Have we now come to the final piece of the jigsaw puzzle; the failure to see that, where in the past it was always the Central Banks that printed money, today, it is the investment banks and the hedge funds. This has turned up on the UK press:
From The Times December 5, 2009
The end game has started and it is inevitable to my way of thinking, that it must end in tears. No one has any real idea of just how much ExtraFiat money is in circulation; but, at the same time, no one holding an ExtraFiat money note is going to let go of it. They are, on the face of it, much too valuable to let go as the moment you do, the value vanishes. Every Merger or Acquisition over the last decade has at the least raised some part of the finance from ExtraFiat money. And the final irony is that, as the ExtraFiat money is called in, the conventional banking system does not have anything like enough on their balance sheets to be able to replace it. And there is the nub of the matter; all roads lead to collapse. The vacuum must be filled, or the whole thing collapses. No way to fill the vacuum, so collapse is inevitable. So get into Gold? Surely it is the only thing you can rely upon.
Food for thought?
From The Times December 5, 2009
Glazer family hit the wall over refinancing of Manchester United
James Ducker, Helen Power
The Glazer family, the owners of Manchester United, are struggling to refinance their enormous debts amid concerns about the impact they are having on the club.
The Times understands that the Americans have been trying unsuccessfully to secure a refinancing package for part of the club’s £699 million debt for months, having failed in 2007 and last year, because of the bleak global economic climate.
The main concern is understood to centre around the £175.5 million worth of debt that the Glazers are personally responsible for, not the £518.7 million of loans secured against the club.
It is these so-called Payment In Kind (PIK) notes, money borrowed from US hedge funds that “rolls up” at an annual interest rate of 14.25 per cent, that the Americans are believed to have been trying to refinance.
The intention was always to pay off these loans within a few years of the takeover in May 2005, but while they managed to redeem some of the original PIK debt of £275 million, the credit crunch has made this difficult.
By the time the debt matures in 2017, it will stand at £580 million unless the Glazers can pay part or all of it off before then, or secure a preferential rate of interest. With the club also facing rising capital repayments from 2013, the PIK debt is a concern. It grew from £152 million to £175.5 million in one financial year.
More here:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/spo...cle6945421.ece
Again, another football club, (soccer to you in the USA), here in the UK experiencing problems is Portsmouth:James Ducker, Helen Power
The Glazer family, the owners of Manchester United, are struggling to refinance their enormous debts amid concerns about the impact they are having on the club.
The Times understands that the Americans have been trying unsuccessfully to secure a refinancing package for part of the club’s £699 million debt for months, having failed in 2007 and last year, because of the bleak global economic climate.
The main concern is understood to centre around the £175.5 million worth of debt that the Glazers are personally responsible for, not the £518.7 million of loans secured against the club.
It is these so-called Payment In Kind (PIK) notes, money borrowed from US hedge funds that “rolls up” at an annual interest rate of 14.25 per cent, that the Americans are believed to have been trying to refinance.
The intention was always to pay off these loans within a few years of the takeover in May 2005, but while they managed to redeem some of the original PIK debt of £275 million, the credit crunch has made this difficult.
By the time the debt matures in 2017, it will stand at £580 million unless the Glazers can pay part or all of it off before then, or secure a preferential rate of interest. With the club also facing rising capital repayments from 2013, the PIK debt is a concern. It grew from £152 million to £175.5 million in one financial year.
More here:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/spo...cle6945421.ece
Portsmouth players left empty-handed again after club fail to pay wages
What we are watching is a very slow but inexorable process; the unwinding of the money printed by the investment banks and hedge funds. Do you remember that just after the SHTF the US re-designated the investment banks as ordinary banks. They did that, without telling you all why. They did it to stop them printing their own money. They had been writing loans without any control over the QUANTITY of money. Now, today, there must be countless businesses that were built upon this, shall we call it "ExtraFiat" money that now cannot be replaced with new loans but must be repaid.Portsmouth have failed to pay players’ wages for the second time this season...that the new regime has also been unable to fund its payroll. “Portsmouth FC can confirm that the majority of the first-team squad have not yet...
Nick Szczepanik
04 December 2009 The Times
Nick Szczepanik
04 December 2009 The Times
The end game has started and it is inevitable to my way of thinking, that it must end in tears. No one has any real idea of just how much ExtraFiat money is in circulation; but, at the same time, no one holding an ExtraFiat money note is going to let go of it. They are, on the face of it, much too valuable to let go as the moment you do, the value vanishes. Every Merger or Acquisition over the last decade has at the least raised some part of the finance from ExtraFiat money. And the final irony is that, as the ExtraFiat money is called in, the conventional banking system does not have anything like enough on their balance sheets to be able to replace it. And there is the nub of the matter; all roads lead to collapse. The vacuum must be filled, or the whole thing collapses. No way to fill the vacuum, so collapse is inevitable. So get into Gold? Surely it is the only thing you can rely upon.
Food for thought?
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