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The euro is falling hard now, recently breaking through $1.31 for its second straight collapse in two days, falling recently to its lowest level since January. It was just below $1.34 when trading began Monday morning.
The US stock market is falling accordingly. The Dow, once up in triple digits, is now up about 17 points. The Nasdaq is in the red. The S&P 500 is just above break-even.
I've been laughing for weeks at Cramer and his DEFCON. DEFCON 4=At War. DEFCON 3, 2, 1 are stages below actual conflict. Now he's not only gotten the order reversed, he's added one. He could have coined his own for EURCON.
+1, kenHas Cramer EVER been right about anything? Oh yeah, he is always right AFTER something happens.
Greece's right-wing New Democracy party has a narrow lead over its left-wing rivals after parliamentary elections, exit polls suggest.
New Democracy, which broadly supports a European bailout deal, was one to two percentage points ahead of Syriza, which opposes the measure.
The outcome could decide Greece's future inside the euro.
If the exit poll is correct, New Democracy should be able to build a majority coalition.
But the BBC's Matthew Price in Athens says the government will be relatively weak, and will seek to change the terms of the bailout.
The election was the second in six weeks, called after a 6 May vote proved inconclusive.
On that occasion, each of the main parties tried but failed to form a coalition government.
Socialists’ Parliamentary Victory Buttresses Hollande’s Power
PARIS — President François Hollande’s Socialists and their allies won an absolute majority in runoff parliamentary elections on Sunday, strengthening the hand of Mr. Hollande both at home and in Europe, where he is pressing for less austerity and more growth in the face of a deepening recession.
He will travel to the Group of 20 summit meeting in Mexico on Monday with his authority reinforced as a spokesman for the European left and a proponent for economic stimulus and job creation.
Mr. Hollande will also be able to keep a Socialist government and pass legislation with little difficulty, without having to rely on the far left, which is more antagonistic to the European Union. Nor will he need to rely on the support of the Greens.
According to projections from partial vote counts, the Socialists’ parliamentary bloc obtained 296 to 321 seats — considerably more than the 289 needed for a majority in the National Assembly. The Greens are expected to win 20 seats, and the far left is likely to take 10.
It appears thar France is basicially Going to double down on the same type of economic policies that got Europe in trouble in the first place. The stimulas will be to create more government Jobs and programs while raising TAXES to pay for it.I would presume markets will rally, not because of Greece, which is a tiny, tiny economic bubble overall, but rather because of what happened today in France, which is a relative economic powerhouse in the overall European market-
France will steer away from the austerity of the previous governments, and will boost the economy with government stimulus. Markets should like that. We'll see.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/18/world/europe/french-socialists-win-majority-in-parliament.html
CAC futures now up 1.82% on the Socialists victory.