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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.

AIG Spells Out What a Run On Insurers Would Mean

Posted by seumasach on March 13, 2009

David Goldmann

Asia Times Blog

12th March, 2009

What happens if insurance policyholders lose confidence in their provider and cash in their policies? It’s a run on the insurance industry, same as a run on the banks — except the regulators have no obvious mechanism to stop it. This could blindside the system in a big way. The academic tinkerers (Roubini, Krugman) who propose nationalizing the banks and haircutting their debt didn’t think about this one. But AIG did. An AIG presentation to Congress on the consquences of its failure was posted today on the Financial Times “Alphaville” blog. It is one of the more entertaiing things to circulate in the course of the crisis.

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Before the stampede

Posted by seumasach on March 13, 2009

Here the so-called flight to safety, to US government bonds, is presented as the next bubble to burst bringing a second wave of economic destruction in its wake.

W.Joseph Stroupe

Asia Times

14th March, 2009

Increasingly ominous clouds are gathering in what could soon be the perfect storm against the United States dollar and against the present dollar-centric global financial order.
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Report presents doomsday scenario for shipping

Posted by smeddum on March 13, 2009

 

By Tony Gray

Friday 13 March 2009     

LLoyd’s List

AN apocalyptic vision of a future in which dysfunctional shipping markets trigger an outbreak of protectionism in trade and the creation of national fleets is outlined in a review of the current crisis by Consultants on Maritime Transport, an independent partnership. Read the rest of this entry »

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British climate scholar: ‘Climate Crisis Worse Than Recession’

Posted by seumasach on March 12, 2009

Is this the beginning of the end of the end of world history?

“He says we musn’t lose sight of the need to tackle global warming just because our economies are suffering.”

We mustn’t lose sight of the need to tackle global warming just because it’s freezing.

‘Climate Crisis Worse Than Recession’

Capital Radio

12th March, 2009

“We are, I fear, at a defining moment in the world’s history,” the royal told a meeting of Brazilian business leaders ahead of a planned visit to the Amazon rainforest.

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Barroso defends EU’s handling of economic crisis

Posted by seumasach on March 11, 2009

Brown’s agenda is obviously floundering and its defeat should be clear at the G20

David Gow

Guardian

11th March. 2009

The European commission president has hit back at US criticism that the EU is providing an inadequate economic stimulus for global recovery and accused the Obama administration of being averse to greater regulation of the financial sector.

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The Upcoming Political Crisis in Washington

Posted by seumasach on March 10, 2009

David Gordian

Global Research

9th March, 2009

In recent days we have seen even mainstream Democratic figures as Joe Stiglitz and Paul Krugman sound the alarm on what seems to be uncertainty in the Obama administration. Stiglitz, Krugman et al. are following in their essential critique a path well worn over the past few weeks by a range of commentators to be found as much among the Austrians as those on the liberal-to-left part of the spectrum. The fundamental point is, of course, that it is now clear to all but the militantly unreflective that Obama can – perhaps – save the Real economy or – perhaps – save Finance (i.e. Bank bond- and shareholders), but certainly not both. The increasing, but still relatively gentle, criticism of Stiglitz, Krugman and their ilk is owing to the fact that it is becoming all too clear that Obama is still unwilling to engage Finance in what might turn out to be the greatest intramural fight capitalism has ever seen.

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Brits to win out against Euro

Posted by seumasach on March 10, 2009

No one can dispute that the British government and financial authorities have taken decisive action: they have channeled an unimaginable sum into the hands of the bankers , thereby bankrupting the nation and effecting an enormous redistribution of wealth to the wealthiest and at the expense of 60 million people. Brown has been energetically trying to draw Europe into similar suicidal measures, making it into an Anglo-saxon style oligarchy, but to little avail. Evans-Pritchard now aligns himself with leftists like Will Hutton in supporting these measures under the guise of fighting deflation. So this article is partly sour grapes reflecting Britains evident loss of influence, and partly just sheer lunacy as he talks up Britain on the eve of its catastrophic collapse, long predicted in these columns.

“Debt and deflation are a deadly mix. ” So let’s go for even more debt, and inflation, and sink our currency whose status we are completely dependent on for the import of food and other necessities

Thanks to the Bank it’s a crisis; in the eurozone it’s a total catastrophe

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

IHT

8th March, 2009

The Bank of England may have averted a catastrophe. If ever there was a time when this country needed its own monetary authorities – acting with wartime urgency – this is the moment.

Those nations with fossilised or timid central banks clinging to outdated ideologies are not so lucky. Even less lucky are those such as Spain and Ireland that have surrendered policy to a body that is deaf to their pleas and constitutionally obliged to ignore the welfare of their particular societies. They face crucifixion.

Spain’s agony is already well advanced. Industrial output has fallen 24pc. Some 352,000 people have lost their jobs in two months. BBVA expects unemployment to reach 20pc next year, touching 4.5m. Premier Jose Luis Zapatero can do nothing as long as Spain remains in monetary union.

He cannot devalue to claw back 30pc in lost labour competitiveness against EMU’s German bloc, or take emergency steps to slow the property crash. In an odd lapse last week – perhaps a slip – he advised Spaniards that the best thing to do in these dark times was to ****.

Yes, it is dangerous for the Bank of England to buy up a third of all long-dated gilts. But it would be even more dangerous to allow deflation to run its course in an economy where debt levels have reached such extremes. Debt and deflation are a deadly mix.

The errors that led to our current predicament are well-known. A small army of economists – Austrians, Monetarists, and Keynesians – warned that central banks were playing with fire by fixing the price of credit too low and ignoring asset bubbles. The $6.7 trillion in reserve accumulation by China, Japan, and the petro-powers drove bond yields too low for safety.

Credit signals were gravely distorted. In Britain, Gordon Brown poured petrol on the fire by pushing the fiscal deficit to 3pc of GDP at the top of the cycle. Wretched man. However much we rage at Sir Fred or Citi-wrecker Chuck Prince, let us not forget that this crisis was confected by governments. To blame the free market is to miss the bigger point.

But I digress. We are now faced with the post-debt wreckage. The task at hand is to hold our societies together as best we can. One dreads to think what would have happened if the Hoover-Brüning nostalgics had succeeded in blocking every remedy.

As it is we have seen industrial production collapse in every region. The drops in January were: Japan (-31pc), Korea (-26pc), Russia (-16pc), Brazil (-15pc), Italy (-14pc), Germany (-12pc). Falls that took two years from late 1929 have been compressed into five months.

Those who say this is nothing like the Great Depression are complacent. Household debt is higher today, and UK banks are in worse shape. (No bank of size failed in the British Empire during the slump). Britain’s economy contracted by 5.6pc from peak to trough in the early 1930s (Eichengreen). Some put the figure at nearer 8pc. We may surpass that this time.

America suffered worse. Real GDP fell 28pc. But the worst occurred in the second leg, after the heinous policy blunders of late 1931. Reading contemporary accounts, it is clear that hardly anybody – not even Keynes or Fisher – realised that the world was slipping into a depression during the first 18 months.

Nobel laureate Paul Krugman says the Fed has been as far behind the curve today as it was then, given the faster pace of collapse. It is bizarre that Ben Bernanke has not started to buy US Treasuries a full three months after he floated the idea, despite a yield rise of 80 basis points.

He has been stymied by the hawks. Kansas chief Thomas Hoenig said last week that the top priority is to drain liquidity before recovery later this year sets off inflation. Well, Mr Hoenig said last May that inflation psychology was gaining a hold “not seen since the 1970s and early 1980s” with a risk that inflation would become “embedded in the economy.” The price spike broke within weeks. If his model was wrong then, why is it right now?

As for the ECB, it has not reached the starting line. Jean-Claude Trichet insists that there is no danger of deflation in Europe. What is the weather like on his planet, asked Mr Krugman.

The ECB has cut rates to 1.5pc, but since they need to be minus 1pc on the Taylor Rule, this leaves the breach as wide as ever. The Bundesbank is blocking any serious move towards quantitative easing.

Given that Germany’s economy is imploding (Deutsche Bank sees 5pc contraction this year) one wonders if the Bundesbank would be less hawkish if the D-mark still existed. Even their hard-money brothers at Switzerland’s SNB are cash printers these days.

So has monetary policy in euroland been paralysed by squabbles at a calamitous moment, blighting every member state? Almost certainly.

I’ll take the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street any day, warts and all.

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Retirement Funds In Danger For Millions Of Americans

Posted by seumasach on March 9, 2009

 

By Mike Bryan

Eldib

 

For millions of Americans, the deepening recession has meant a dramatic drop in funds put aside for their retirement. While many have seen the value of these accounts slashed in half, the pensions of others have been rendered virtually worthless as their employers file for bankruptcy. For others, a layoff in the family spells disaster, and saving for retirement is out of the question.

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‘Run on UK’ sees foreign investors pull $1 trillion out of the City

Posted by seumasach on March 8, 2009

 

 

Banking crisis undermines Britain’s reputation as a safe place to hold funds

 
7th March, 2009

 

A silent $1 trillion “Run on Britain” by foreign investors was revealed yesterday in the latest statistical releases from the Bank of England. The external liabilities of banks operating in the UK – that is monies held in the UK on behalf of foreign investors – fell by $1 trillion (£700bn) between the spring and the end of 2008, representing a huge loss of funds and of confidence in the City of London.

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The $700 trillion elephant

Posted by smeddum on March 7, 2009

The $700 trillion elephant
Commentary: Gargantuan derivatives market weighs on all other issues

By Thomas Kostigen, MarketWatch
Last update: 12:01 a.m. EST March 6, 2009Comments: 340
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (MarketWatch) — There’s a $700 trillion elephant in the room and it’s time we found out how much it really weighs on the economy. Read the rest of this entry »

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Dennis Kucinich States His Intention To Put The Federal Reserve Under Government Control

Posted by seumasach on March 7, 2009

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