Posts Tagged ‘financial’

When Little Countries Strike Back: The Case of the Swiss and the Ex-Hapsburg Central European Territories of Austria

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

The Financial fallout has provided an excellent opportunity for little countries in Europe to show the big players, humbled by the global recession, who’s boss.

 

This is a salutary tale of how and why you should think carefully before badly treating a small country, however harmless it may seem. Not so long ago, 65million years to be exact, the dinosaurs thought they had the Earth to themselves and  thought nothing of riding roughshod over little creatures called mammals that were all to intents and purposes insignificant. Then came the Asteroid (the precursor to the sub-prime crisis) and wiped out the big dinosaurs leaving the meek to inherit the earth. History could be repeating itself.

 

Here are two sobering tales from our times:

 

How Switzerland Turned on Germany To Teach The Americans A Lesson

 

This is a truly bad time for Germany. In classical Götterdämmerung style, it is being assailed by its friends and allies for money.

 

Only yesterday, I wrote about how its Euro-area partners are trying to fleece it, so that they may carrying on living way beyond their means. To fill up its rainy day chest, beleaguered Germany is being forced to turn on small tax haven Liechtenstein to claw back some of the money stashed away there by its rich barons.

 

 

Don't Mess With UBS!

 

And now, in a typical kick’em-while-they’re-down fashion, Switzerland has entered the fray as the latest country asking Germany to bail it out, and it is doing so in a very imaginative fashion. We’ve been dumping on the Swiss for a while now about their banking secrecy laws, so it seems that they are fighting back to secure a future in a rather bleak financial future.

 

The Swiss are neither in the Euro nor in the EU. They also have no natural resources to speak of, aside Milka cows, fresh air and great scenery. For their fabled chocolate, they have to depend on some pretty dodgy African countries for supply, and for their legendary timepieces, they need a constant supply of people with at least two free wrists to wear them, if the business is to remain sustainable.  So they had to be resourceful. First, they invented secret numbered bank accounts where, behind the façade of respectable cute family-owned banks that looked like something out of Legoland, anyone could hide their money and have access to it with no questions asked. But then the Americans and the Germans turned on them to try to get them to divulge the assets of their nationals. And so, in an attempt to show they are still in control, the Swiss have unveiled their new and deadly weapon.

 

 

Swiss Chocolate may be innocent for children,but the Swiss secret service has been using it as their weapon of choice for seduction and espionage for centuries. Ever wondered how a country could live off chocolate?

 

The Swiss Gigolo.

 

The Swiss Treasury, together with their fabled Nestle-fed Secret Services have sent their best agent first to seduce and then blackmail Germany’s richest woman who is heiress to the BMW fortune. The Swiss Secret services must have planned this operation very carefully, and they counted on certain German national proclivities. For example, they Swiss are obsessive about time-keeping, and so are the Germans. And so it was most natural that Ms Susanne Klatten, a member of the reclusive Quandt dynasty, and a major shareholder of BMW, would fall for suitor whose charm lay, largely, in being punctual and arriving on time for their secretive trysts. If there is one thing the Germans love, it is punctuality. A punctual yet unimaginative lover from the clock making Germanic  races could easily trump a constanly late but more ardent latin lover. If there are two things the Germans and the Swiss adore in a partner, they would be constancy and punctuality. The Swiss then asked their chocolatiers to produce to the most aphrodisiacal confectionaries for their man to ensure that his prey would offer no resistance.

 

 

He is considered "good-looking" by German matrons, and she's a good catch if you're a nerdy looking Swiss spy on the make. But he always "came on time", and that's what really made her fall for him. She became his "Swiss Made"

 

Having sold her some cockamamie story about running over some US mafia kid and the mafia dad asking for EURO10 million to care for his daughter. He would put up EUR3m and she the remaining EUR7m, which she did. Then he asked for her to leave her husband and place EUR290m into a trust fund for their future lives together. When she refused, he threatened to show intimate videos of them making love (punctually, of course). She reported him to the police, he was arrested and just sentenced to six years imprisonment by a Munich court.

 

It turned out that Ms Klatten was nothing more than the fourth wealthy woman he had seduced then conned and duped into coughing up the cash. He had been practicing for his big hit. While this may seem like a failed mission by the Swiss secret service, it is in fact a very successful mission. The Swiss wanted the Germans to know that they can strike at the heart of the industrio-financial complex. BMW had been penetrated (excuse the pun). What of Mercedes?

 

 

Unbeknownst to a German car manufacturer with a similar logo, this the coat of arms of the Swiss secret service. It stands for Blackmailing Married Women

 

This was also a shot across the American bow. UBS, the Swiss bank has been forced to hand over a few hundred client account details under duress by the US with the threat of criminal action. The Americans want details of 52,000 more clients who, they say, are flouting America’s stringent tax laws. For the Swiss, banking is their means of survival and they will defend it at any cost. Is it any coincidence that the Sgarbi case has been made public now? No, they Swiss are simply warning the Americans. Every American leader of industry, major banker, or politician, must now be wondering if his wife is currently being seduced by a suave, charming, and very punctual Swiss agent masquerading as an “attentive” lover, as Ms Klatten touchingly described Mr Sgarbi. Every package of Swiss chocolate entering the US can now justifiably be considered a tool of industrial espionage, aimed at giving the Swiss an unassailable advantage over the Americans.

 

 

How The Central Europeans Finally Got To Screw Austria

 

 

Up until less than a century ago, Austria had reigned supreme for over a thousand years over large swathes of Central Europe. The Holy Roman Empire, in the hands of the Hapsburg dynasty, kept a tight rein over the whole area. From 962 to 1806 (when it was dissolved by Napoleon). Then it was revived again briefly and managed to keep going till WWI when it was finally laid to rest.

So it was quite big, as you can imagine.

 

 

The Holy Roman Empire would eventually become a Wholly Austrian Mess

 

The Austrians, in typical Imperial fashion, lorded it over the Central Europeans and treated them like they were some oafish backward louts. They did have a favourite in Hungary, but generally treated the whole area with the disdain reserved for exotic diseases. They waited and bided their time, these Central Europeans, and they knew that eventually, they would have the last laugh.

The WWII came and went, and they all fell under the Soviet Yoke and got even more abused. Then the Iron Curtain fell and they were free again for a while, and then they saw their opportunity. Austria was so near, and yet so far.

 

In 2004, a whole bunch of them joined the EU where Austria had found refuge. A rump state and a far smaller one, but still a haughty one, all the same. Their revenge would be sweet.

 

http://www.eurointelligence.com/Article3.1018+M545e0be824a.0.html

 

They all then secretly agreed to start building shakiest and most advanced banking system that money could buy, and they made sure that they didn’t use their own money. In effect, the Central Europeans got Western Europeans, with Austrians at their forefront, to buy them a banking system from scratch. Then, in a concerted action that History will remember as the true end of the Hapsburgs, they encouraged their citizens to borrow their mortgages in Euros and Swiss francs, where the rates were lower than local currency banana republic rates. The Central Europeans then went on the kind of profligate shopping spree that one only does with other people’s credit cards! When the financial downturn came, all the local currencies collapsed, and all the mortgage repayments became huge as the local currency value of the foreign currency loans shot up sky high.

 

When people talk of the banking system of Hungary being screwed, they are in effect saying that Austria’s banking system is screwed. That is because Austria, in a last fit of imperial grandeur, thought it its god given right to recreate a financial Holy Roman Empire all over again. They fell into the Central Europeans’ trap. Austria got burned badly and the Central Europeans know that the Austrians, much as they would love nothing better than see them go to hell, must now bail them out as that’s the only way to save the Austrian banking system.

 

“After leading the way in providing credit to the eight former communist nations that joined the European Union in 2004, Austria’s banks are now on the hook for 201 billion euros ($254 billion) in loans, equal to about 71 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product. International investors rank Austria’s bonds as less safe than those of Italy, Spain or even Slovakia”. ©Bloomberg 2009

 

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid=aSskJbEPpc4A&refer=europe

 

Who’s having the last laugh now??

 

© Sameh El-Shahat 2009

 

 

Pay-As-You-Arrest, The Future of Capitalism

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

© Sameh El-Shahat 2009

 

Things must be getting tough in the US. Either that, or once again America is leading the way in helping private enterprise and fighting the encroaching advances of global socialism.

 

A girl in Pennsylvania is caught making fun of her teacher on a spoof MySpace page and gets three months in a private youth detention centre. Sounds drastic? It turns out a whole bunch of misguided teens – almost 5000 – have been sent to two privately-run detention centres run by PA Child Care and Western PA Child care. So far so good, it would seem. I mean, kids can be pretty cruel, so better knock some sense into them while they’re still malleable… But then we discover most of them were first time offenders and their crimes were usually no more terrible than picking their noses in public. Hardly the kind of thing that warranted a prolonged incarceration, let alone any time in detention.

 

The common link behind this rash of detentions is a pair of judges, Mark Ciavarella and Michael Conahan. It turns out they were paid kickbacks by PA Child Care and sister company Western PA Child Care, for every child they sent into their care. The kids were basically treated as a resource to keep PA Child Care units in business. This had been going on since December 2002 when the judges, and in a daring promotion of private over public interest, shut down the state run detention centre and forced the county to send the non-offending criminals to the private detention centres that gave them the kickbacks….

 

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29167829/

 

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29142654/

 

http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/02/13/america/judges.php

 

Seen in the larger context, could the judges have inadvertently stumbled upon a possible stimulus package for the global economy? Could this be the way out of the current mess we’re in? Every  state could set up one huge private detention centre and have everybody without a job arrested then we don’t have to worry anymore about the dangers of unemployment. Everybody arrested would be fed and provided for, as happens in prison…We can even arrest entire families to make sure they stay together… Of course, it would have to be house arrest…The private prison would pay the state for every person arrested for no reason, and the state can then use the kick-back money to kick-start our economies.

 

I think we could be on to something here…

 

© Sameh El-Shahat 2009

The Dutch Threat To Britain’s Stability

Friday, February 13th, 2009

© Sameh El-Shahat 2009

 

While queuing to buy a copy of the Financial Times this morning at City Airport in London, I spied with my little eye a man dressed in jeans (please below) that were decorated with a pattern of small dogs.
 
 Dutch Courage...or just bad taste?
Mistaking this vision for a hallucination, or at least a mirage that would go away, I rubbed my eyes and redirected my gaze in the direction of the offending article. To my great distress, the object of my attention was all too real. The trousers were still there while their owner continued chatting away in Dutch to his more soberly dressed companion. I’m a dog lover but would never countenance adorning my trousers with images of dogs. To emphasise the point, I’m also great eater of chicken but I make a point of not wearing jackets bedecked with the likeness of a the succulent plumed bird. Good taste prevents me from committing such a heinous style faux-pas.
 
In this country we are all to willing to impose silly laws about such things as blasphemy and racial incitement. As a result, you can be easily apprehended for telling a joke with an element of race in it, but can expect light treatment if you are a fiery cleric shouting hate from a pulpit. Only yesterday, our home secretary saw it fit, in his heavily circumscribed wisdom, to bar Geert Wilders, the Dutch MP accused of being Islamophobic from entering the country. Apparently his presence could destabilise the security of the UK. He was put back on the plane and sent back home. In my opinion, this was a mistake.
 
My question is, how did the man with the dog-bedecked trousers enter the country in the first place? And how come we have no laws against the insidious threat of bad taste? And how come I did not see our valiant security forces manhandling him out of the country? Bad taste from Holland is a far greater threat than an MP who can only offend those who disagree with him. These trousers, on the other hand, offered a far greater menace by offending everyone bar the blind.
 
We should rethink our concept of security. I hope my picture will help in apprehending the man and his trousers should either or both try to destabilise our island nation again.
 
Please arrest him on sight.
Blogged on The Road!

 

© Sameh El-Shahat 2009

International Financial Court

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

© Sameh El-Shahat 2009

 

OK. Here is what I think. You can only have rule of law in society if there is the deterrent that crime is punishable. Otherwise, we would have total chaos with people killing each other with total impunity.

The same applies to the international financial system. If there is no credible deterrent that those people who acted irresponsibly will be punished, then the system will not inspire faith and regain its health again.

The solution, we need an International Financial Court, just like we have the Internatioal Criminal Court in the Hague. Bankers and economists considered to have pushed the system to the brink should be tried there. I suggest Robert Rubin as first defendent, as well heads of the SEC in the US and the FSA in the UK. Bad regulators are like bad cops. They are rotten to the core. We see the results of their shoddy work all around us.

 

© Sameh El-Shahat 2009