Thursday, April 8, 2010

Sovereign Debt Crisis at 'Boiling Point'

The Bank for International Settlements does not mince words. Sovereign debt is already starting to cross the danger threshold in the United States, Japan, Britain, and most of Western Europe, threatening to set off a bond crisis at the heart of the global economy.


The aftermath of the financial crisis is poised to bring a simmering fiscal problem in industrial economies to the boiling point", said the Swiss-based bank for central bankers -- the oldest and most venerable of the world's financial watchdogs. Drastic austerity measures will be needed to head off a compound interest spiral, if it is not already too late for some.
The risk is an "abrupt rise in government bond yields" as investors choke on a surfeit of public debt. "Bond traders are notoriously short-sighted, assuming they can get out before the storm hits: their time horizons are days or weeks, not years or decade. We take a longer and less benign view of current developments," said the study, entitled "The Future of Public Debt", by the bank's chief economist Stephen Cecchetti.
More Here..

2 comments:

  1. I am sure every country is just waiting for the first one to bail on their debt and the rest will come rushing in. I am sure Bernake gets a hardon just at the thought of sovereign defaults...more hard assets and natural resources for sale...everything must go....offer ends soon!!!!

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  2. Whew! Just what I needed to hear. More bad news. Wish I could donate - seriously - but the last bad news was that I'm broke, busted and disgusted, can't be trusted.

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