Money Printing to the Max - resourceinvestor.com Money Printing to the Max - resourceinvestor.com

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Money Printing to the Max - resourceinvestor.com

Money Printing to the Max - resourceinvestor.com

There is a big shift in political sentiment among G8 leaders towards less austerity and more emphasis on economic growth, which was evident at their meeting earlier this month. The triggers are the election of Francois Hollande, the threatened collapse of the euro zone, and the impending US election. The obstacle in the euro zone is Germany, whose citizens are being asked to pay up, throwing their limited savings at a seemingly unlimited problem. The IMF also opined on the UK, saying further quantitative easing may be necessary.

Putting G8 politics to one side, the euro zone’s problems have reached a critical point: it is clear that either a lot more money is needed to buy some time, or it faces systemic collapse. Greece’s problems are bad enough, but Spain, Italy, Belgium, Ireland and Portugal are also ensnared in debt traps from which there is no obvious escape. Even France has a developing banking problem, with a large state-backed mortgage lender downgraded by Moody’s having difficulties funding its balance sheet. France’s commercial banks are also horribly exposed to Italy, Spain and Belgium.

We often focus on state finances and forget the impact on the private sector of the systemic crisis. Higher government borrowing costs push up mortgage lending rates, which are bound to undermine over-leveraged property markets, particularly in Portugal, Spain and Ireland. The French lender mentioned above, Caisse Centrale du Credit Immobilier, is in danger of needing a state rescue, and this in a country not thought to have residential property problems. Mortgage rates in the UK are also rising, as lenders tighten their lending criteria, and houses aren’t shifting. And the effect of rising interest rates on other property markets is obvious. It is early days, but it appears that these property markets are stalling again, which will worry central banks.

Their overriding fear has always been a debt-deflation collapse, where falling asset prices trigger self-perpetuating collateral liquidation. Central banks must think that the risk of this happening is increasing again. It all adds up to pressure on the European Central Bank to join with the Fed and the Bank of England in a renewed expansion in monetary policy.

Historians may look back at the G8 meeting last week and see it as the point in the continuing crisis when central banks were given the green light for a final, catastrophic monetary easing. It is game-on again for the Keynesians, and is an opportunity for them to push hard for a Roosevelt-type expansion of money and spending. Both Obama and Hollande favor this approach, and more conservative politicians who might argue against it do not have sufficient understanding of sound economic theory to put forward a valid counterargument. But the Roosevelt stimulus failed to stop a renewed downturn in 1938 nine years after the Wall Street Crash of 1929, and is not a happy precedent for today’s situation.

A new wave of stimulus seems certain to undermine confidence in the dollar, and now also the euro. And as Germans wake up to the possibility of their third currency wipe-out in a century, there is only one escape route for them: the accumulation of gold.



Aqua Finance's $327M lawsuit against accounting firm nears decision - marshfieldnewsherald.com

Wausau-based Aqua Finance has accused Baker Tilly Virchow Krause of accounting malpractice for costing the company tens of millions of dollars in profits and is demanding $327 million in damages.

A Marathon County jury will begin deliberations today after hearing more than four weeks of testimony in a trial for a civil lawsuit filed by Aqua Finance. The company accused its former accounting and advising firm of negligence and breach of contract.

Aqua Finance's attorneys argued that Baker Tilly and the partner who managed Aqua Finance's account, Kevin Prather, withheld for one year that Aqua Finance's loan loss calculations were improperly calculated and did not meet industry standards, according to court records.

Baker Tilly's attorneys say the company's losses were because of the economy, not accounting errors.

Aqua Finance downsized from 380 employees in January 2008 to 97 employees in February 2011 as it dealt with financial woes, according to court records.

Ralph Weber, an attorney representing Aqua Finance, asked jurors Tuesday during closing arguments to award up to $167 million in compensatory damages and another $160 million in punitive damages. Aqua Finance won't recover its loses until sometime between 2020 and 2025, he said.

"These dealers were hurt and it's going to take a while to repair that," Weber said of Aqua Finance's customers.

Aqua Finance was founded in 1986 and provides financing to water treatment dealers across the country.

According to a complaint filed in court:

Prather announced in February 2008 that Aqua Finance's loan loss reserves were not conducted in accord with industry standards since Jan. 1, 2005, and the company's loan loss reserves must be increased by $20 million. He later said that he discovered the problem one year earlier, but had not reported it to Aqua Finance.

Baker Tilly withdrew from its agreement to complete Aqua Finance's 2007 audit until after the company resolved its loan reserve issue. Aqua Finance's struggles to obtain credit without the completed audit led to the loss of possible contracts with vendors and ultimately forced the company to lay off employees.

Thomas Falkenberg, an attorney for Baker Tilly, told jurors that Aqua Finance made poor business decisions in not maintaining adequate reserves in a declining economy. Falkenberg said business in the water treatment industry was down 30 percent at the time and Aqua Finance was suffering as a result.

"The accounting didn't create those losses," Falkenberg said.

Jurors likely will take days to reach a consensus on the complex verdict that includes more than a dozen allegations against Baker Tilly.


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