Lars Seire Christensen |
A volte qualche banchiere sembra dire le cose come stanno. In questo caso, niente meno dell'amministratore delegato della Saxo Bank (Lars Seire Christensen) ci ricorda che ...
"il recente rally dell'euro è un'illusione, la moneta unica è destinata a fallire perchè non è supportata da un'unione fiscale"
"adesso siamo in uno di quei momenti in cui, la gente pensa che il problema sia stato affrontato e ci si avvii verso una soluzione, niente di più falso..."
"un'altra possibilità è sbarazzarsi dei paesi che sono stati rovinati dall'euro, quelli del sud europa, la gente ha tremendamente sottovalutatoil problema. Una volta che i Francesi entreranno in piena crisi sarà game over".
"L'euro viene tenuto in piedi dall'apparato politico che lo sostiene per motivi politici e non economici".
Non resta molto altro d'aggiungere.....
via bloomberg
Lars Seier Christensen, co-chief executive officer of Danish bank Saxo Bank A/S, said the euro’s recent rally is illusory and the shared currency is set to fail because the continent hasn’t supported it with a fiscal union.
“The whole thing is doomed,” Christensen said yesterday in an interview at the bank’s Dubai office. “Right now we’re in one of those fake solutions where people think that the problem is contained or being addressed, which it isn’t at all.”
“I’d be a bigger seller of the euro at anything near 1.4,” according to Christensen, who said he isn’t making any speculative bets against the currency.
“Another possible fallout is getting rid of some of the countries that are being ruined by being in the euro, notably the southern European economies,” Christensen said. “People have been dramatically underestimating the problems the French are going to get from this. Once the French get into a full- scale crisis, it’s over. Even the Germans cannot pay for that one and probably will not.”
Record Debt
Public-sector debt is at record levels, having more than doubled from 40 percent of gross domestic product in 2008. The European Commission, which is due to update its forecasts this week, sees it rising to 97.1 percent of GDP next year.
“It’s the political world that has been extremely supportive of the euro, not for economic reasons but for political reasons,” said Christensen, a long-time critic of the single currency who now lives in Switzerland.