This Is The Beginning Of The End For The Euro
The long-anticipated collapse of the euro is here.
When European Central Bank president Mario Draghi unveiled an open-ended quantitative easing program worth at least 60 billion euros a month on Thursday, stocks soared but the euro plummeted like a rock.
It hit an 11 year low of $1.13, and many analysts believe that it is going much, much lower than this. The speed at which the euro has been falling in recent months has been absolutely stunning.
Less than a year ago it was hovering near $1.40.
But since that time the crippling economic problems in southern Europe have gone from bad to worse, and no amount of money printing is going to avert the financial nightmare that is slowly unfolding right before our eyes.
Yes, there may be some temporary euphoria for a few days, but it is important to remember that reckless money printing worked for the Weimar Republic for a little while too before it turned into an utter disaster.
Now that the ECB has decided to go this route, it is essentially out of ammunition.
The only thing that it could potentially do beyond this is to print even larger quantities of money.
As the global financial crisis begins to unfold over the next couple of years, the ECB is pretty much going to be powerless to do anything about it.
Over the next couple of months, we can expect the euro to continue to head toward parity with the U.S. dollar, and eventually it is going to go to all-time lows.
Meanwhile, the future of the eurozone itself is very much in doubt.
If it does break up, the elite of Europe will probably try to put it back together in some sort of new configuration, but the damage will already have been done.
Over the next 18 months, the European Central bank will create more than a trillion euros out of thin air and will use that money to buy debt.
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