The news out of Spain is that the country has banned
short-selling of stock shares for three months in an effort to limit the market sell off. Markets fell
sharply on fears the country may need a full bailout, things turned negative on Friday, just hours
after the Eurozone's finance ministers agreed on an interim bailout of
the banks. The reaction caught the Spanish government by surprise. They
expected their borrowing costs would ease as a result of what they
described as a "prompt and well-defined clean-up operation". Instead rates have again soared above 7%, a rate that is not sustainable. Spain is effectively shut out of the markets and cannot afford to finance itself.
If there is is not enough gloom hanging over Europe, focus is also returning to Greece's woes. On
Tuesday, officials from the so-called "troika" - the International
Monetary Fund, the European Commission and the European Central Bank -
will arrive in Greece to assess the progress made on reforms that were
agreed as part of the country's latest bailout. Reports over the weekend suggested that the IMF will refuse
calls for further aid, if, as expected, the country fails to meet
targets for cutting spending and raising taxes. The IMF did say it would work with the country to
get it "back on track". But the foot note from the IMF, "the viability of the monetary union is at stake" is not something to take lightly.
The mood in Spain has turned sour, the people have grown weary of austerity and are increasingly
rebellious. It was under-reported at the time but the protesters on the
streets last Thursday night in Madrid may have reached 100,000 as
rubber bullets flew. There were protests in 80 other towns and cities with off-duty police and firefighters sometimes joining in. What is
significant is that it is no longer just the unions on the streets other citizens are joining in. More bad news was heaped upon Spain on Friday, Valencia, one of the country's 17 regions, asked the central
government for a financial lifeline, and on Sunday, the Murcia region
said it was considering following suit.
The financial problems in Spain are in some ways similar to those of Ireland. Spain has wildly over built during the last decade. Empty buildings and homes sit everywhere, real estate prices have now tanked, and unemployment has soared. The banks are sitting on billion of dollars of bad loans that will never be repaid. The cost of supporting the unemployed coupled with a drop in tax revenue has caused a huge government deficit. Bleak is the best word to describe the situation. To make matters worse, the government is predicting the economy will further contract next year.
Thank you for sharing. please visit here for more info:
ReplyDeletePackers and Movers Jaipur
Packers and Movers Chandigarh
Packers and Movers Pune
Packers and Movers Mumbai
Lovely Website, Maintain the fantastic work. Thank you so much!
ReplyDeletePlease visit
https://www.roknelbeet.com/نقل-اثاث-بجدة/
https://www.roknelbeet.com/نقل-اثاث-بالدمام/
https://www.roknelbeet.com/نقل-اثاث-بمكة/
https://www.roknelbeet.com/تخزين-اثاث-بالرياض/