"No, not that Sarkozy. His half-brother - the one who actually can
use a calculator. In an interview on CNBC, the Carlyle group head had
the temerity to tell the truth, the whole truth, and use math - that
long-forgotten concept which one has to scour various backwater blogs to
rediscover - to explain nothing but the truth which is that Europe needs many
more trillions than either the EFSF or the ECB can afford to give. Actually, we
take that back. The ECB can inject the needed €3-5 trillion,
but after that concerns about localized episodes of (hyper)inflation, especially
now that Kocherlakota has confirmed that the transmission mechanism between bank
reserves and inflation may be broken, will be all too justified. In the
meantime, Sarkozy on Europe math fail: "The math i'm working with is very
simple. In the US banking sector, we had 3 trillion of wholesale funding that
needed to be stabilized, got stabilized by the implementation of TARP which saw
the US treasury buy $212 billion worth of preferred in the banking sector to
stabilize that $3 trillion, give our banks the time to work through hair problem
their problem assets. In Europe, that $3 trillion is $30 trillion. so if you
multiply the $212 by 10, you get the $2.12 trillion. In my view, the issues on
the European banks are bigger than the issues on the books of the US Banks.
So if you want to stabilize that $30 trillion and in my view it's not
that you want to, it's that you have to, you do not have a choice, you're going
to have to be at least at 2.1 trillion and i suspect it may need to be
more." Q.E.D. - there, the math wasn't that difficult, was it?"
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/sarkozy-europes-liquidity-run-has-begun-because-there-30-trillion-problem
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/sarkozy-europes-liquidity-run-has-begun-because-there-30-trillion-problem