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Interestingly, the euro has gained ground solidly the last month.
Despite all of the calls for the destruction of the EU, the euro so far has held up well against the US dollar at about $1.30 / euro.
Negative new on Europe is less the last few months.
http://www.economist.com/blogs/graphicdetail/2013/02/european-economy-guide
Despite these improvements, government debt levels are now worryingly high in the periphery, with debt burdens (ie, as a share of GDP) above 100% in Greece, Italy, Ireland and Portugal. Greece’s remains exceptionally high, at 178% of GDP, despite a bond buyback late last year and the writedown of over half of privately held debt in March 2012. But other European governments, to whom Greece now owes over half of its debt, have eased the effective burden by lowering interest rates and extending the maturities of their loans.
3-Month Performance Leaders
http://www.barchart.com/commodityfutures/leaders?type=pl&cat=65d&view=chart
relative performance
http://finviz.com/forex_performance.ashx?v=26&o=-perfdaypct
Now Cyprus is all better too!
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/stock-futures-signal-rise-cyprus
Euro still above $1.28.
Despite all of the calls for the destruction of the EU, the euro so far has held up well against the US dollar at about $1.30 / euro.
That says a lot about what people around the world think of the dollar. The euro should be dropping like a rock against the dollar. Zerohedge likes to point out how well the dollar is doing, but only against the yen, pound, and euro. As we used to say in Texas, it's the best of a (really) bad lot. How's the dollar doing against the rest of the world's currencies? Not nearly as well.
People are getting antsy about the dollar. Lots of direct currency exchange deals popping up around the world lately, especially in China. Going to get interesting the next 5-10 years. Sooner or later the piper must be paid. The only question is who runs out of cans to kick down the road first. It's the ultimate game of chicken going on out there. If the situation wasn't so deadly serious and dire it would actually be funny.
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Stories like this seem to imply that all is well:
Stock futures rise Greek debt hopes
Asia stocks following surge wall
However, something is rotten in the state of....
Greek debt talks to stretch into weekend (profit.ndtv.com)
Faber-Greece is a write-off (The Mess that Greenspan Made)
Market Bulls Rely on...Greece? (Zacks)
Greece tearing-Europe apart politically socially economically-William (Yahoo Tech Ticker)
Why the Euro-zone could unravel very fast. (Time)
Europe bailout of Spain could cost 125 billion (Japan Today.com)
Spain unveil's austerity steps soon (Yahoo Finance)
Boj policymaker warns of uncertainty over recovery amid Europe woes (Japantoday.com)
Euro-crisis-revving-again-fasten (yahoo.com)
Greek-protest-turns-violent-during-general-strike (Yahoo.com)
Spain-default-debt-just-greece-john-mauldin-162554593.html
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/spain-time-greece-does-not-110143314.html
Could it be?