Category Archives: Banking industry

IMF Activates Emergency Facility to Support Countries

BBC reports that the IMF is reactivating some of the emergency mechanisms used during the 1997 Asian crisis to help support countries suffering from capital flight. The story is a bit thin on particulars; we’ll provide an update should they surface later today. From the BBC (hat tip reader Saboor): The International Monetary Fund (IMF) […]

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Troubled LBO Loans Nearly Triple

The other shoe, as in real economy symptoms of the credit crunch, are starting to show up. One that was widely anticipated was rising default rates in private equity loans. This last cycle was particularly overheated, with not only the predictable peak-of-cycle high prices, which therefore implies high debt levels to make the private equity […]

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U.S. May Buy Stakes in Banks

It is bit perverse that the powers that be had to try all sorts of measures before considering the course of action that has been the most successful in handling financial crises, namely, letting asset prices fall and recapitalizing banks. In this case it would apparently involve taking equity stakes, say preferred stock and warrants, […]

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Wolfgang Munchau: Policy Errors Risk Turning Credit Crunch Into Depression

Wolfgang Munchau in EuroIntelligence argues against conventional wisdom, which is that modern policy tools and institutional arrangements will keep the credit crisis from morphing into a depression. He contends that the policy errors, the result of political considerations, have been substantial. He also says that Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson devised the badly-flawed Troubled Assets Repurchase […]

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Coordinated Central Bank Action Fails to Relieve Money Markets

The coordinated central ban effort today to restore some level of activity to stressed funding markets, in which five central banks cut their policy rates by a half a point and China cut rates by 0.27%, is a resounding failure. From Bloomberg: Overnight corporate borrowing costs jumped, Treasury bill yields fell and the bond market […]

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£50 Billion Rescue for British Banks (Update: RBS Chief Thrown Out)

The Independent reports that a rescue package will be announced tomorrow. After the massive amounts of liquidity thrown around in the last couple of weeks, a mere £50 billion seems a bit puny. However, this is a far more sensible than anything done in the US to date (save the AIG bailout, which was concluded […]

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Lloyds, RBS, Barclays Ask UK Treasury for£15 Billion Each; RBS Shares Plunge

Another day, another rescue? Well, at least another rescue petition. From Robert Peston at the BBC: Well last night a trio of the UK’s biggest banks – Royal Bank of Scotland, Barclays, and Lloyds TSB – signalled to Alistair Darling that they’d like to see the colour of taxpayers’ money rather quicker than he might […]

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NY Times: Fed Considering Buying Commercial Paper

Now we see how the Fed’s toolkit is not well suited to the problem at hand, and its next-best moves are dubious indeed. Acute conditions in the commercial paper market, a vital source of short-term funding for large corporations and banks, threaten to produce a sharp contraction in business activity. Commercial paper defaults have been […]

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Willem Buiter: Banking System in North Atlantic Probably Insolvent

Willem Buiter has a penchant for ruffling feathers with his blunt pronouncements. He caused a firestorm at the Fed’s recent Jackson Hole conference by, in his presentation, telling the central bank that it was a victim of “cognitive regulatory capture” and was excessively sensitive to the needs and special pleading of the financial services industry. […]

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Japan, Australia Inject $11 Billion to Combat Rising Money Market Rates

Even with Japan’s banks largely on the sidelines in the international housing bubble (US subprime exposure is a mere $8 billion), its money markets are suffering the effects of the flight from risk. Both Japan and Australia pumped more funds into their markets to combat banks’ unwillingness to lend to each other. From Bloomberg: Japan […]

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Roubini: Fed Fiddles While Rome Burns

We noted earlier today that neither the signing of the much-touted bailout bill, nor the dramatic increase in size of the already bulked-up Term Auction Facility (it has been enlarged six-fold in a mere two weeks) has had any impact on conditions the money markets, which are barely functioning. We noted earlier and reiterated that […]

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