By ITMS News on February 5th, 2010 11:09am Eastern Time
By Phil at Phil’s Stock World
It was September 15th, 2008 when Lehman announced they would file Chapter 11.
Lehman had already lost half their value in one day on September 9th as the government failed to step in and assist them. Whether they were solvent or not became a non-issue as investors lost confidence and put a run on Lehman, making the short attacks on them a self-fulfilling prophecy. Jean Claude Trichet yesterday, was speaking up for the EU in the same way that Dick Fuld attempted to speak up for Lehman as the end was near. Fuld could not believe that people were questioning the solvency of LEH and Trichet can’t believe that people are now questioning even the continued existence of the Euro.
“Trichet did not convince me,” said Stuart Thomson, who helps manage $100 billion at Ignis Asset Management in Glasgow, Scotland. “Where does he think the Greek, Spanish and Portuguese economies will be three years from now? Their austerity measures will weigh on the euro area as a whole.” As Greece tries to control a record deficit and stem a slide in its bonds, Trichet said the economy of the 16-nation euro area is solid and its budget shortfall will probably be smaller than those of the U.S. and Japan this year. The comments yesterday didn’t stop Spanish and Portuguese stocks from dropping on concern they are in a similar predicament to Greece, or the euro from tumbling to a nine-month low against the dollar.
Trichet has been forced to fend off questions about the survival of the euro as investors doubt Greece’s ability to cut its deficit from 12.7 percent of gross domestic product to below the European Union’s 3 percent limit. As concern spreads to Spain and Portugal’s rising debt burdens, Trichet will try to stress the need for fiscal prudence without inflaming skepticism that it can be achieved. “Something has to happen to turn credibility around,” said Paul Mortimer-Lee, head of Market Economics at BNP Paribas in London. “The market’s just saying it’s not believable. It might have to get worse before it gets better.”
Trichet said the “solidity” of the euro area “is not necessarily very well known” and its situation compares “very flatteringly with a number of other industrialized countries.” He said that according to the International Monetary Fund, in 2010 the average deficit for the entire euro region should be around 6 percent of GDP. “Can I mention what it is for other major industrialized countries,” Trichet said. “The U.S., a little bit more than 10 percent, Japan, a little more than 10 percent, and you can find out other industrialized countries that are even higher than 10 percent.”
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