"While the catalyst for much of the recent rally in risk assets seems to have
been on the back of Europe clambering back from the edge of the abyss (and
admittedly hope for better global growth and US decoupling), JPMorgan's Michael
Cembalest notes that Europe remains very much an Achilles Heel going forward.
With former ECB member Stark's recent comments on the already 'shocking' quality
of the ECB's balance sheet, it is the outflows (or net balance of
payments) from the periphery that means the ECB will simply have to keep
printing. ECB funding of Spanish and Italian banks is still a
relatively small part of their liabilities and should we see even a crack in the
resilience of these knife-sitting nations, the retail depositors, bondholders,
and non-local wholesale/retail money is unlikely to stay put (especially if
there is the continued lack of growth that seems inevitable). The latest Spanish
data is dreadful, as Cembalest notes, but the economic situation in
France remains weak and while JPM's analysis looks for a
gradual closure of the periphery's current account deficit by 2015, the ECB's
need to finance the gap in the interim raises a critical question. Since
the ECB's printing has boosted the US stock market primarily, will the Fed now
take the lead and return the favor (QE3 or more) to help its European partners
grow their (net trade) way out of this hole?..."
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/why-jpm-sees-lot-more-printing-ecb
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/why-jpm-sees-lot-more-printing-ecb
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