poland – 0 failed, 1 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Powszechna Kasa Oszczednosci Bank Polski

Portugal - 0 failed, 4 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Caixa Geral De Depositos, Banco Comercial Portugues , Espirito Santo, Banco BPI

Slovenia – 0 failed, 1 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Nova Ljubljanska Banka

Spain - 5 failed, 22 passed
Failed: Unnim, Diada, Espiga, Banca Civica, Cajasur
Passed: Banco Santander, Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria , Jupiter, Caixa, CAM, Banco Popular Espanol, Banco de Sabadell, Breogan, Mare Nostrum, Bankinter, Caja De Ahorros YMP De Zaragoza, Antequera Y Jaen, Banco Pastor , Caja Sol, Bilbao Bizkaia Kutxa, Caja de Ahorros YMP De Gipuzkoa Y San Sebastian, CAI, Banca March, Banco Guipuzcoano, Caja de Ahorros De Vitoria Y Alava, Caja de Ahorros YMP De Ontinyent, Colonya - Caixa D'Estalvis De Pollensa

Sweden – 0 failed, 4 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: Nordea Bank, Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken , Svenska Handelsbanken, Swedbank

UK – 0 failed, 4 passed
Failed: 0
Passed: HSBC Holdings, Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland Group, Lloyds Banking Group

Monday, July 5, 2010

Citi group share movement ...

1 Jul 2010

The US Department of the Treasury today announced the sale of approximately 1.1 billion shares of Citigroup [C 3.79 0.01 (+0.26%) ] common stock pursuant to the completion of its second trading plan with Morgan Stanley as sales agent. Treasury has now sold about 2.6 billion shares of Citigroup common stock at an average price per share of $4.03.
2.6 billion shares sold, 5.1 billion still to go.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Jim Rogers Sees Bond Market Bubble Developing

Published: Thursday, 1 Jul 2010
4:44 AM ET Text Size By: Antonia Oprita
Web Producer, CNBC.com
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Bond markets are a bubble waiting to burst because the world economy is facing even worse problems after central banks flooded markets with cash to try to get out of the crisis, famous investor Jim Rogers told CNBC Thursday.
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On Wednesday, banks borrowed less money than markets expected from the European Central Bank, in what investors saw as a reassuring sign that Europe's banking system is not as weak as previously feared.
"I don't quite see that myself," Rogers said, adding that the problems are worse now than at the beginning of the crisis. "Markets are looking ahead to more difficulties."
And he said he does not see why investors look at bonds as safe havens.
"I'm watching the bond market, I have no longs and no shorts," Rogers said. "It is a bubble which is developing; it's one of the few bubbles in the world which is developing."
"I think it's going to be a disaster and I plan to be selling them short sometime in the foreseeable future," he added.
Some economists have been calling for more stimulus money to be poured into the economy, but Rogers said this would be bad as it would help only certain categories and will have to be paid for by others.
"The people who receive the money think things are better, and they are better for them, but the rest of us have to pay the price," he warned.
'We Have Inflation Now'
In the US, officials and pundits recently said the bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may end up costing taxpayers $1 trillion.
Prices are creeping up all over the world but some governments "lie" about inflation, according to Rogers.
"We have inflation now. Everybody who shops knows there is inflation… prices are going up," he said.
The US and the UK are among governments who "lie" about inflation, while Australia, China and Norway – countries that tightened monetary policy – are facing up to it, he added.
"My investment outlook is I am long commodities and short stocks. I don't own stocks in any place at all," Rogers said.
Geographically, he said he prefers assets in the countries that have the cash, rather than in the ones that have the debt.
"The creditor nations are all in Asia now … I'd rather be invested with the creditors than the debtors," Rogers said.
Food Prices Rising
Printing money has been good for hard assets and food prices "are going through the roof," he added.
"You should all become farmers. Agriculture's been a disaster for 30 years. We have a shortage of farmers now," Rogers said.
He said he is long the US dollar, despite the fact that there are huge negative feelings in the markets about the greenback and currencies are "suspect" everywhere.
"We now know that Greece is bankrupt. We know now that many companies and states in the US have been lying about their finances," Rogers said.
"Governments have poured huge amounts of money in the system… that money has to come from somewhere. This is not over yet. The debts have gone higher," he added.
The recent data on China showed signs of economic cooling as the central bank tightened policy.
"The Chinese government realizes they have problems in real estate and they're trying to solve these problems," he said.
But even though China's economy is in better shape than the euro zone and the US economies, the country can not pull the world out of recession, he added.