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Unreported News, Commentary, Resources and Discussion of Bible Prophecy
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10.56 Barclays has claimed that skyscrapers have an "unhealthy" link with impending financial collapse.
Researchers pointed to the fact the world's first skyscraper, New York's Equitable Life building, was finished in 1873 during a five-year recession, while the Empire State Building coincided with the Great Depression
Not good news for the ECB, which is building its own high-rise structure.
Could there be a worse portent than this?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/debt ... -live.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... perts.html
Skyscrapers have an 'unhealthy' link with impending financial collapse, according to banking experts.
The news may bring fresh fears to Britain, where the tallest building in Western Europe - The Shard - is near completion in London.
Researchers pointed to the fact the world's first skyscraper, New York's Equitable Life building, was finished in 1873 during a five-year recession, while the Empire State Building coincided with the Great Depression.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... z1j9biUxNd
Merkel: Transfer more powers to EU, not more money to bail-out fund
BRUSSELS - German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said transferring more powers to EU institutions rather than increasing the size of the eurozone's future bail-out fund is the way to overcome the euro crisis
"It's not even Merkozy anymore, it's just Merkel now," one senior EU diplomat noted, in reference to the Franco-German tandem named after Nicolas Sarkozy and Angela Merkel
07.45 The Portuguese PM Pedro Passos Coelho has said he sees no risk of haircuts for bondholders, as the yield on 10-year debt hits 18.26pc.
Greece seeks bail-out deal 'this week' to avert catastrophe
Today @ 09:31
BRUSSELS - Greece is seeking a deal with private lenders and the EU "by the end of the week" its prime minister said Tuesday (31 January), as Athens races to avoid a financial meltdown ahead of debt repayments due in March
James1:12 wrote:http://euobserver.com/19/115083Greece seeks bail-out deal 'this week' to avert catastrophe
Today @ 09:31
BRUSSELS - Greece is seeking a deal with private lenders and the EU "by the end of the week" its prime minister said Tuesday (31 January), as Athens races to avoid a financial meltdown ahead of debt repayments due in March
Athens "managed to recovered 50 percent of its lost competitiveness compared to the period 2000-2009. But we know this is not enough and we should take more steps to improve our competitiveness, boost growth and stabilise unemployment, particularly among young people - where it's over 40 percent," Papademos said.
Something is going to happen to the EU, which is going to affect the rest of world, and soon imo.
Doug
11.56 Deutsche Bank chief executive Josef Ackermann believes that Greek aid is now less dependent on banks but on "others", adding that the present net haircut on Greece is 70pc or more. But he warns that if the country fell then Portugal could be next.
12.00 The head of the Eurogroup, Jean-Claude Juncker (below), believes the measures from the January 30 EU summit are "largely insufficient", and the Greek PSI talks are "ultra-difficult". Euro hits session low versus the dollar of $1.3103.
12.55 Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas, who recently nixed his country's membership in the EU's new budgetary discipline pact, has said the eurozone needed a federal fiscal union in order to survive.
The eurozone has no choice now: either it will melt down - something which nobody wants - or it will move towards a federal fiscal body.
Necas called the new pact on budgetary discipline, which all EU states save the Czech Republic and Great Britain intend to join, a "fundamental step in this direction".
States are renouncing their right to a free vote in the EU on important topics concerning the budget, and they are giving up a part of their sovereignty.
11.05 The eurozone's powerhouse is ailing. German industrial output fell 2.9pc month-on-month in December, representing the biggest fall since January 2009.
Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expected the figure to come in flat.
12.31 Greek newspaper Kathimerini reports that agreement has been reached on around €2.5bn of a total of €3.3bn of spending cuts demanded by the troika. As part of this:
• €1.1bn will come from health cuts.
• Local government subsidies and defence spending will each be cut by €300m.
• Greece's minimum wage (which is paid to around 300,000 workers) will be cut by between 20 and 22pc to €750 per month. However, plans to scrap Greece's 13th and 14th "bonus" monthly salaries will be dropped.
• 15,000 jobs will be cut from the civil service by the end of the year. A total of 150,000 public sector jobs will be cut by 2015.
James1:12 wrote:12.55 Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas, who recently nixed his country's membership in the EU's new budgetary discipline pact, has said the eurozone needed a federal fiscal union in order to survive.
The eurozone has no choice now: either it will melt down - something which nobody wants - or it will move towards a federal fiscal body.
Necas called the new pact on budgetary discipline, which all EU states save the Czech Republic and Great Britain intend to join, a "fundamental step in this direction".
States are renouncing their right to a free vote in the EU on important topics concerning the budget, and they are giving up a part of their sovereignty.
It's happening gradually (our time) but rapidly in historical terms.
13.54 Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, our international business editor, offers his view on a euro break-up plan drafted by French economists:
A few extracts, loosely translated: "The obstinate determination of governments to take us by forced march deeper into the euro impasse can only lead to the general aggravation of the economic situation in Europe."
"Even though our American and Chinese competitors have an interest in the survival of the single currency, the euro is condemned to an uncontrollable explosion sooner or late". (A nice twist that one, inverting the false and widely believed conspiracy theory that the US is trying to destroy the euro.)
"National currencies should be recreated in each eurozone country". There will be a short transition period of dual notes as old euros are stamped by country ('U' for France) until new francs etc are printed. (This is what happened when the Austro-Hungarian monetary union fell apart in 1919.)
James1:12 wrote:13.54 Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, our international business editor, offers his view on a euro break-up plan drafted by French economists:
A few extracts, loosely translated: "The obstinate determination of governments to take us by forced march deeper into the euro impasse can only lead to the general aggravation of the economic situation in Europe."
"Even though our American and Chinese competitors have an interest in the survival of the single currency, the euro is condemned to an uncontrollable explosion sooner or late". (A nice twist that one, inverting the false and widely believed conspiracy theory that the US is trying to destroy the euro.)
"National currencies should be recreated in each eurozone country". There will be a short transition period of dual notes as old euros are stamped by country ('U' for France) until new francs etc are printed. (This is what happened when the Austro-Hungarian monetary union fell apart in 1919.)
Or is the wound healed some other way?
The Beast from the Sea
1 And the dragon stood on the sand of the [a]seashore.
Then I saw a beast coming up out of the sea, having ten horns and seven heads, and on his horns were ten diadems, and on his heads were blasphemous names. 2 And the beast which I saw was like a leopard, and his feet were like those of a bear, and his mouth like the mouth of a lion. And the dragon gave him his power and his throne and great authority. 3 I saw one of his heads as if it had been [b]slain, and his fatal wound was healed. And the whole earth was amazed and followed after the beast; 4 they worshiped the dragon because he gave his authority to the beast; and they worshiped the beast, saying, “Who is like the beast, and who is able to wage war with him?” 5 There was given to him a mouth speaking [c]arrogant words and blasphemies, and authority to act for forty-two months was given to him. 6 And he opened his mouth in blasphemies against God, to blaspheme His name and His tabernacle, that is, those who [d]dwell in heaven
15.39 Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, our international business editor, has posted a blog on Spain's refusal to comply with EU austerity demands. The Spanish rebellion has begun, he writes, and sooner and more dramatically than expected:
As many readers will already have seen, Premier Mariano Rajoy has refused point blank to comply with the austerity demands of the European Commission and the European Council (hijacked by Merkozy).
Taking what he called a "sovereign decision", he simply announced that he intends to ignore the EU deficit target of 4.4pc of GDP for this year, setting his own target of 5.8pc instead (down from 8.5pc in 2011).
In the twenty years or so that I have been following EU affairs closely, I cannot remember such a bold and open act of defiance by any state. Usually such matters are fudged. Countries stretch the line, but do not actually cross it.
With condign symbolism, Mr Rajoy dropped his bombshell in Brussels after the EU summit, without first notifying the commission or fellow EU leaders. Indeed, he seemed to relish the fact that he was tearing up the rule book and disavowing the whole EU machinery of budgetary control.
07.16 This is how Ambrose Evans-Pritchard viewed the move by Spain in his blog Spain's sovereign thunderclap and the end of Merkel's Europe:
The Spanish rebellion has begun, sooner and more dramatically than I expected ... Taking what he [Rajoy] called a "sovereign decision", he simply announced that he intends to ignore the EU deficit target of 4.4pc of GDP for this year, setting his own target of 5.8pc instead (down from 8.5pc in 2011).
In the twenty years or so that I have been following EU affairs closely, I cannot remember such a bold and open act of defiance by any state. Usually such matters are fudged. Countries stretch the line, but do not actually cross it.
With condign symbolism, Mr Rajoy dropped his bombshell in Brussels after the EU summit, without first notifying the commission or fellow EU leaders. Indeed, he seemed to relish the fact that he was tearing up the rule book and disavowing the whole EU machinery of budgetary control.
He is surely right to seize the initiative. Spain’s economy will contract by 1.7pc this year under his modified plans and unemployment will reach 24pc (or 29pc under the 1990s method of counting). To compound this with manic fiscal tightening – and no offsetting devaluation – is intellectually indefensible.
07.04 Spain also is showing its frustration at the new EU fiscal pact - with the ink barely dry on the treaty. The European Commission warned that Spain risks being fined under new fiscal rules for a "grave" breach of budget limits.
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has increased the country's deficit target to 5.8pc in 2012, from its original 4.4pc goal. A relapse into recession pushed Spain's budget deficit to 8.5pc last year, far above the 6pc target.
Under the new fiscal pact signed on Friday, which will allow tougher Brussels scrutiny of budgets, the European Court of Justice will have the power to fine countries up to 0.1pc of GDP if they fail to stick to the new rules.
07.01 The Netherland is beginning to show signs of increasing frustration at the their loss of sovereinity as the euro debt crisis escalates. The Dutch Freedom Party has called for a return to the Guilder, becoming the first political movement in the eurozone with a large popular base to opt for withdrawal from the single currency.
James1:12 wrote:Is Germany now being uprooted by Spain, ending the UK/Frace/Germany leadership of the EU?07.16 This is how Ambrose Evans-Pritchard viewed the move by Spain in his blog Spain's sovereign thunderclap and the end of Merkel's Europe:
The Spanish rebellion has begun, sooner and more dramatically than I expected ... Taking what he [Rajoy] called a "sovereign decision", he simply announced that he intends to ignore the EU deficit target of 4.4pc of GDP for this year, setting his own target of 5.8pc instead (down from 8.5pc in 2011).
In the twenty years or so that I have been following EU affairs closely, I cannot remember such a bold and open act of defiance by any state. Usually such matters are fudged. Countries stretch the line, but do not actually cross it.
With condign symbolism, Mr Rajoy dropped his bombshell in Brussels after the EU summit, without first notifying the commission or fellow EU leaders. Indeed, he seemed to relish the fact that he was tearing up the rule book and disavowing the whole EU machinery of budgetary control.
He is surely right to seize the initiative. Spain’s economy will contract by 1.7pc this year under his modified plans and unemployment will reach 24pc (or 29pc under the 1990s method of counting). To compound this with manic fiscal tightening – and no offsetting devaluation – is intellectually indefensible.
07.04 Spain also is showing its frustration at the new EU fiscal pact - with the ink barely dry on the treaty. The European Commission warned that Spain risks being fined under new fiscal rules for a "grave" breach of budget limits.
Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has increased the country's deficit target to 5.8pc in 2012, from its original 4.4pc goal. A relapse into recession pushed Spain's budget deficit to 8.5pc last year, far above the 6pc target.
Under the new fiscal pact signed on Friday, which will allow tougher Brussels scrutiny of budgets, the European Court of Justice will have the power to fine countries up to 0.1pc of GDP if they fail to stick to the new rules.
07.01 The Netherland is beginning to show signs of increasing frustration at the their loss of sovereinity as the euro debt crisis escalates. The Dutch Freedom Party has called for a return to the Guilder, becoming the first political movement in the eurozone with a large popular base to opt for withdrawal from the single currency.
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