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Archive for the ‘Financial crisis’ Category

The financial system established in England after 1688, based on usurious lending to the state by private bankers, is reaching its final blowout in the form of a series of devastating bubbles and a massive bailout of the financiers with public money. But the issuance of money doesn’t have to be in the hands of a private consortium: another credit system is possible.

Anatomy of a bank failure: When the liquidators come calling

Posted by seumasach on July 2, 2008

Damian Paletta
Wall Street Journal
Sunday, June 8, 2008(Charleston.net)

— At 7 p.m. on Friday, Mayor Chris Etzler walked through the back door of First Integrity Bank. The lobby should have been closed for the weekend, but dozens of strangers in dark suits were bustling about with laptops and file boxes. Someone had just delivered 32 pizzas.

Dan Walker, a top official with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., a Washington, D.C., bank regulator, had summoned Etzler to explain what was going on: The FDIC had just taken over First Integrity.

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‘Financial catastrophe looms’: analyst

Posted by seumasach on July 2, 2008

“The statements in here are talking about comparisons to the 1920s depression and is actually pointing fingers at central banks and their policies and their misunderstanding of how the financial system works and their love of the new-fangled things that have brought the world to the precipice of what could be one of the most major financial catastrophes in the history of economics,” Satyajit Das said.

Stephen Long

1st July(abc)

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) says global markets may still be set for severe economic downturn.

Last year, when inflation was low and the world economy was still strong and stable, BIS gave a a prescient warning about the growing risks that could bring it all undone.

In its latest annual report, released last night in Basel Switzerland, BIS gives a grim and candid assessment.

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The Subprime Trump Card:Standing Up To The Banks

Posted by seumasach on June 27, 2008

 

Ellen Brown, June 26th, 2008(Web of Debt)

“If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.”

– Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin (1802)

Jefferson had it right.  More than 1.5 million homeowners are expected to enter foreclosure this year, and about half of them are expected to have their homes repossessed.  If the dire consequences Jefferson warned of 200 years ago have been slow in coming, it is because they have been concealed by what Jerome a Paris calls the Anglo Disease – “the highly unequal economy whereby the rich and the financial sector . . . capture most of the income but hide it by providing cheap debt to the middle classes so that they can continue to spend.”  He calls “finance” the “cannibalistic” sector in today’s economy.  Writing in The European Tribune this month, he states:

“[O]ne of the more attractive features of the financial world, for its promoters, is its ability to concentrate huge fortunes in a small number of hands, and promote this as a good thing (these people are said to be creating wealth, rather than capturingit). . . . [O]f course, the reality is that such wealth concentration is created by squeezing the rest, as is obvious in the stagnation of incomes for most in the middle and lower rungs of society.  This is not so much wealth creation as wealth redistribution, from the many to the few.  But what has made this unequality . . . tolerable is that the financial world itself was able to provide a convenient smokescreen, in the form of cheap debt, provided in abundance to all.  The wealthy used it to grab real assets in funny money, and the rest were kindly allowed to keep on spending by tapping their future income rather than their insufficient current one; in a nutshell, the debt bubble hid the class warfare waged by the rich against everybody else.1

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Wall Street Writes the Obituaries for U.S. Banks

Posted by seumasach on June 25, 2008


PRESS RELEASE(EIR)



June 23, 2008 (EIRNS)—While Wall Street and other media don’t want to admit the reality of the systemic financial collapse, the many obituaries for U.S. banks that fill their pages make it hard to miss. Things have become tough in the “post Bear Stearns” environment, the Wall Street Journal complains today.

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Dope, Dollars, Gold & Deficits

Posted by seumasach on June 24, 2008

“…How did the last Western empire settle its balance of trade deficit with China…?”

Adrian Ash(PrudentBear.com)

DO DEFICITS MATTER? Just as English missionaries were proof-reading the first-ever Bible written in Chinese, the British Empire found itself with a trickier kind of translation problem altogether.

Exporting the English language to China – and a little Protestant godliness besides – was proving much easier than exporting British-made goods during the early 19th century.

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King Abdullah critical of speculators

Posted by alfied on June 23, 2008

King Abdullah critical of speculators
Irish Sun
Monday 23rd June, 2008

Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah has slammed so-called oil speculators for forcing the price of a barrel of oil up to almost 140 dollars. Read the rest of this entry »

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Recession UK: The £238,000 flat that has lost 70% of its value in two years

Posted by smeddum on June 23, 2008

By BECKY BARROW (Daily Mail)
Last updated at 8:58 AM on 23rd June 2008

Once seen as a sure-fire way of making a small fortune, newly-built flats have become the worst victims of the housing market meltdown. Read the rest of this entry »

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Bond fund has made money by betting against the dollar

Posted by smeddum on June 22, 2008

Bond fund has made money by betting against the dollar (APP.com)
BY SREE VIDYA • BHAKTAVATSALAM • BLOOMBERG NEWS SERVICE • JUNE 22, 2008

Axel Merk, the top-ranked world bond-fund manager thanks to his three-year bet against the U.S. dollar, said the currency’s weakness will persist for as long as a decade despite government efforts to prop it up. Read the rest of this entry »

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JEDDAH: India advocates price band; blames speculators for oil surge

Posted by alfied on June 22, 2008

NEWINDPRESS.COM

JEDDAH: India on Sunday advocated for a price band for crude oil and blamed the speculators for the surge in global crude prices saying this is threatening to ‘wipe out’ economic gains of developing countries. Read the rest of this entry »

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Halifax becomes last of big four lenders to hit homeowners with punishing rate rises

Posted by smeddum on June 21, 2008

And so claims made by the government that their bailout of the banks with public money would lead to better mortgage deals turns out to be fraudulent: that money seems to have gone into the latest bubble in commodities which impoverishes everyone except the financiers and the producers.

By BECKY BARROW (Daily Mail)
Last updated at 9:46 PM on 20th June 2008

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The death knell was sounded for the cheap fixed mortgage tonight as Britain’s biggest lender raised rates by up to 0.5 per cent.

Halifax – which provides one in five new mortgages – pushed up the cost of more than half of its fixed-rate deals.

It became the last of the ‘Big Four’ to impose massive rate rises on cash-strapped homeowners this week. Read the rest of this entry »

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G-8 fails to sound the charge

Posted by smeddum on June 20, 2008

By John Browne(ASIA TIMES) 

With market watchers the world over feeling increasingly alarmed by spreading economic problems, much hope and attention was focused on Japan last weekend as finance ministers and central bankers of the G-8 (Group of Eight) nations gathered to apparently map out a coordinated global response. 

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