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Friday, March 29, 2024

European Bailout Stigma Shifts From Banks To Sovereigns As Bundesbank Refuses PIG Collateral

Courtesy of ZeroHedge. View original post here.

Submitted by Tyler Durden.

Back in early February, the ECB’s Margio Draghi told a naive world when discussing the implication of taking LTRO bailout aid, that “There is no stigma whatsoever on these facilities.” We accused him of lying. Additionally, we also suggested to put one’s money where Draghi’s lies are, and to go long non-LTRO banks, while shorting LTRO recipients. In two short months the spread on that trade has doubled…

… which intuitively is not surprising: after all, as a former Goldmanite (and according to some – current), Draghi is merely treating Europe’s taxpayers like the muppets they are. As such, fading anything he says should come as naturally as Stolpering each and every FX trade. Yet what that little incident shows is that despite all their attempts otherwise, the central planners can not contain every single natural consequences of their artificial and destructive actions. Today, we see learn that the same Stigma we warned about, and that Draghi said does not exist, is starting to spread away from just the bailed out banks (becuase we now know that the LTRO was merely a QE-like bailout of several insolvent Italian and Spanish banks), and to sovereigns. From Bloomberg: “Germany’s Bundesbank is the first of the 17 euro-area central banks to refuse to accept as collateral bank bonds guaranteed by member states receiving aid from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported.” And where Buba goes, everyone else is soon to follow. And what happens then? Since it is inevitable that Spain and Italy will be next on the bailout wagon, what happens when over $2 trillion in bonds suddenly become ineligible for cash collateral from the only solvent central bank in the world (aside for that modest, little TARGET2 issue of course). Will it force the ECB to be ever more lenient with collateral, and how long until the plebs finally realize that the ECB has been doing nothing but outright printing in the past 5 months? What happens to inflationary expectations then?

More:

The Bundesbank won’t lend to banks against bank debt guaranteed by Greece, Ireland and Portugal from May, the newspaper said, citing unidentified officials. The Frankfurt- based central bank currently has less than 500 million euros ($667 million) of those bonds on its balance sheet, FAZ reported.

Remember: we already indicated that the Bundesbank is at the center of a whole lot of receivables, which it will never collect on, at the heart of Europe’s banking system.

Is the first “enough” uttered by Germany? Or is this nothing but more posturing? We will find out rather soon, once things sping out of control once again.

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