And the Next Country to Fall in Europe Will Be…

Which country Michael thinks will be the next to fall to the sovereign debt crisis in Europe and why.
By: Michael Lombardi
 
June 24, 2011 - PRLog -- I have to tell you, I thought it would be Spain. My thinking of the order in which the sovereign debt crisis would engulf Europe was first Greece, then Spain, then Italy.

But it looks like I was wrong. Italy, home of my favorite Italian wine, is next.

It all started on June 18 when Moody’s Investor Services said that it was weighing whether to cut Italy’s credit rating. Since then, government bond yields have been rising in Italy.

Italy has regained only a small fraction of the gross domestic product (GDP) growth it lost during the global recession (Italian GDP in the first quarter of 2011 rose only one-tenth of one percent over first-quarter 2010 GDP). Unemployment is high. Interest rates are rising and a sex-scandal-plagued Silvio Berlusconi is occupied with trying to maintain his position as Prime Minister as uncertainty over his capacity to govern rises.

Here’s why I believe the sovereign debt infection is spreading to Italy.

Yesterday, the shares of Italy’s forth largest bank, Unione di Banche Italiane, fell five percent to 3.63 euros—below what it had priced its shares in a one-billion euro rights offering it was trying to close yesterday.

The stock price of Italy’s largest bank, UniCredit, was down about nine percent yesterday. Intesa Sanpaolo, the country’s second largest bank, saw its stock price tumble seven percent yesterday.

When the stock prices of major banks fall so quickly, investor panic usually sets in. And that may be the situation in Italy right now. Moody’s Investor Services said Thursday that it may downgrade the credit rating of 13 large Italian banks.

It looks like the bond vigilantes are closing in on their next target. Poor euro; how will it ever get a break?

Michael’s Personal Notes:

What a day for the stock market Thursday…

First we had the International Energy Agency (IEA) announce that it would release 60 million barrels of oil into the marketplace. That pushed stock and commodity prices severely lower. Then Greece announced that it has struck an austerity deal, which brought stock prices back the other way.

Why the IEA is releasing so much oil is a mystery to me. I’ve read all the news reports last night and this morning, but I just don’t get it. This oil is being released from “emergency oil supplies.”

Some reports said the oil was being released to reduce the shortage of oil caused by loss of production in Libya. But the market reacted as if this was an oversupply situation. After all, Saudi Arabia is increasing its oil production to near record daily levels.

There are obviously some political motives behind the scenes here…so I’ll just leave it at that.

But for investors, I see opportunity. Gold bullion was down over $30.00 per ounce yesterday. I haven’t seen that kind of downside movement on gold for months.

But when I looked at my gold stocks, I noticed that they closed Thursday at the same level they closed Tuesday. Gold stocks holding steady while the yellow metal falls in price?

As I have been writing for a few weeks now, the share prices of gold exploration and development companies are forming a base here. Yesterday’s sharp pullback in gold bullion’s price was a good indication that the gold stock prices are near their bottom. If this was two months ago, and gold was down $30.00 an ounce, gold stock prices would have pivoted downward quickly.

Where the Market Stands; Where it’s Headed:

Let them release 60 million barrels of oil, let Greece and Italy fall. It doesn’t matter to this bear market rally. No matter how bad the news gets, the market continues to trade above its 200-day moving average—a big technical positive for stocks.

Stocks love to climb a “wall of worry.” And we seem to have plenty of that around lately. I’m sticking with my guns: The bear market rally that started in March 2009, although tired and long-in-the-tooth, still has life left in it.

What He Said:

“What group of stocks is next to fall in light of the softening U.S. housing market? The stocks of companies that sell retail products to the American consumer, I believe, are next on the hit list. Many retail stocks are already reporting soft sales. In my opinion, they haven’t seen anything yet in respect to weaker sales.” Michael Lombardi in PROFIT CONFIDENTIAL, August 30, 2006. According to the Dow Jones Retail Index, retail stocks fell 42% from the fall of 2006 through March 2009.

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