Pubblichiamo un'acuta breve nota di Bergamini sulla crisi bancaria italiana e la colpevole ignavia europea. L'ora si avvicina...
The banking crisis on the wall
In Italy the banking crisis has been written on the wall for some time, 
the product of the concurrent circumstances of a weak economy (with 
attendant increase in the banks' NPL [non performing loans]), the imposition by the ECB of ever
 tighter capital requirements along with near-zero interest rates and 
untimely adoption of bail-in provisions. 
Brexit (but it could as well have been the exit
 of Mexico from Nafta, for that matter) provided the global speculators 
with a suitable pretext to shoot on the battered Italian Banks. 
Now 
let us figure what the government and central bank of a sovereign 
country would do in order to stem the full-blown effects of a crisis 
such as that under way in Italy.
Number one, they would intervene in 
the market by purchasing massive amounts of stocks (mainly banks, but 
possibly also other blue chips). Needless to say, such market 
transactions should be carried out in a professional fashion : any 
market practitioner knows that to be effective asset purchases must be 
timed to coincide with short-coverings, with a view to magnifying the 
effect on prices by virtue of market squeeze.    
Let me remind to 
the doubters that, when in 1998 the Asian financial crisis spread to 
Hong Kong, the Hongkong Monetary Authority accomplished just that : at 
one point it had bought 11 percent of the Hang Seng Index.
Number 
two, market operations would be coupled with a clear, explicit and 
unambiguous statement by the concerned government agencies/central bank 
to the effect that it was utterly unacceptable that the country's banks 
be the punching ball of the international speculators, and all the 
firepower at their disposal stood ready to back up such statement. 
Now
 if we compare the suggested course of action with the unseemly 
give-and-take currently ongoing between the Italian government, the Bank
 of Italy (provided there still is an Italian Central Bank) and their 
various European counterparts in Bruxelles and Frankfurt, it seems to me
 that we have one more reason to blame the euro that not only bears a 
responsibility for exacerbating the crisis of the Eurozone on account of
 the detrimental austerity policies embedded in its constitution, but 
also deprives member countries of the means to defend themselves 
promptly and effectively.
Finally, if all of the above sounds 
analogous to what the European institutions should have done (and 
culpably did not do) during the Eurozone's sovereign crisis, then yes, 
this actually is the replay of that same song sheet. 
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