Major Dollar Shortage Exposed In Europe As Deutsche Bank Contagion Spreads
by Tyler Durden
Sep 29, 2016 12:42 PM
je reproduit cette annonce de ZH non parce que cela me fait plaisir de voir que l’on s’éveille au problème que je ne cesse de rabacher, mais parce que la prise de consciecne va s’en trouver accélérée et la situation va devenir plus évolutive. Le fait que cette information devienne une information plus grand public est en soi … une information.
l’article de ZH
« Storm in a teacup » this is not.
While global markets remain calm(ish), distracted by OPEC headlines, US election ‘entertainment’, and Middle East proxy wars, the reality is, something very ugly is accelerating in Europe. With the collapse of the « most systemically dangerous bank in the world » we should hardly be surprised, but Deutsche Bank’s crash is being shrugged off by average joes on mainstream media… and besides, the central banks will save us, right?
Well, Deutsche contagion is spreading… rapidly.
Since Deutsche’s recent highs, the short-end of the EUR-USD basis swap curve has collapsed…

Simplifying – this chart measures the degree of USD shortage (willingness to spend money just to get USD now) across time – the lower the level, the more desperate for USDs.

And no, it’s not a quarter-end issue…
Still not sure… Then explain why European banks just increased their demand for USDs from The ECB’s 7-day lending facility by over 2000%…
As @Landonthomasjr notes, since 2009: DB shareholders put up 13.5 billion euros in equity. DB has paid 19.3 billion euro in bonuses. Perhaps they should have saved some of that cash eh?
Simply put – trust in the European Banking system is faltering, counterparty risk hedging is accelerating…
And liquidity concerns are exploding… ahead of Germany’s bank holiday on Monday.
Mint’s Bill Blain – in his Morning Porridge note – had some more ‘market realist’ thoughts…
Meanwhile, Mario Draghi was in “robust” form yesterday telling Europe’s languid political classes about the need to do more in terms of structural reform – yada, yada, heard that one before – but also the need for other policies to boost recovery in Europe. Optimal fiscal policy? That’s an interesting call.
The likelihood of banking embarrassment in Germany means his comments about banks being able to operate successfully in zero interest rate environments were particularly elucidating.
Let’s see.. if interest rates are zero, then borrowers don’t pay any interest and can extend their loans indefinitely? Then banks can’t have any NPLs, and will therefore be absolutely default free?
Suddenly I understand.
ECB NIRP is absolute genius. European banking is fixed and nothing to worry about. (US Readers – massive sarcasm alert!)
My day started in the Bloomberg studio where I was somewhatsurprised to read a comment from Man’s CEO that Deutsche Bank is “healthy”. Right….
I’m not sure I buy that.
Banks are enormously complex beasts. They are not simple businesses. To turn around a bank is complex. To reinvent a bank – which is what Deutsche Bank, UBS, CS, and others are desperately trying to do, is one level below impossible.
Earlier this year we had commodities firm Glencore teeter on the edge of disaster. Swift action, clear plan, and it’s back from the brink. That is not going to happen with banks. In my 30 years of markets I can’t think of a single bank that’s got in trouble that has staged anything like a similar comeback. Once bank’s catch a cold, it often develops into dangerous pneumonia.
Deutsche – and the others – are anything but healthy. The need to reinvent. The news flow yesterday was positive-ish. Rumours of a SWF capital injection, rumours of a domestic rescue plan, but the reality is more likely to be further deterioration. If that develops into a full crisis any rescue will come at the cost of contingent capital deals being triggered (which will send shock-waves around banking confidence) and the strong/inevitable bail-in of senior debt holders.
Others say the senior debt is safe. Delighted they think so.Call me and tell me how much you want to buy?
Confirming there is a problem:
- *DIJSSELBLOEM REPEATS DEUTSCHE BANK MEETS CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS
The denials continue… and so does the blame-mongery…
The U.S. Department of Justice fine imposed on Deutsche Bank is very high and “damaging for financial stability,”Dutch Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem tells lawmakers in The Hague Thursday.
U.S. fines against European banks are “repeatedly so high that all the money European banks tap on the international markets, also from U.S. investors, is skimmed by the U.S. government. That’s a risk for the financial stability and that worries me sincerely.”
If Deutsche Bank has to pay the $14b fine, it will reduce capital, then it will have to raise new capital.
Deutsche Bank will have to bring things « back in order. »
Add another to the list of ‘elites’ distancing their actions from Deutsche’s demise. And one more denial…
Deutsche Bank’s troubles are not Europe’s Lehman Brothers moment, Austria’s finance minister said on Thursday, although he warned the region’s lenders were facing a broader profitability crisis.
« After the financial crisis we haven’t quite worked through the banking issues….but what I am very convinced of is that we don’t have a banking crisis, we have a profitability crisis in our banks, »
- default
- headlines
- Germany
- Lehman Brothers
- Department of Justice
- Central Banks
- fixed
- Lehman
- Middle East
- recovery
- OPEC
- SWIFT
- Deutsche Bank
- Reality
- Glencore
- 85,433
- 164
Comment viewing options
Flat list – collapsedFlat list – expandedThreaded list – collapsedThreaded list – expanded
Date – newest firstDate – oldest first
10 comments per page30 comments per page50 comments per page70 comments per page90 comments per page150 comments per page200 comments per page250 comments per page300 comments per page
Select your preferred way to display the comments and click « Save settings » to activate your changes.
HedgeAccordingly Sep 29, 2016 11:09 AM
The Deutsche Bro’s are at Oktoberfest.
Tom Servo HedgeAccordingly Sep 29, 2016 11:09 AM
It’s probably nothing.
Transitory.
Please. Do not panic.
Rainman Tom Servo Sep 29, 2016 11:13 AM
Sweet Jeezus have mercy !! … the 2/20 gets posted in less than 48 hours !
nibiru Rainman Sep 29, 2016 11:17 AM
Mackerel has really bad year.
I guess being Soros puppet didn’t pay that much at the end of the day. Well, she may as well enjoy leaving politics now instead of leaving in a year while being the most hated person in Germany.
http://independenttrader.org/diy-how-to-destabilise-the-continent.html
kliguy38 nibiru Sep 29, 2016 11:18 AM
If there is a dollar shortage then it is already decided they are to die……..no wonder merkel said to store food….she knows we’re gonna take um down
MillionDollarBonus_ kliguy38 Sep 29, 2016 11:37 AM
This highlights why we desperately need a global central bank and governing structure, with a global currency, so that we can provide liquidity to any multinational entity as and when it is needed. We cannot continue to enact fiscal and monetary policy at a local level, when our economy is inherently global. We need a system of global governance, run by the best and brightest economic minds from across the globe, so that we can solve the world’s financial problems together, rather than negotiating with each other as isolated nation states.
Deathrips MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 11:39 AM
They say there is a shortage of promises from liars….?
I call bullshit.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awY1MRlMKMc
RIPS
oops Deathrips Sep 29, 2016 11:40 AM
It’ll get worse with the Sept 11 Bill, the DEATH KNELL for America. https://goo.gl/oehIgG
Huh Reeeally oops Sep 29, 2016 11:48 AM
If by that you mean that it might hold the US accountable for its terrorist actions worldwide then I would have to agree.
f_symbols Huh Reeeally Sep 29, 2016 12:06 PM
My last pay check was $9500 working 12 hours a week online. My sisters friend has been averaging 15k for months now and she works about 20 hours a week. I can’t believe how easy it was once I tried it out. This is what I do…http://tiny.cc/477bfy
Automatic Choke f_symbols Sep 29, 2016 12:09 PM
db should just have the leverage dept load up on puts of their own stock. problem solved.
Pairadimes Automatic Choke Sep 29, 2016 12:35 PM
Same shit, different day until little red holes start appearing on banksters.
Mister Ponzi Pairadimes Sep 29, 2016 12:44 PM
Creditanstalt 2.0
beemasters Mister Ponzi Sep 29, 2016 12:55 PM
As they say, « No bank is an island. »
SafelyGraze f_symbols Sep 29, 2016 12:11 PM
fortunately, the us central bank stands ready to issue 10T, denominated in usd, in exchange for an equivalent amount denominated in euros
which will tide everyone over until such time as a global authority intervenes to calm the waters
hugs,
mizzlegarde
hedgeless_horseman SafelyGraze Sep 29, 2016 12:26 PM
…the us central bank stands ready to issue 10T, denominated in usd, in exchange for an equivalent amount denominated in euros
True.
But don’t tell anyone.
It is supposed to be a secret.
Alan Grayson: « Which Foreigners Got the Fed’s $500,000,000,000? »
Bernanke: « I Don’t Know. »
ejmoosa f_symbols Sep 29, 2016 12:16 PM
Too bad you are paid by the year…
DirkDiggler11 f_symbols Sep 29, 2016 12:28 PM
You a Soros funded BLM rioter ? How was Charlotte?
f_symbols Huh Reeeally Sep 29, 2016 12:06 PM
My last pay check was $9500 working 12 hours a week online. My sisters friend has been averaging 15k for months now and she works about 20 hours a week. I can’t believe how easy it was once I tried it out. This is what I do…http://tiny.cc/477bfy
RAT005 Huh Reeeally Sep 29, 2016 12:10 PM
This is a strange setup for gold and silver. Dollar going up because of more bankrupt EU but PMs appearing to go down in US$ terms. Sell expensive $US and buy cheap gold if you’ve got the stomach for it.
Terp Deathrips Sep 29, 2016 2:17 PM
lmao…no shortage of that, ever.
oops MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 11:39 AM
O Boy
Jim Sampson MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 11:39 AM
Don’t you dare say a lack of USD!!!
SHIT! I think I hear Bernanke coming out of retirement. Way to go!
knukles MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 11:42 AM
Yep
Fed to the rescue
Currency swaps, extensions of credit to the sick lame and dying.
Wash and repeat, a la 2008/9
These people have built us a fucking house of cards, rampant speculative activities, losses insured by the citizenry.
Something wrong, ya think?
By The Way, This is the Exact Type of Activity Screams Real Problems Accompanying Panics
Once loosed, gold and long bonds should do well under a flight to quality/safety.
Just wait until after the election. The Establishment MUST make all appear Happy and Congenial for Hillary
Uncertain T knukles Sep 29, 2016 11:56 AM
The Banksters are interconnected
Their puppets we’ve always elected
A true global sham
A fraudulent scam
When failing they’ll all B affected
….. The Limerick King
GunnerySgtHartman MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 11:46 AM
This highlights why we desperately need a global central bank and governing structure, with a global currency, so that we can provide liquidity to any multinational entity as and when it is needed.
MDB needs to go on the comedy show circuit.
lasvegaspersona GunnerySgtHartman Sep 29, 2016 12:24 PM
When Trump is elected we are going to have people ‘Green Listed’ (like the days of ‘Black Listing).
Anyone who has uttered leftist nonsense will be shamed. those who fired people for conservative views will be fired themselves.
Iniversiry presidents who allowed safe spaces will be launched into safe space…kinda like a superman villian….perpetually frozen until evil makes a comeback.
IridiumRebel MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 11:47 AM
Best and brightest. I’ll pass. Multiple boats are better than one big yacht waiting for the rogue wave to hit. Placing it all in one central bank basket means we get what we deserve. For the record, I still think your posts are satire.
JRobby MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 12:01 PM
Get Benny! We need FX « swaps »
Maybe he does « family audits » too?
bh2 MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 12:09 PM
What we desperately need, MDB, is to abandon the mad belief that unpayable debt is « money ».
Accomplishments by the « best and brightest » have been uniformly dismal and sordid, at best, owing mainly to functional illiteracy fostered by academia.
moneybots MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 12:14 PM
« We need a system of global governance, run by the best and brightest economic minds from across the globe, so that we can solve the world’s financial problems together, rather than negotiating with each other as isolated nation states. »
Such dripping sarcasm.
Antifaschistische MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 12:17 PM
MDB…you forgot to add that our global currency needs to be 100% electronic so we can inject as much capital into the system as necessary in times of crisis. Our paper fiat has always been a constraint to progress and the central banks ability to eliminate painful economic cycles.
geno-econ MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 12:22 PM
Can you name one brightest economic mind that is not corrupt, does not represent top 1%, Bankers, Multinationals, is internationally respected, and able to convince soveriegn nations and legislators that global governance is better than local jobs and community, social well being and family values ?
Jtrillian MillionDollarBonus_ Sep 29, 2016 1:13 PM
Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WrjwaqZfjIY
Listen up junior.
You write well and you sound smart but I sure as hell hope that you were being sarcastic. If not, you have in fact not only drank the BRAWNDO, but you guzzled the whole thing and went back for seconds.
Seriously, do you think that a single banking system is a good thing? Seriously? SERIOUSLY??? If you do then you clearly have not done any homework on what the signers of the Declaration of Independence had to say on the matter. Nor do you know what Rothchild has to say on the matter. Nor do you have any idea with regard to the history of the FED or how the central banking system was formed. In other words, when you argue FOR a central banking system, you are either a part of it, or you are showing your ignorance (assuming you are not being sarcastic).
Bottom line… you do NOT want to make banksters the center of the universe or the driving force of any economy because they will surely sacrifice long term sustainability for short term profits. That is the status quo these days. Buybacks are a perfect example.
If you want to address the root cause then look to history. It’s too much risk. It’s called « systemic risk » for a reason. There is too much leverage out there and when the market corrects, contagion spreads. This is mainly due to derivatives but it’s worse than 2008 as it’s spread to credit risk as well in the form of buybacks, consumer credit bubbles, high yield corporate debt and the massive bubbles that have been created in equities, bonds, and certain sectors like housing thanks to endless global « stimulus ».
What did you think was going to happen? Did you really think that all this credit risk was just going to work itself out without another financial collapse? If that is the case, then you TRULY HAVE NOT LEARNED ONE THING from the 2008 financial collapse.
The banking system would be best without a central bank, or « too big to fail » banks. The best banks would be those at the local level with strict capital requirements to ensure that systemic risk is kept to a minimum. And for the love of God, when a bank invests in derivatives with your money… that’s not investing. That is creating systemic risk and creates a clear conflict of interest with regard to the banks need to make a profit to satisfy shareholders and keeping your money safe.
But people are going to believe what they will. There is a very small percentage who are open to the truth and will seek it out. To those, I recommend Mike Maloney’s « Hidden Secrets of Money ». That series is a great history lesson in why these systems fail. Its’ a start anyway.
Deathrips kliguy38 Sep 29, 2016 11:43 AM
Dollars are worth something? THey are collateralized…..
Calling Bernanke!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awY1MRlMKMc
I call bullshit.
RIPS
MFL5591 nibiru Sep 29, 2016 11:47 AM
This situation in Europe than in the USA is all by design, no one can foolishly believe this along with its perfect timing!
Ghost of Porky Rainman Sep 29, 2016 11:17 AM
« Somebody’s gotta go back and get a shitload of dimes. »
Bay of Pigs Ghost of Porky Sep 29, 2016 11:54 AM
Slim Pickens was gold.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SbWg-mozGsU
Doom Porn Star Rainman Sep 29, 2016 2:03 PM
« since 2009: DB shareholders put up 13.5 billion euros in equity. DB has paid 19.3 billion euro in bonuses. «
This is all you need to know about what DB is really about.
The management are bonusing themselves cash faster than they can raise capital even when supposedly under pressure by the ECB to raise capital ratios.
All the cash in the bank is being stolen by the management and the NPLs and Derivatives exposures are being left behind…
Hitlery_4_Dictator Tom Servo Sep 29, 2016 11:14 AM
I’m not panicing, I’ve seen these charts for years and years…nothing will happen
Philo Beddoe Hitlery_4_Dictator Sep 29, 2016 11:22 AM
When the entire fucker comes down we will not even be able to come here to bitch about how we saw it coming.
Deathrips Philo Beddoe Sep 29, 2016 11:44 AM
This does indeed suck.
Ill say it now..
I saw it coming…..ok thats good enough for me.
RIPS
MagicHandPuppet Deathrips Sep 29, 2016 12:12 PM
For the past few years I’ve almost wished it would just happen already… Except, now, I really don’t want it to happen until at least after the election. I’m not really sure that will change anything – especially the way the goobermint behaves as its power structure weakens. But, at least there’s a chance it might.
robertocarlos Philo Beddoe Sep 29, 2016 12:07 PM
Electrons ain’t free.
TradingTroll Hitlery_4_Dictator Sep 29, 2016 11:27 AM
Nothing? Not the 15% drop in US indices Jan-Feb ’16? Not the steep drop in same Aug ’15? Not the steep drop in the fall of ’14?
Some people I know made millions on the other side of your ‘nothing will happen’.
Wait for the topping action next week and then get short. OTM puts on the QQQ and IWM look juicy.
Some people will make out like a bandit next several weeks.
Hitlery_4_Dictator TradingTroll Sep 29, 2016 11:28 AM
I don’t play with rigged casinos. Good luck to you sir.
spanish inquisition Hitlery_4_Dictator Sep 29, 2016 11:38 AM
Even if « something » happens, the charts won’t change.
hedgeless_horseman spanish inquisition Sep 29, 2016 12:21 PM
True.
For a little while that may only seem like an eternity.
Just ask Michael Burry.
Volaille de Bresse Hitlery_4_Dictator Sep 29, 2016 11:47 AM
‘I don’t play with rigged casinos »
You should… as long as you own the rigged casino.
Ghost of PartysOver TradingTroll Sep 29, 2016 11:46 AM
Wait for the topping action next week and then get short.
Which market? If you are referring to the USSA Stawks and Bonds then I may, said may, take the other side of that trade. EU capital has to go somewhere and I am thinking that the USSA might be the place. What other options are there? Only thing holding me back from buying like a drunken sailor is I have no idea what the counter party risk is to the USSA Financial Majors.
- 1
- next ›
User login
Username: *
Password: *
Zero Hedge Reads
- Acting Man
- Alt-Market
- Bearish News
- Benzinga
- Boom Bust Blog
- Capitalist Exploits
- China Financial Markets
- Chris Martenson’s Blog
- Contrary Investor
- Credit Writedowns
- Daneric’s Elliott Waves
- DealBook
- Demonocracy
- Dr. Housing Bubble
- ETF Daily News
- ETF Digest
- Economica
- Financial Revolutionist
- First Rebuttal
- ForexLive
- Fundist
- Gains Pains & Capital
- Global Economic Analysis
- Hedge Accordingly
- Implode-Explode
- Investing Contrarian
- Jesse’s Cafe Americain
- Liberty Blitzkrieg
- Market Folly
- Market Montage
- Max Keiser
- Minyanville
- Mises Institute
- Mish Talk
- Of Two Minds
- Oil Price
- Peter Schiff
- Rebooting Capitalism
- Shanky’s Tech Blog
- Slope of Hope
- SmartKnowledgeU Blog
- StealthFlation
- Stratfor
- TF Metals Report
- The Automatic Earth
- The Burning Platform
- The Economic Populist
- The Hammerstone Group
- The Trader
- The Vineyard Of The Saker
- Themis Trading
- True Sinews
- Value Walk
- View From The Bridge
- Wolf Street
09-29 14:09: According to NYT, Salesforce are said to question the Microsoft (MSFT…
09-29 14:09: Mexican Interest Rate Decision 4.75% vs. Exp. 4.75% (Prev. 4.25%)
09-29 14:09: UBS (UBSN VX), RBS (RBS LN) and Deutsche Bank (DBK GY) are reportedly…
09-29 14:09: Qualcomm (QCOM) are in discussions to acquire NXP Semiconductors (…
09-29 14:09: Some Deutsche Bank (DBK GY) clients are lowering their collateral on…
09-29 14:09: As the latest negative story for Deutsche Bank circulates, financials…
09-29 14:09: OSRAM Licht (OSR GY) has received interest from Chinese investors,…
09-29 14:09: WTI and Brent crude futures have extended on their gains following…