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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.

All Power to the Bank

Posted by seumasach on June 19, 2008

These changes are a ratification of existing policy i.e. the bailing out of the banks at the expense of the general population. It also looks like a further concentration of financier power, something already observed by some authors in the USA.

Just as we, in our dotage relive childhood experiences, the British financier power is reliving its early days, going back through the various bubbles of the early 18th century, to its birth with the establishment of the Bank of England as a consortium of private financiers effectively controlling a weakened executive. The role of doge, allegedly shunned by William of Orange, now falls to the hapless Gordon Brown.

Bank of England changes leave Mervyn King in pole position

Jonathan Loynes 

19th June, 2008

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King has won new authority to manage financial crises and promotions for two of his proteges in the biggest shakeup of Britain’s economic policy making in a decade. Jonathan Loynes of Capital Economics explains that the changes will strengthen Mr King’s hand.

The changes at the Bank of England announced today would appear to strengthen the position both of the Bank itself and, in particular, the Governor Mervyn King.

  Bank of England Governor Mervyn King and Chief economist Charlie Bean are close allies
Mervyn King (left) and Charlie Bean are close allies

Not only has the Bank taken on more responsibility for banking supervision, albeit with accountability to a new “financial stability committee”, but confirmation of Charlie Bean’s appointment as Rachel Lomax’s replacement as Deputy Governor with responsibility for monetary policy will also be seen as a victory for King.

And if, as rumoured, Paul Tucker takes over from the “retiring” Sir John Gieve in the other Deputy Governor position, the Governor will have two bank insiders and close supporters at his side.

Bean’s replacement as the Bank of England’s chief economist, Spencer Dale, is also a Bank insider and a King ally.

It is always difficult to gauge how changes in the composition of the MPC will affect its voting behaviour but, at face value, the changes would seem to bolster King and his hawkish camp.

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Mr Bean to take over British finance

Posted by alfied on June 18, 2008

Bank’s No 2 to stand down early

By Robert Peston 

Business editor, BBC News

Sir John Gieve is to stand down early as Deputy Governor of the Bank of England, the BBC has learned.

He is in charge of the Bank’s operations responsible for the stability of the financial system.

Sir John’s departure comes as the Treasury moves to strengthen the Bank’s financial stability role.

The surprise announcement is expected to be made officially on Thursday. The Bank’s chief economist Charles Bean is expected to be named a deputy governor.

Mr Bean will take charge of the Bank’s monetary policy side, replacing the other deputy governor, Rachel Lomax.

It is unclear who will replace Sir John.

Interrogated

The Bank of England’s senior directors would probably wish the new financial stability Deputy Governor to be Paul Tucker, the Bank’s executive director in charge of markets.

The Treasury is refusing to comment on the changes.

Sir John was savaged when interrogated last autumn by the Treasury Select Committee for allegedly being insufficiently on top of the crisis at Northern Rock. His colleagues regarded the attack as unfair.

However Sir John is not a markets specialist. And it is thought that the Treasury wants someone with greater technical knowledge in charge of an expanded financial stability division at the Bank.

Sir John was appointed Deputy Governor in January 2006 and has two and a half years of his term to run.

His appointment was pushed through by Gordon Brown, when he was Chancellor, in the face of stiff resistance from the Bank of England Governor Mervyn King.

Mr King recently had a battle with the Treasury to have his preferred candidate, Charles Bean, appointed as the replacement for Ms Lomax.

 

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The world plunges into the heart of the global systemic crisis

Posted by seumasach on June 18, 2008

“In a few weeks time (after the next G8- and other organisations-meetings have taken place), when it will be confirmed that there is no way to stabilise the US currency (not to mention the eccentric idea of pushing it up) because the US economy is sinking always deeper into the recession and because the world is already filled with US Dollars no one knows what to do with, then the global financial system will burst out in various sub-systems trying to survive as much as they can before a new global financial equilibrium is found”

Public Announcement GEAB No26(Leap 2020)

On the occasion of this 26th – Summer 2008 Special – edition of the Global Europe Anticipation Bulletin, the LEAP/E2020 team has decided to launch an alert on the July-December 2008 period. Indeed, our team is now convinced that this period will consist for the whole world in a major plunge into the heart of the phase of impact of the global systemic crisis. The upcoming six months are in fact the core of the unfolding crisis. The troubles met in the past six months were mere harbingers.

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What’s the Difference Between Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns? Lehman’s CEO Sits on the Board of NY Fed.

Posted by seumasach on June 16, 2008

Ellen Brown, June 14th, 2008(Web of Debt)

An earlier article by this author (“The Secret Bailout of JP Morgan”) summarized evidence presented by John Olagues, an expert in options trading, suggesting that JPMorgan, far from “rescuing” Bear Stearns, was actually its nemesis.1 The faltering investment bank was brought down, not by “rumors,” but by insider trading based on a plan drawn up much earlier. The deal was a lucrative one for JPM, handing the Wall Street megabank $55 billion in loans from the Federal Reserve (meaning ultimately the U.S. taxpayer). So how did JPM get away with it? Olagues notes the highly suspicious fact that JPM’s CEO James Dimon sits on the Board of the New York Federal Reserve.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Lehman and the liars

Posted by seumasach on June 14, 2008

By Chan Akya (Asia Times)

The travails at one of the smaller investment banks in the world, Lehman Brothers, this week helped to increase investor focus on the phalanx of lies that underpin valuations across financial markets. Since I last alluded to the potential problems of this firm (Cheap talk, pricey banks, Asia Times Online, June 5, 2008), events have moved rather quickly; its share price is down from around US$31 to Thursday’s close of $22.70. Read the rest of this entry »

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Why the Oil Price Is High

Posted by seumasach on June 12, 2008

By Paul Craig Roberts

11/06/08 “ICH — – How to explain the oil price? Why is it so high? Are we running out? Are supplies disrupted, or is the high price a reflection of oil company greed or OPEC greed. Are Chavez and the Saudis conspiring against us?

In my opinion, the two biggest factors in oil’s high price are the weakness in the US dollar’s exchange value and the liquidity that the Federal Reserve is pumping out. Read the rest of this entry »

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The Panic Of ’08 – Oil,War and Denial

Posted by seumasach on June 7, 2008

 

By Gerald Celente
Trends Alert
TrendsResearch.com
– The Panic is “On.” Each day brings more bad news and it just got much worse.
 
On Friday, oil super-spiked nearly $11 to close above $138 a barrel and the Dow dumped nearly 400 points. The dollar is back on its losing streak and gold is back above $900 an ounce. Job losses increased for the fifth month in a row and the unemployment rate had its biggest jump since 1986. Read the rest of this entry »

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Russia says U.S. can’t solve financial crisis alone

Posted by seumasach on June 7, 2008

 

ST PETERSBURG, Russia (Reuters) – Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev said on Saturday the United States was not strong enough to solve the world financial crisis alone and offered to convene a global conference in Moscow to tackle the issue. Read the rest of this entry »

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Economic depression in America: Evidence of a withering economy is everywhere

Posted by seumasach on June 3, 2008

Global Research, June 2, 2008
Information Clearing House
Look around. The evidence of a withering economy is everywhere. In “good times” consumers shun the canned meat aisle altogether, but no more. Today, Spam sales are soaring; grocery stores can’t keep it on the shelves. Everyone is looking for cheaper ways to feed their families. The Labor Dept. assures us that core-inflation is only 4 per cent, but everybody knows it’s load of malarkey. Food prices are going through the roof. White bread is up 13 percent, bacon is up 7 percent and peanut butter is up 9 percent. Inflation is rampant and there’s no end in sight. The dollar is closing in on the peso and working people are struggling just to get by. The bottom line is that more and more people in “the richest country on earth” are now surviving on processed pig-meat. That says it all. Read the rest of this entry »

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The Great Oil Swindle

Posted by seumasach on June 1, 2008

How much did the Fed really know?

By Mike Whitney

30/05/08 “ICH” — – The Commodity Futures and Trading Commission (CFTC) is investigating trading in oil futures to determine whether the surge in prices to record levels is the result of manipulation or fraud. They might want to take a look at wheat, rice and corn futures while they’re at it. The whole thing is a hoax cooked up by the investment banks and hedge funds who are trying to dig their way out of the trillion dollar mortgage-backed securities (MBS) mess that they created by turning garbage loans into securities. That scam blew up in their face last August and left them scrounging for handouts from the Federal Reserve. Now the billions of dollars they’re getting from the Fed is being diverted into commodities which is destabilizing the world economy; driving gas prices to the moon and triggering food riots across the planet. Read the rest of this entry »

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The End Of Free Trade: Revolt Begins Against British Policy

Posted by seumasach on May 27, 2008

THE END OF FREE TRADE: REVOLT BEGINS AGAINST BRITISH POLICY(LAROUCHEPAC)

by Helga Zepp-LaRouche

Not a moment too soon, a group of seven former European heads of state, five former finance ministers, and two former presidents of the European Commission, including former EU Commission head Jacques Delors, former French Prime Minister Michel Rocard, and former German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, have gone public with an open letter to the EU Presidency and the EU Commission. They warn that the systemic collapse of the global financial system–a collapse which had been foreseen by “farsighted individuals”–brings with it the threat of unprecedented poverty, the proliferation of “failed states,” migration of entire populations, and further military conflicts. The financial world, they argue, has accumulated a massive amount of “fictitious capital” (!), with very little improvement for humanity. Among the immediate countermeasures they propose, is creation of a European Crisis Committee, and the convening of a world financial conference to “reconsider” the current international system and the globalized world order. Read the rest of this entry »

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