"If there is one thing one can say about the insolvent European continent is
that despite everything, it is a bastion of truth, and a knight of see-thru
disclosure. After all, who can forget such brutally honest statements as "Greece
will not default", or the follow ups: "Ireland is not Greece", "Portugal is
not Ireland", "Spain is not Portugal", "Italy is fine", "Italy has turned down
money from the IMF", "The
IMF has never offered any money to Italy", and then the old standbys, "the
ECB will not be a lender of last resort", "the EFSF will use 4-5x
leverage", wait, make that "the
EFSF will use 3-4x leverage", and last but not least, "Europe is not
America" and "it is all the fault of evil CDS speculators." Well we have one
more to add to the list: "the EFSF is not an illegal ponzi
scheme" - because after the mindboggling report in the Telegraph
yesterday that the EFSF has bought hundreds of millions of its own bonds,
exposing the scam in the heart of the Eurozone for anyone to see, the European
rescuer of last resort (at least until the ECB comes out monetizing and
Eurobonds are issued)has no choice but to join in the parade of truths and as Reuters reports "said on Sunday that it did not
buy its own bonds last week, denying a British newspaper report that it spent
more than 100 million euros ($137 million) to cover a shortfall of demand.
"The EFSF did not buy its own bonds and the book was 3 billion euros,"
an EFSF spokesman said, referring to the 3 billion euros raised in last Monday's
10-year bond issue." We are certain that in order to dispel rumors
about its fraud-i-ness, the EFSF will promptly submit a full breakdown of the
entities that received bond allocations (we know that Japan is good
for €300 million, that China is good for €0.0,
and that as Merkel said
one week ago, "hardly any countries in G20 have said they will
participate in the EFSF." So, because we believe everything that comes
out of Europe, we are patiently waiting to see just who it was that bought EFSF
bonds when nobody else did. And yet what is most troubling to us, is that it
took the world 5 minutes to completely agree that the EFSF is a ponzi scheme,
with nobody doubting this supposedly "refuted" disclosure for even a second.
Perhaps that tells you more about the current state of Europe than anything
else..."
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/efsf-denies-it-illegal-pyramid-scheme
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/efsf-denies-it-illegal-pyramid-scheme