BBC News – Bankia shares suspended amid bailout request reports

Bankia headquarters Bankia shares have fallen 58% since July

Trading in shares in the Spanish lender Bankia has been suspended in Madrid.

The market regulator CNMV said it was “due to circumstances that may affect the normal share trading”.

Bankia is reported to be due to ask the government for a bailout of more than 15bn euros ($19bn; £12bn) after a board meeting later on Friday.

Bankia, which is Spain’s fourth-largest bank, was part-nationalised two weeks ago because of its problems with bad property debt. Continue reading

Millions in the streets: Spain protests cuts to education (PHOTOS, VIDEO) — RT

Published: 22 May, 2012, 21:15

A striking teacher holds up a blackboard in front of a policeman during a protest in front of the education ministry in Madrid (Reuters/Andrea Comas)

(6.3Mb) embed video

TAGS: Conflict, Crisis, Protest, Politics, Europe, Education

The majority of Spain’s educational institutions have closed as teachers and students take to the streets to defend their rights. The government has cut billions of euros from educational sector expenses.

­The strike is taking place on all levels, from elementary schools to universities in all but three of Spain’s 17 regions. As many as a million teachers and seven million students are expected to take part in Tuesday’s demonstrations.

If the austerity package goes through, it will reduce government subsidies on education by more than 20 per cent. The measure, unions say, will result in worsening educational conditions, mass teacher layoffs and higher tuition costs.

A policeman identifies a striking teacher during a protest in Madrid (Reuters/Andrea Comas)
A policeman identifies a striking teacher during a protest in Madrid (Reuters/Andrea Comas)

­“They are stealing from us in every possible way, and that can’t be allowed to happen. I don’t know if we will get something out of [the strike], but at least it’s something,” a student demonstrator said.

The crisis unfolding in the Eurozone has pushed the Spanish government to introduce a new round of austerity measures in addition to €30 billion cuts in 2012 alone. Continue reading

Atlantean Language Remnants – Spirit House Healing

Thanks to Patricia – Laura

WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 2012

Atlantean Language Remnants

An obvious consequence of a Minoan – Atlantean global sea trade and culture that prospered for at least 1500 years is that a trade language would exist and provide loanwords to locales in which trade stations or factories were established.
It also can be suggested that Dravidian a major successor language of the Atlantean trade language.
Surprisingly we discover that the Ainu were sharply impacted as were also the Polynesians. Many more are now been recognized and will surely include the Cree and certain historic tribes in the Americas.
This item helps us map out the relationship between the Basque Language and the Dravidian Language.
As I have posted in the past, the North African littoral including Egypt was a major population base for the Atlantean world and easily extended north and south around Spain and North Africa.
This world was also developed before the advent of the horse warrior which ended stability and also explains rather clearly why the Atlanteans failed to introduce horses into the Americas. They were already paying a high price in terms of defense and it would have been easy to ensure that this did not happen in the Americas
This in fact eliminates a nagging question that had bothered me. An Atlantean civilization, and a civilization it was in which the natural currency was metal, operated by control of trade and some form of tribute system. It was progressing rather well in fact and it had created the alphabet by then which evolved over a millenia int the brillint Greek Solution which empowered the rise of Western civilization.
Speakers of The Atlantean Tongue
Friday, April 6, 2012
“The Turdetanians [Andalucians] are ranked as the wisest of the Iberians; and they make use of an alphabet, and possess records of their ancient history, poems, and laws written in verse that are six thousand years old, as they assert. And also the other Iberians use an alphabet, though not letters of one and the same character, for their speech is not one and the same, either.” — Strabo, Geography, Book III, Chapter 1, 1st century 

Education Cuts Spur Huge Student Protests Across Spain

Published on Wednesday, February 29, 2012 by Common Dreams

  – Common Dreams staff

Tens of thousands of students marched out of their schools across Spain today, protesting broad education cuts that have caused teacher layoffs, overcrowded campuses and unheated classrooms. Tensions were highest in Barcelona, where police and protesters clashed as more than 30,000 people took to the streets.

Students shout slogans during a protest against cuts in education in central Madrid. (Photo: Reuters) Agence France-Presse reports:

Protestors marched through the streets in various towns after some camped the night in universities in a movement dubbed Primaveraestudiantil (“Student Spring”) and Tomalafacultad (“Seize the faculty”) on Twitter.

The national students’ union said marches were called in about 40 cities and towns across the country to protest the austerity measures they say are disrupting classes and cutting teaching jobs.

“We did not create this crisis but we are paying for it in every sense,” said the union’s leader Tohil Delgado ahead of Wednesday’s marches, saying classes and thousands of teaching jobs have been cut.

“They are making cuts in public education, they are giving us no option to work, and on top of this, when we protest democratically, they beat us with complete impunity.”

He estimated turnout at the Valencia demonstration alone was in the tens of thousands.

In Madrid students whistled and chanted slogans such as “Fewer cuts, more education!”

They rallied noisily outside the national education ministry and stopped on their march to whistle angrily outside offices of Santander, a major bank.

They were the latest in a string of demonstrations in various sectors in anger at cuts and reforms that the conservative government says will strengthen the economy and eventually curb unemployment, which is near 23 percent.

“All the cutbacks and the labour reforms make it hard for youths to enter the labour market,” Diego Parejo, 21, a third-year politics student, at the Madrid demonstration, told AFP.

“When I finish university, I see a very dark future.”

And The Guardian reported on events in Barcelona:Students and riot police clash during education protest in Barcelona. (Photograph: David Ramos/Getty Images)

Fires were lit in the streets, cars burned and bank windows were smashed with missiles as the protests turned violent. At least one bank was broken into and police fired rubber bullets as roads in the city were blocked.

Baton-wielding riot police made several charges, pushing hundreds of demonstrators back into the main buildings of the University of Barcelona, not far from the central Plaça de Catalunya.

A small group of peaceful demonstrators marched on the Mobile World Congress – a major international telecoms trade fair – being held at the city’s exhibition centre, blocking a nearby main road.

Masked protesters also attacked a television cameraman as authorities suggested the student protests had been infiltrated by troublemakers. “This gives an image of students and the university world that is simply not real,” said Antoni Castellà, the director of universities for the Catalan regional government.

Early reports were of a handful of arrests and nine injuries.

“We did not expect this degree of repression,” said Pau Brosons, a student, after police hit protesters with truncheons. “Nobody broke anything until they charged.”

Students were due to assemble again on Wednesday night to decide whether to continue their protests.

A report in the Los Angeles Times warned that today’s protest might only be an “omen of what’s to come,” and continued, “Spaniards are only beginning to feel the effects of a $20-billion package of spending cuts and tax hikes passed this year by the newly installed conservative government. Further spending cuts may follow because Madrid is still flouting rules limiting budget deficits for members of the 17-nation Eurozone.”

Spanish duke subpoenaed in fraud case

Thanks to Pat ~ Laura
Published: Feb. 24, 2012 at 7:50 PM,

MADRID, Feb. 24 (UPI) – The husband of Spain’s Princess Cristina will be the first royal in the country’s modern history to appear in court as part of a fraud investigation.

Inaki Urdangarin, 44, a commoner who became duke of Palma after a 1997 marriage, was subpoenaed by a judge investigating whether he and his business partners channeled millions of dollars in public funds into private companies, The New York Times reported Friday. He will appear in court Saturday.

Carmen Enriquez, national television’s royal correspondent for nearly two decades, said the investigation has hurt the image of the monarchy. Continue reading

Massive Crowds as Spaniards Protest Stripping of Labor Rights

- Common Dreams staff

Up to a million Spainards marched in cities across Spain Sunday in a massive protest at the new government’s drive to strip them of their labor rights under the cover of austerity measures.

Protesters take part during a rally against the economic policy of the Conservative Spanish Government in Barcelona, Spain, Sunday, Feb. 19, 2012. The new conservative Popular Party government pledges new labor reforms to try to halt further job destruction as Spain already has the highest unemployment rate in the 17-nation eurozone with more than five millions unemployed and more than eleven million people at risk of social exclusion, as a result of the economic crisis. (AP Photo/Manu Fernandez)In echoes of Wisconsin, the labor ‘reforms’ proposed by Spain’s conservative government would make it easier for companies to fire workers and pull out of collective bargaining agreements.

The country’s two main trade unions, CCOO and UGT, organized demonstrations in at least 57 cities under the slogan: “No to the Labor Reforms – Unfair to Workers, Ineffective and Useless to the Economy and for Employment.”

Unemployment in Spain has tripled since 2007, and today about 5.2 million people in the country are out of work. The official unemployment rate is running at 23%, and its youth unemployment rate is nearly 50%. Continue reading

» Founder Of $30 Billion Hedge Fund Says Euro Banks Insolvent, Euro Situation Much “Worse Than 2008″ Alex Jones’ Infowars: There’s a war on for your mind!

Zero Hedge
December 15, 2011

The Founder of one of the world’s largest asset managers, the $30 billion hedge fund BlueCrest, Michael Platt, spoke to Bloomberg TV and cut right to the chase,saying most of the banks in Europe are insolvent and the situation in the region is “completely unstable.” On how he approaches market risk: “”I do not take any exposure to banks at all if I can avoid it.  All the money at BlueCrest Capital Management is in Two-Year U.S. government debt, Two-Year German debt, we have segregated accounts with all of our counterparties.  We are absolutely concerned about the credit quality of the counterparties.” On investing in illiquid assets, Platt said he “would not touch them with a barge pole” and that “the major opportunities will come post-blowout.” Something tells us Russia and China know this all too well, and realize that the best time to “invest” in Europe is after the single (or multiple) bankruptcy. Which incidentally, as Kyle Bass said yesterday, after the “blowout” is when the ECB will finally step in as well, at which point the entire world will go all in on that now infamous 2-7 offsuit. And his view on how that bluff will end: ‘In my opinion, what’s going on now is significantly worse than 2008.

Platt on Europe’s sovereign debt crisis:

“The level of concern of what we have about what is going on in Europe is absolutely huge.  When you evidence all over the markets that they are pricing for the potential of the eurozone break up, it is contrary to what everything is set by policy makers and by central bankers. We distill it down essential fact that we continue to focus on at BlueCrest Capital Management – if you look at the debt of Italy at 120% of GDP, which is increasing at a real rate of 5%, and if you look at the GDP, which now is forecast next year to be declining, arithmetically their debt is going to blow up.  And we don’t see anything happening at the policy level that gives us any indication that there’s anything that’s going to convert this situation from where it is now to a much more substantial and real crisis in the future.”

On whether a blow up of Italy will force a breakup of the Eurozone:

“We need much more radical measures to prevent this from happening.  If Italy and Spain are forced to roll their debt over, if they have to pay rates between 5 and 7% for this, then the situation in Europe is unsustainable.  We’re not going to have any euro bonds, we’re not going to have a full political and fiscal union where the transfers will take place.  It seems what we’re going to have is an attempt to control the European situation through continued austerity, which is pro-cyclical.  As the economy slows down, we end up with more austerity which creates more slowdown.  We also have a requirement for banks to increase capital, therefore we’re looking at a 3 trillion euro takedown in European balance sheets.  There’s basically nowhere I can see where we can get any growth from.”

On whether cultural and political divides between nations in Europe have played a role in the crisis:

  • A D V E R T I S E M E N T

“Absolutely, it’s about the cultural and political divide.  The reality is that there is no willingness within the Eurozone to share wealth.  In the United States, if California is having a really difficult time, the rest of the United States will send money to California.  This is not the case in Europe.  There is no willingness to transfer money across boundaries in a long-term and sustainable way.”

“The market prices the probability of a euro breakup to be distinctly non-zero, despite what the politicians say.  I believe that the eventuality of a European breakup is so awful, that more and more drastic measures will take place as time goes by.  The ECB is probably the only institution that can tackle this problem, but it doesn’t have a mandate to do so…As time goes by, my view of what’s required is a radical change of policy from the ECB to tackle this problem.”

More on Europe’s problems:

“The probability that the market is putting on a Eurozone breakup, in my opinion from evidence I’m seeing from option pricing across the different markets, is steadily rising…We’re going into 2012, and in our opinion, it’s only going to get worse.”

“There is a sensible argument you should not price and the whole loan in response to where the government trades because the government has the ability to remove assets and put them on their own balance sheets.”

“The problem with Europe is that almost every part of it has gone wrong now.  The banks are undercapitalized…If banks were hedge funds, and you mark them to market properly, I would say that probably most of them are insolvent.  [Most of the banks in Europe are insolvent right now] if they were marked like I am at a hedge fund, yes.”

On whether BlueCrest’s relationship with banks has changed:

“I do not take any exposure to banks at all if I can avoid it.  All the money at BlueCrest Capital Management is in Two-Year U.S. government debt, Two-Year German debt, we have segregated accounts with all of our counterparties.  We are absolutely concerned about the credit quality of the counterparties.”

On whether he’s afraid of taking risk right now:

“Absolutely.  The main thing that’s driving our decision about where to lend money or where to place our funds under management, the vast majority is dollars which we keep in two-year notes.  We have a chunk of euros, which we keep in German two-year paper.  We’re not interested in taking any peripheral debt risk at all and we’re not interested in taking any bank credit risk right now.”

On the United States and Germany:

“I think they’re the best of the bunch.  I feel pretty good about the United States.  I don’t really have an issue because I think the complete control that the authorities have, particularly the Fed and its bond buying program, we do not have issues about having money in Two-Year securities in the United States.  In Europe, you’ve got to put your euros somewhere.  It is a much more difficult place to make a decision.  Two-year German notes seem like a reasonably safe bet right now, certainly compared to anything else.”

On making money in a crisis:

“The most important thing to remember about crises is you do not make your money going into the crisis.  When you go into a crisis such as 2008, markets trade against positions. People have positions on and people need to get risk off.  All the things that people thought were a good idea start going into reverse.  The big money you make in trading is more in the aftermath of the crisis.  In 2009 we made 60% with no down months on our master fund.”

On whether BlueCrest is looking at illiquid investments:

“I would not touch an illiquid product with a barge pole, to be honest. We’re going into an environment where banks need to delever.  Illiquid assets will be coming on to the streets everywhere.  The price of liquidity in my opinion will go up.  I don’t want to own any illiquid assets whatsoever. The strategy at BlueCrest is to be in super liquid products, things that can be turned around in a day.”

“It would have been the end of my business in 2008 had I done such a thing.  Anyone who had an illiquid position within their hedge funds, there were runs on those hedge funds because people wanted to get the cash out and not be side pocketed with the illiquids.  In 2008 I paid out $9.5 billion to the street because I was the only hedge fund that was up a lot and completely liquid.

On whether we’ll see a repeat of the 2008 credit crunch and whether those that hold illiquid assets will get crushed:

“That’s what I think, yes.  I think so.  In my opinion, what’s going on now is significantly worse than 2008…The European debt situation is fundamentally completely unstable.  The process of refinancing your debt with a real rate of 5 when you have negative GDP growth, and we are heading into a recession in Europe, arithmetically can turn all of the countries in Europe, given enough time, into Greece.”

On how closely tied America’s futures and the potential for investment are to Europe’s debt crisis:

“Clearly it would be a huge drag on the U.S. economy.  We’re talking about in Europe is a situation of instability driven by pro cyclical policy, removing the ability of banks to invest in sovereign debt.  We’re talking about pro-cyclical policy of governments not being able to deficit spend by law. We’re talking about existing deficits that need to be closed. We’re talking about an increase in the amounts that governments will have to find when they’re

Forced to refinance their rolling over paper this year at real rates of interest, which are way beyond anything they will ever be able to achieve in terms of growth.”

On how BlueCrest continues to make money through the slowdown:

“Because we are traders and do not take any credit risk and we’re super liquid.  In the time that BlueCrest has been around, we have made $17 billion of trading profits for our investors…so in an environment like this where we are a very secure trading strategy, taking no credit risk, not buying anything illiquid, that is the kind of thing investors frankly really want to hear from someone like me.”

On where he’s seeing investment opportunities:

“I think the major opportunities will come post the blow up.  I think for the time being you want to keep it quite simple.  You do not want to take any credit risk.  I think volatility in certain markets is very underpriced compared to what’s potentially about to happen.  I think if we go into a crisis scenario, things like German bunds could be more expensive than they are right now.  And I think as the crisis intensifies through the process of governments refinancing and deficits becoming more unstable and growth deteriorating in particular, I think those kinds of trades will play out in the market and be profitable.”

On moving BlueCrest from London to Geneva:

“I did not really want to be exposed to the Eurozone. I don’t want to be exposed to regulation coming out of the Eurozone.  Most of my clients come from the United States.  I am not really marketing to the Eurozone anyway.  So it didn’t make much sense for me to be in the Eurozone as a business.”

» Founder Of $30 Billion Hedge Fund Says Euro Banks Insolvent, Euro Situation Much “Worse Than 2008″ Alex Jones’ Infowars: There’s a war on for your mind!.

Prepare for riots in euro collapse, Foreign Office warns – Telegraph

British embassies in the eurozone have been told to draw up plans to help British expats through the collapse of the single currency, amid new fears for Italy and Spain.

British expats braced for collapse of Euro

The Treasury confirmed earlier this month that contingency planning for a collapse is now under way Photo: BLOOMBERG

As the Italian government struggled to borrow and Spain considered seeking an international bail-out, British ministers privately warned that the break-up of the euro, once almost unthinkable, is now increasingly plausible.

Diplomats are preparing to help Britons abroad through a banking collapse and even riots arising from the debt crisis.

The Treasury confirmed earlier this month that contingency planning for a collapse is now under way.

A senior minister has now revealed the extent of the Government’s concern, saying that Britain is now planning on the basis that a euro collapse is now just a matter of time.

“It’s in our interests that they keep playing for time because that gives us more time to prepare,” the minister told the Daily Telegraph.

Recent Foreign and Commonwealth Office instructions to embassies and consulates request contingency planning for extreme scenarios including rioting and social unrest. Continue reading

Occupy Wall Street: Beyond Encampments

2011 November 24

Posted by Steve Beckow

Article image

Now here comes a discussion from Nation of Change of moving beyond encampments. Perhaps it’s inevitable that protest strategists might be thinking along these lines.  In this case, advice from the indignados and an invitation to a new phase of the Occupy movement. A long article.

Occupy Wall Street: Beyond Encampments

Luis Moreno-Caballud and Marina Sitrin, Nation of Change, Nov. 23, 2011

http://www.nationofchange.org/occupy-wall-street-beyond-encampments-1322062361

We write this letter  as participants in the movements, and as an invitation to a  conversation. We hope to raise questions about how we continue to deepen  and transform the new social relationships and processes we have begun …  to open the discussion towards a common horizon. Continue reading