Monday, April 11, 2011

YES! Iceland's Got the Balls No One Else in Europe or America Has! "... it's still a bailout and the people of Iceland are having none of it."

Sunday, April 10, 2011 12:30

The Daily Bail

Iceland voted yesterday in a second referendum on the proposed Icesave deal, rejecting it by a 57% to 43% margin.

UK and Netherlands depositors were bailed out by their own governments in 2008 when the Icelandic bank failed, and now the British and Dutch want Iceland to reimburse them for approximately $5B. (Not a lot considering the figures our 'shut down the government' non-representatives are juggling - t.d.)

An earlier deal had been overwhelmingly rejected by 93% of voters last year. The current proposal would extend Iceland's repayment out to 2046 and reduce the interest rate to 3.3%. Plus, a portion of the total $5B would be covered by the sale of Landsbanki (aka Icesave) assets, with taxpayers paying the rest. As far as things go, it wasn't a particularly bad deal. But it's still a bailout and the people of Iceland are having none of it.

Bloomberg reports the comments of a Reykjavik shopkeeper who says a "No" vote,

"will be a wakeup call for the citizens in other countries. They’ll realize that there’s no fairness in pushing bank losses onto taxpayers when things go sour, but pocketing the gains when everything is going well. A big fat ‘no’ from Iceland will drive that point home.”

The party line from the EU and the IMF, though, is that if voters reject the deal, then the Icelandic government will not be able to access the international bond market. Moreover, the ratings agencies have already downgraded Iceland government bonds to junk. Funny thing is, CDS on Icelandic debt are running at about half of what it costs to insure Irish or Portuguese bonds -- and they've gone full speed ahead with their bank bailouts. As for that, I'd put my money on the debt markets and Icelandic voters before I'd trust Moody's or the IMF. We've said it before, but the lesson is clear: if you swamp your country with bank bailout debt, you will likely run into a sovereign default. If, on the other hand, you let bank creditors twist in the wind (as they should) you will actually be in much better fiscal shape than you would be otherwise, the IMF be damned.

1 comment:

  1. The nerve of these people! What sane nation in this day and age expects people to accept the risk of there own investments? Do they not realize that some of these investors are already giving up one afternoon tea a month to cover their losses? What more do they want? Before you know they will have all the white collar criminals in the same jails with regular "street scum".

    ReplyDelete

Sheeple



The Black Sheep tries to warn its friends with the truth it has seen, unfortunately herd mentality kicks in for the Sheeple, and they run in fear from the black sheep and keep to the safety of their flock.

Having tried to no avail to awaken his peers, the Black Sheep have no other choice but to unite with each other and escape the impending doom.

What color Sheep are you?

.





100627