Wednesday, May 9, 2012

More on Why Japan's Economic D-Day Could be Coming Soon - The Euro Collapse Has Started



As predicted, events are quickly spinning out of control in the Eurozone and this is going to have many unforeseen consequences to Japan and the rest of the world's economy. The recent news and chain of events have even begun the clarion call that the countdown to the breakup of the European Union has begun.


When a politician holds up a copy of EU Constitution and says, "Elect me and I will make a country for our people, not the EU" He will be elected... Greece recently elected Neo-Nazis to parliament. Will it happen in other EU countries? I think the answer is "Of course!"


I think it is a safe bet that the Euro is a dead currency and I don't think it will last another two years. In fact, I believe that things will completely spin out of control this year (but have been wrong with timing before).


Zerohedge reports in Countdown to the Breakup of the Euro Has Officially Begun:



It turns out that austerity is extremely unpopular.  But if newly elected politicians all over Europe begin rejecting austerity, this puts Germany in a very difficult position.  Should Germany be expected to indefinitely bail out all of the members of the eurozone that choose to live way beyond their means?  If Germany pulled out of the euro tomorrow, the euro would absolutely collapse, bond yields for the rest of the eurozone would skyrocket to unprecedented heights, and without German bailout money troubled nations such as Greece would be headed directly for default.  The rest of the eurozone is absolutely and completely dependent on Germany at this point.  But as we have seen, much of the rest of the eurozone is sick and tired of taking orders from Germany and is rejecting austerity.  A lot of politicians in Europe apparently believe that they should be able to run up gigantic amounts of debt indefinitely and that the Germans should be expected to always be there to bail them out whenever they need it.  Will the Germans be willing to tolerate such a situation, or will they simply pick up their ball and go home at some point? 

"It turns out that austerity is extremely unpopular." Duh!


This looks to me like a lose-lose proposition. 


If the EU countries stick to austerity, the people revolt and their governments fall. If they reject austerity (which I believe they will) then the Euro collapses. Germany is not going to keep bailing out these countries.


I expect that Greece will leave the Euro - soon! And then Germany won't be far behind...


Couple that with US economic problems and the Japanese financial disaster we are faced with and, as I said, I expect the bug to hit the windshield this year... Possibly summer.  

3 comments:

  1. I saw some People new to buying PM's in the coin shop today. They seemed eager.

    I wanted to buy much more than I did, but at the same time I felt like I shouldn't be buying anything, in fact, maybe I shouldn't have bought what I did?

    Maybe I should have waited for prices to drop more? I feel a bit like when I'm at an auction and the price starts out kind of high and everyone in the crowd goes silent while waiting for the auctioneer to lower the starting bid. It's sort of tense at that moment, the auctioneer looks around the crowd trying to catch someone's eye,... most everyone looks away or down at the floor to avoid giving the impression they are casting a bid with eye contact with the auctioneer.
    Yeesh, and it really gets difficult/uncomfortable when the auctioneer knows your name and asks you several times to say, "Yes!" to the opening bid.

    I feel like maybe I should wait for the price to hit the floor like a dropped rock and pick it up then.

    But maybe, when the price gets that low and I walk into my coin shop to buy some the coin guy gives me this funny look and says there's none available of what I want to buy,... some so-and-so came in earlier and bought it all. I had that happen a time or two already.

    I don't know, maybe it's a good time to buy something else I could use, like a vehicle? I've already got a Berkey. Those are nice.

    I keep thinking of the phrase, "From weak hands to strong hands." I'll bet that's happening a lot right now.

    - clark

    ReplyDelete
  2. Clark, I think you are smart to wait a while. Seriously! Look for silver in the low 20s, maybe? Gold at $1500?

    ReplyDelete
  3. 20's and 1500?

    Whew, I had visions of 11 and 750 or 450. Heh, how's that for scary? What a roller coaster ride this is.

    And wow, Jim Rogers is buying Yen. I like his overall approach though:

    HOLOCAUST COMING Jim Rogers on the pending world economic crisis.

    http://revolutionarypolitics.tv/video/viewVideo.php?video_id=18728

    ReplyDelete

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