Von Eichelburgs Seite Systemkrise:
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard: Brace yourself for the insolvency crunch
<http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/b…august07/marketmayhem.htm>
The liquidity crunch is not yet over: the insolvency crunch has hardly begun.
Many cannot. Germany’s Chamber of Industry told me yesterday that it had been flooded
with distress calls from family Mittelstand firms unable to roll over credit lines.
In Canada and Australia, junior mining finance has dried up almost entirely.
Global junk bond issuance has been frozen for two months. Fresh sales of collateralized debt
obligations – the CDOs of subprime notoriety: a $1 trillion sold last year - have all but stopped.
Banks have yet to off-load $300bn of debt from leveraged buy-out deals, forcing them to keep the
liabilities on their books. They are all snake-bitten now.
Why? Because trust had collapsed to such a degree that players with a lot of cash no longer believed it
safe to leave wealth in bank accounts, or the money market funds of brokerage companies - (exposed
as they are to short-term commercial paper and subprime CDOs). This did not occur after 9/11, or in the
heat of the October 1987 crash. Nor did was there such a banking panic in October 1929. (it hit in
August 1931). If you think this is of no importance, or that this will pass swiftly, you have a strong nerve.
“When you have a run on the money markets like this, it is bound to spill over into the real economy,”
said Albert Edwards, global strategist at Dresdner Kleinwort.
Zitat Eichelburg:
Also, der Credit-Crunch ist unterwegs. Die deutsche DIHK wird mit Anrufen aus Mittelstandsfirmen geflutet,
die ihe Kreditlinien nicht mehr verlängert bekommen.
Und die Insider (Players) trauen weder Banken noch Brokern noch Geldmarkt-Fonds. Das geht nicht vorbei.
Link: <http://www.hartgeld.com/systemkrise.htm>
Vatapitta