Skip to main content

How Ireland Will Destroy the Euro? - New World Order Or New World Disorder? - Our 100th Post...

Ireland's decision to guarantee all bank deposits will contribute to the demise of the single European currency, because it will erode the euro's credibility...Hugh Hendry, chief investment officer and Partner at Eclectica Fund, told CNBC on Thursday...

Watch the video:


Promises of lavish spending such as this and others being discussed in Europe will erode investors' confidence, Hendry warned.

The plan pledges to guarantee the liabilities of six Irish-owned banks totaling some 400 billion euros ($565 billion), more than twice the country's annual gross domestic product.

"The decision, if left to stand … my prophecy is it will bring down the currency. The euro is not a tenable currency if you have politicians making such decisions. The reality is there is no such thing as a free lunch"...

Irish lawmakers backed the plan and the government said it may be extended to foreign banks with retail units in Ireland, but it has raised questions in Brussels and London about competition and state-aid rules.

Promises of lavish spending such as this and others being discussed in Europe will erode investors' confidence, Hendry warned.

"McDonalds has got less chance of going bust than the British government," he said. "When our government comes to issue this sea of money they're going to pay through the nose … if we can't constrain that behavior, we're going to pay for it."

"We're on the verge of a sovereign debt default in Europe."

The current crisis stems from central banks easing monetary policy and flooding markets with liquidity to kick-start the economy after the dot-com bust in 2000, Hendry said.

"The reality is we should have had a stinking recession at the turn of the century. We burnt and destroyed lots of capital, we should have suffered from it," he said, adding that former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan thought he could "abolish the economic cycle" by inflating house prices.

Report from CNBC



Ireland's possible destruction of the Euro - is this part of a "new world order" or a "new world disorder"???? Comments welcome.

Popular posts from this blog

Ireland's Celtic Tiger Excesses...

'Bang twins' may never get to run a business again... POST-boom Ireland is awash with cautionary tales of Celtic Tiger excesses, as a rattle around the carcasses of fallen property developers and entrepreneurs will show. Few can compete with the so-called Bang twins for youth, glamour and tasteful extravagance. Simon and Christian Stokes, the 35-year-old identical twins behind Bang Cafe and exclusive private members club, Residence, saw their entire business go bust with debts of €9m, €3m of which is owed to the tax man. The debt may be in the ha'penny place compared with the eye-watering billions owed by some of their former customers. But their fall has been arguably steeper and more damning than some of the country's richest tycoons. Last week, further humiliation was heaped on them with revelations that even as their businesses were going under, the twins spent €146,000 of company money in 18 months on designer shopping sprees, five star holidays and sumptu...

Property Crash Homes For Sale...

Hundreds of repossessed homes in Ireland to be sold by auction... UK property consultancy Allsop to hold auction in April at Dublin's Shelbourne hotel: Flats in Ireland that could have fetched €150,000 in the Celtic Tiger years are to be put on the market for as little as €25,000 (£21,000) in the country's first ever mass auction of repossessed homes. And, in a sign of how wide the property crash is, the latest item to turn up in liquidation sales in Dublin is a job lot of 15 cranes, including a pair towering over Anglo Irish Bank's half-built headquarters in the city's docklands. "Tower cranes were among the most sought-after heavy plant and machinery 10 years ago," Ricky Wilson of Wilsons Auctions says. "You couldn't buy them quick enough. Now they are left idle for two or three years on sites." He has 15 cranes worth €500,000 going on sale on 26 March, with German, Dutch and Polish buyers expressing interest. But it is the auction ...

Varadkar says it’s ‘not the worst thing’ that Ryanair is buying up homes for staff

25 of the 28 units in a new development at Fostertown Place in Swords were purchased by Ryanair for their cabin crew. TAOISEACH LEO VARADKAR says he does not have any issue with Ryanair or other companies buying up almost entire housing estates for their staff. He said there is a big difference between companies like Ryanair bulk-buying houses and apartments compared to investment funds. “We are building over 30,000 new homes now every year,” he said. “If you think about it, that’s 70,000, 80,000 or 90,000 bedrooms every year so we are finally seeing housing being built on scale,” Varadkar said. “We want to scale that up this year and next year as well because we do have a rising population and family sizes are getting smaller, so we need more housing and we are making progress,” he said. “In relation to Ryanair specifically, I don’t think it is the worst thing that a company would buy accommodation for their staff. It’s not the first time this has happened, it has be...