Tag Archives: Irish Economy
He looks sociopathic, oily, like an extra from American Psycho, friendly.
For months now, a big investor has been betting billions of dollars that two of Europe’s most wounded countries will bounce back from the beating they have taken during the region’s debt crisis.
The man behind the trades is Michael Hasenstab, who at the relatively young age of 38 has already drawn comparisons to some of the titans of the mutual fund industry, including Bill Gross of Pimco.
From his perch at Franklin Templeton’s headquarters in San Mateo, Calif., Mr. Hasenstab oversees a team of research analysts that controls more than $165 billion in assets, including the $57 billion Templeton Global Bond Fund. Last summer, when investors around the world dumped their holdings of Irish government debt, sending yields soaring, Hasenstab was buying. Today, his fund owns at least $2.5 billion in Irish government bonds. His Hungarian bet is even bigger, at more than $3 billion in that shakier country’s debt. The Irish bonds have been the far stronger performers, rallying more than 35 percent from the middle of last year.
There has to be a catch:
Mr. Hasenstab has been an evangelist for Ireland’s stoic response to the crisis. In October, The Wall Street Journal’s editorial pages published a commentary by Mr. Hasenstab, titled “Lessons of the Irish Comeback.” In it, he said wage cuts for Irish workers were painful but had helped the country regain competitiveness. In the article, he did not disclose whether his funds held any Irish bonds. Mr. Hasenstab did mention that Franklin Templeton funds had bought Irish sovereign debt in a September commentary on the company’s Web site, a spokeswoman said.
Oh.
A Contrarian Bets Ireland and Hungary Will Rebound (Peter Eavis and Julie Creswell, New York Times)
Go. Just Go.
atIrish unemployment tripled to an average 14.2 percent last year from 4.5 percent in 2007, as the economy shrunk by about 15 percent as a real-estate bubble collapsed. Emigration rose to the highest since the 19th century in the 12 months ended last April, with about 76,400 people leaving Ireland during the period, according to the Central Statistics Office.
And those closing lines:
Outside the social welfare office in central Dublin just off the campus of Trinity College, floor layer [Anthony] Roche says he is bracing for a year of suffering.
“This is going to be the hardest year of all, much harder than last year as the government is cutting everywhere,” he said. “I am trying to get my youngest son to go Australia if he can get a visa. I’ve told him we’ll even put together a bit of money to send to him every month.”
Irish Urge Children to Leave as Export Gain Masks Lost Jobs (Bloomberg)
(Mark Stedman/Photocall ireland)
Pity
atMinister Shatter rejects Stephen Donnelly’s bill aimed at protecting family homes + giving judges discretion in repossession cases. Pity.
— NAMAwinelake (@namawinelake) February 3, 2012
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HANouuHrdVI&feature=player_embedded
“In 2007, our debt to GNP ratio was approximately 30%. By 2014, it will have ballooned to 145% – no developed economy can survive those levels of debt. Ireland has just about survived four years of austerity. Our debt levels directly linked to bailing out banks in Ireland and in Europe are now simply unsustainable.
Yet we are told that more of the same without any commitment to Eurobonds, Redemption Funds, or debt restructuring will solve our problems. It will not, and cannot and, given that our access to the ESM is tied into ratification of the Treaty, it is little short of blackmail.”
Marian Harkin MEP, today.
Ireland West MEP Marian Harkin Accuses European Council Of Blackmailing Ireland Over Fiscal Treaty (Politics.ie)
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neU68ETzSBg&feature=player_embedded
Go to 6.10.
Yes, that Irish card.
Via @Ainekerr
Number of people charged.
Anglo Irish: 0
Irish Nationwide: 0
Etc.
Corporate Enforcement’s Paul Appleby To Retire RTE)
(Photocall Ireland)
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oAR0VRLRGHE&feature=player_embedded
“This is not a friendly union. It’s a vindictive, fiscal straight jacket.”
The Euro crisis explained using Catholicism, Marx, and Roy Keane.
Can you guess the theme song?











