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  1. #1076
    bkkandrew
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    And they are even trying Enron, India style!

    Satyam chairman resigns amid $1bn fraud

    Rhys Blakely in Mumbai


    One of India's biggest-ever corporate scandals took a dramatic twist today after the chairman of Satyam, the IT services giant, resigned and admitted he had orchestrated a $1billion fraud (£669 million).

    Satyam, which means "truth" in Sanskrit, said today it had discovered 50.4 billion rupees of "inflated" cash on its balance sheet at the end of September.

    It added that B. Ramalinga Raju, the company's chairman, had unsuccessfully tried to sell two companies last month to Satyam in the "last attempt to fill the fictitious assets with real ones".

    In a notice to India's Stock Exchange, Mr Raju, 53, said: "I sincerely apologise to all Satyamites and stakeholders, who have made Satyam a special organisation, for the current situation." He added: "I am now prepared to subject myself to the laws of the land and face consequences thereof."

    Mr Raju said the years of fraudulently inflating assets, revenues and profits margins were "like riding a tiger, not knowing how to get off without being eaten."

    Continued here:

    Satyam chairman resigns amid $1bn fraud - Times Online

    This collapse isn't half uncovering some naughties, from New York Jews, to dodgy car dealers in Thailand and now to Indian software companies called 'Truth'.

  2. #1077
    bkkandrew
    Guest

    Now the IMF Seeks bailout funds to, er, bailout...

    .

    Strauss-Kahn Says IMF May Need Another $150 Billion for Crisis

    Email | Print | A A A



    By Christopher Swann


    Jan. 12 (Bloomberg) -- The International Monetary Fund may need another $150 billion to help counter the hit to emerging markets and poorer countries from a worsening global economic downturn, Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said.

    The IMF chief, in an interview in Washington, also chided European leaders for failing to grasp the depth of the coming slump in their region, creating the risk of social upheaval. The fund will make a “significant” increase in its $1.4 trillion projection of global financial losses and writedowns, he added.

    Full story here:

    Bloomberg.com: Worldwide

    Ho hum, where will all the money come from...

  3. #1078
    bkkandrew
    Guest

    Spain faces ratings cut - Could this the the end of their Euro adventure?

    .

    The move caused fury in Madrid and revived fears in the currency and bond markets about the underlying health of Europe's monetary union.

    Spanish officials are irked that S&P has placed Spain's debt on "CreditWatch Negative", a notch lower than the "outlook" alert issued on Irish bonds last week. It is the first time that a AAA country has suffered such a harsh verdict since the start of the global financial crisis.

    Such a move typically precedes a downgrade within weeks but the finance ministry insisted last night this would not be allowed to happen. "There's not going to be a rating downgrade because we are taking measures to overcome the crisis," it said.

    Trevor Cullinan and Myriam Fernández, the agency's analysts, said the housing crash had set off a downward spiral in Spain that would drive the budget deficit above 6pc by 2006, double the EU's Maastricht limit.

    "We expect a substantial worsening in the Kingdom's public finances," it said, predicting 2pc contraction in 2009 and a long slump as years of credit excess are slowly purged.

    Spain is discovering the limits of action within the eurozone. It can no longer let its currency take the strain, or follow the US, Switzerland, Sweden, Britain, in slashing rates. Indeed, Frankfurt raised eurozone rates last July at a time when Spain's housing crash was already under way. Unemployment has surged to 13.4pc, breaking the 3m barrier.

    Michael Klawitter, from Dresdner Kleinwort, said Spain was now crumbling on every front. "Tax revenue is collapsing. There is a banking crisis and a massive deterioration linked to housing. It is arguable that Spain has already let matters go past the point of no return," he said.

    "We are going to see fresh talk about the sustainability of monetary union and it is going to get messy. Spain is the most pro-EMU of the big states so there has not been any backlash against EMU, but who knows what will happen," he said.

    Ian Stannard, a currency strategist at BNP Paribas, said Spain needs to raise €70bn (£63bn) this year on the bond markets, both to roll over old debts and to pay for a fiscal rescue package worth 1pc of GDP.

    Europe's bond supply will reach €765bn this year, up 15pc from 2008. It is far from clear whether the markets can absorb so much debt. Although Spain's public debt is modest at under 40pc of GDP, this may not prevent a downgrade.

    "The economy is less resilient than any other AAA state. It is more dependent on real estate and tourism, and there is very high corporate debt. Household debt is close to levels in Britain and the US," said Mr Fernandez.


    From:

    S&P threatens to strip Spain of top AAA rating - Telegraph

  4. #1079
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    Spin's Avatar
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    Now what on earth are they on about? Wasnt TARP supposed to fix the toxic asset issue?

    Fed Seeks New Effort to Cleanse U.S. Banks as Toxic Assets Retard Lending

    an. 14 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve’s top two officials urged a new effort to address the toxic assets held by financial companies, warning that they threaten to prevent banks from resuming lending to households and companies.

    Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Vice Chairman Donald Kohn said in separate remarks yesterday that the illiquid investments raise questions about the “underlying value” of banks and may hinder “private investment and new lending.” They called for the government to remove or insure the assets.

    The goal is to prevent the type of economic stagnation that plagued Japan in the 1990s, when banks weighed down with bad loans were unable to lend. President-elect Barack Obama has a window of opportunity to oversee a comprehensive bank restructuring plan after taking office next week.

    “Banks are insolvent now,” said Paul Miller, a bank analyst at Friedman Billings Ramsey & Co. in Arlington, Virginia, who estimates that financial institutions need an additional $1 trillion to $1.2 trillion in new help. “Until you address this shortfall, banks will continue to be credit hoarders and destroyers as they shrink their balance sheets.”

    The remarks by Bernanke and Kohn came as Obama aides and legislators deliberated how to use the next half of the $700 billion financial-rescue program approved in October. Democratic House lawmakers want the Troubled Asset Relief Program deployed to help troubled homeowners, community banks and municipal-bond issuers rather than for large banks.

    Lawmakers’ Priorities

    House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat, said yesterday at a hearing that with “the larger banks having gotten money, we can advance to the smaller banks and community banks” in the second part of TARP.

    Representative Spencer Bachus of Alabama, the panel’s top Republican, said the TARP has already “prevented a doomsday scenario” and complained that the rest of the funds are becoming a “grab bag” for special interests. The Senate plans to vote on a motion to reject the release of the next $350 billion of TARP by Jan. 18. The House also expects to vote in coming days.

    Financial shares show continued concern about mounting credit losses. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Financials Index is down 12 percent this month. Citigroup Inc., which has already received a taxpayer-funded bailout, slid 17 percent two days ago and is shedding assets including its Smith Barney brokerage unit in an effort to survive.

    Bank Values

    “The large quantity of troubled, hard-to-value” assets “significantly increases uncertainty about the underlying value of these institutions,” Bernanke said at the London School of Economics yesterday and Kohn told Frank’s panel, using identical language.

    A sustained economic recovery requires “a comprehensive plan to stabilize the financial system and restore normal flows of credit,” Bernanke said in London. He added that the Obama team’s $775 billion spending and tax-relief plan would be “unlikely” on its own to revive growth if the credit system isn’t repaired.

    Consumer borrowing dropped by a record $7.9 billion in November, capping the first back-to-back monthly decline since 1992, Fed figures showed last week. Financial companies worldwide are making it tougher to get loans after recording about $1 trillion of writedowns and losses during the crisis.

    Paulson, with Bernanke’s support, originally sold the concept of the TARP to Congress as an asset-purchase program. The Treasury then switched to capital injections, investing $192 billion so far. Officials said it was faster to buy stakes in firms than design a process for buying investments at a time when confidence in the industry was collapsing.

    Taxpayer Risk

    “They tried it once before and the Treasury backed away from it for good reason,” said Bert Ely, head of Ely & Co., a bank consulting firm in Alexandria, Virginia. “They couldn’t figure out how to price this stuff. If you pay too much, it is great for the bank, but it is bad for the taxpayer.”

    Bernanke and Kohn outlined three approaches to deal with troubled assets. Public purchases are one possibility, as was originally planned under departing Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s design for the TARP.

    The government could also agree to absorb, in exchange for warrants or a fee, part of the losses on a specified portfolio of troubled assets, he said. Regulators used that method with their November rescue of Citigroup, agreeing to backstop $306 billion of the company’s investments, while also injecting $45 billion of taxpayer capital.

    ‘Bad Banks’

    A third solution would be to set up and capitalize “bad banks” that would purchase assets from financial institutions in exchange for cash and equity in them, Bernanke said.

    One example of how a bad bank could be designed comes from Switzerland. The Swiss National bank and UBS AG in October set up a special unit to buy as much as $60 billion in toxic assets from UBS.

    Zurich-based UBS provided $6 billion in capital to the fund, which will be used as first protection against losses. The SNB finances the purchase of the assets with secured loans to the fund of up to $54 billion.

    “Lack of confidence in the financial system is well justified” given the “trouble they are in,” Allen Sinai, chief economist at Decision Economics in New York, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television, referring to U.S. banks.

    link
    Originally Posted by Smeg
    ... I like to fantasise sometimes, and I lie very occasionally... my superior home, job, wealth, freedom, car, girl, retirement age, appearance, satisfaction with birth country etc etc... Over the past few years I have put together over 100 pages on notes on thaiophilia...

  5. #1080
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    Quote Originally Posted by bkkandrew
    Oh, you believed that stuff
    < I do believe i missed one of these off the end of....
    Quote Originally Posted by Spin
    Wasnt TARP supposed to fix the toxic asset issue?

  6. #1081
    bkkandrew
    Guest
    Another bailout for Bank of America:

    Bank of America (BoA) could receive an additional bailout of billions of dollars to stave off the impact of Merrill Lynch’s fourth-quarter losses, after the closure of a deal between the two banks.

    The bank said in September that it would pay $50 billion in shares for Merrill Lynch, the Wall Street bank that was struggling with huge credit-related losses. The deal saved Merrill from the same fate as Lehman Brothers, which went bust on the day the takeover was announced.

    However, BoA is thought to have warned the US Treasury in December that it would not close the deal because of the danger from Merrill’s larger-than-expected fourth-quarter losses. Desperate for the transaction to go through, the Treasury is believed to have agreed to protect BoA from Merrill’s losses, possibly via a cap on the amount of red ink that the bank would have to absorb because the Government stepped in to take responsibility for the remainder. BoA took ownership of Merrill on January 1.

    BoA has already received $25 billion from the Government’s $700 billion Troubled Assets Relief Programme (Tarp), including $10 billion that Merrill would have received had their deal not gone through.


    The details of the rescue plan have not been finalised but are expected to be announced when the bank reveals its fourth-quarter figures on January 20. It is not clear how large Merrill’s losses for the last three months of the year will be, while analysts are divided over whether BoA will report a loss or a smaller-than-expected profit. BoA yesterday declined to comment on the possibility of a further bailout.

    The Treasury has used the first half of the Tarp and the President-elect, Barack Obama, has asked Congress for access to the remaining $350 billion. But lawmakers are reluctant to release the cash without guarantees that it will be used to help homeowners and give a boost to the economy.

    Taxpayers have been angered by the paucity of strings attached to the handout of the first $350 billion, while the banking sector has refused to account for how it spent the cash.

    Bank of America may get extra aid for Merrill Lynch losses - Times Online

    Its only money anyway...

  7. #1082
    bkkandrew
    Guest

    Irish Banks

    I will post a fuller article re. Irish banks, but I would urge anyone with deposits to remove them ASAP. The rationale is that, without their Government support, they would be bust. However, just like Iceland, the deposits they are guarenteeing are in Sterling and Euros, neither of which it can print to make good on the guarentee. Add to that the fact that they are seeking an IMF bailout (see yesterday's FT) and there is a very real chance that you will lose your funds. A silent run on Irish banks is already happening, so time is of the essence...

  8. #1083
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    ^ All these "big" US banks have had to move their earnings release dates forward so they dont cloud Obamaday with depressive news. JPM are out today, they were scheduled for next tuesday.

  9. #1084
    bkkandrew
    Guest

    The Irish Independant's Take...

    .

    Cold facts of how we could be 'Iceland inside the euro'


    Wednesday January 14 2009


    Could the unthinkable come to pass here? Could Ireland default on its sovereign debt? The answer is yes. Such a disaster is now quite possible. In the same way as a family can end up losing the house, the car, everything, a country, too, can fail to make its repayments. At the moment, such thoughts are heresy; but so, too, was questioning the property boom a mere four or five years ago.

    Back in 2003 or 2004 when people questioned the property boom and its driver, the debt splurge by the bankers, we were ridiculed and dismissed. We were labelled mavericks. We were told that it was "dangerous" to even suggest such things because we might "talk down the economy".

    I remember being labelled "unpatriotic" by a politician in 2004 following an appearance on 'Prime Time' when I described the property market as a "scam" operated by "an unholy alliance of bankers and property developers".
    We now know that this is exactly what it was, it was a scam perpetrated by a small minority who made fortunes, aided and abetted by a frenzied population caught in a mania and presided over by Fianna Fail. It is extraordinary that the party which lays claim to the Rising, could end up advocating property purchases in Bulgaria using borrowed money as the highest form of national patriotism, but that's where we got to!

    So the moral of that tawdry story is that "thinking the unthinkable" while not popular, is necessary. If we are forewarned, we are forearmed. Make no mistake about it; it is entirely possible that Ireland will default on its sovereign debts. We are hurtling in that direction. Foreign investors are on notice and last week, they demanded a huge interest rate premium from Ireland before they gave us cash. We paid 4.7pc to borrow money on Thursday last. In contrast, Germany paid 3.2pc. This implies an Irish interest rate premium of over 40pc for two states that are in the same currency union. So lenders are worried that Ireland will not be able to pay its way.

    More here, including a very funny cartoon:

    Cold facts of how we could be 'Iceland inside the euro' - Analysis - Independent.ie

  10. #1085
    bkkandrew
    Guest
    And from the same article:

    Consider the position of Anglo. If Anglo goes bust, because people withdraw their deposits, the State will have to write a large cheque. That cheque could be as big as €30bn if the assets in the bank's balance sheet are as bad as many fear. Will Ireland be able to write this cheque? Will we be able, at short notice, to borrow that much cash? Furthermore, will Irish workers stick around to pay the tax associated with such a rise in our national debt?

    After all, we the Irish citizens are volunteers, not prisoners and can emigrate to escape the pleasure of paying higher taxes for developers' greed. Therefore, it is not hard to envisage a situation where we default, particularly as we can't even finance day-to-day expenditure without borrowing for God's sake!
    Now, Anglo Irish is just one of the big three banks in trouble. Ireland's GDP was just €190bn in 2007 and in 2009 it will be far less (Dell pulling out last week reduces GDP by 6% alone).

    I saw a joke somewhere:

    What's the difference betwen Iceland and Ireland?

    One letter and 12-months.

  11. #1086
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    Carnage in the US right now for bank shares Citigroup at record low of 3.36$ per share. Bank of America at 7.70$.
    Loads of rumours abound, the bailouts need bailouts again.

    Citygroup, too big to fail, too big to save.

  12. #1087
    bkkandrew
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    ^Yep, we are on course for the rout that I have been talking about. Citi is the key, but BoA alone will bring the whole system down. Not long now. I do hope people protected themselves...

  13. #1088
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    ^Yep Hedged up to my eyeballs these days.

  14. #1089
    nid aur yw popeth melyn
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    Great time to invest in Citi and BOA!!!

  15. #1090
    bkkandrew
    Guest
    ^Oh yes, the US taxpayers will be doing lots of that. Don't think they will get a say in the matter though.

  16. #1091
    bkkandrew
    Guest
    ^The frightening thing is that all the banks are bust way before we have got anywhere near bottom:

    Foreclosure filings surpassed 3 million in 2008, setting a record that has Washington, D.C., policymakers calling for more aggressive efforts this year to aid troubled homeowners.

    Foreclosures last year were up 81% from 2007 and 225% from 2006, according to a report out today from RealtyTrac. One in 54 homes received at least one foreclosure filing during the year, RealtyTrac reported.

    Banks repossessed more than 850,000 properties in 2008 compared with about 404,000 in 2007.

    Houses in some stage of foreclosure totaled 303,410 in December, up 17% from the previous month and up nearly 41% from December 2007.
    http://www.usatoday.com/money/econom...-filings_N.htm

  17. #1092
    bkkandrew
    Guest

    On the Day the agreed to release the second half of the TARP...

    .

    BoA gobbles up another $20BN + $120BN guarantees. Oh - and those guarantees will be called on, that's for sure.

    Last night Bank of America was reported to be on the brink of an agreement with US officials that would give it an injection of $15 billion to $20 billion of fresh capital while underwriting $115 billion to $120 billion of its assets.
    Full article:

    Senate frees $350bn of bailout fund as shares slide - Times Online

  18. #1093
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    ^ Interesting that BAC get the 130bn on the day they report earnings, coincidence of course

  19. #1094
    bkkandrew
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    I did say that the UK was going bust...

    .

    £200bn to save banks from bad debt


    The taxpayer will be forced to underwrite up to £200 billion of bad banking debt under a government plan to take control of assets belonging to Britain's major high street lenders, The Daily Telegraph can disclose.

    By Katherine Griffiths and Andrew Porter
    Last Updated: 11:30PM GMT 16 Jan 2009

    In an attempt to restore confidence within the financial sector, the Treasury will tell the banks of its plan on Saturday. It aims to announce details of the rescue package publicly early next week.

    The bad bank plan has climbed the political agenda in the past couple of weeks as the Government has become aware of the extent of the lenders' bad debts.

    Sources said that a bad bank would have to take on about £200 billion of toxic assets. That would take the Government's total commitment to solving the banking crisis to almost £1 trillion in taxpayers' money that has either been spent or pledged.

    That equates to about £33,000 per taxpayer. The total sum is equivalent to more than two-thirds of Britain's annual GDP of £1.4 trillion.


    Full article here:

    &#163;200bn to save banks from bad debt - Telegraph

    Second bailout in UK, only on the second half of the first one Stateside. Their lagging behind them Merkins are!

  20. #1095
    bkkandrew
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    Two More Banks Go..

    .

    Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Banks in Illinois and Washington state with $769 million in deposits were closed by regulators, the first failures this year as a deepening recession and record foreclosures extend the housing slump into a third year.

    National Bank of Commerce in Berkeley, Illinois, with $430.9 million in assets and $402.1 million in deposits, was shut yesterday by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and Bank of Clark County in Vancouver, Washington, with $446.5 million in assets and $366.5 million in deposits, was closed by state regulators. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. was named receiver for both.

    More here:

    Bloomberg.com: Worldwide

    Interestingly, some interesting numbers from the latter part of the article:

    draining money from the FDIC deposit insurance fund, which had $34.6 billion as of Sept. 30.
    Note - Sept 30 was before all the BIG bank failures that cost the FDIC dear - IndyMac et al...

    Then:

    The FDIC oversees 8,384 institutions with $13.6 trillion in assets
    Hmmm, a few billion left out of the 34.6 into 13.6TRILLION doesn't really, er, go..

    And then we have their own (wildly optomistic) forcast:

    that bank failures through 2013 will cost almost $40 billion
    All in all, complete Alice-in-Wonderland figures. Anyone who thinks that they have funds to cover deposits in Citi or BoA is a moron.

  21. #1096
    bkkandrew
    Guest
    Arnie on the verge of Termination:

    California controller to suspend tax refunds, welfare checks




    John Chiang announces that his office will suspend $3.7 billion in payments owed to Californians starting Feb. 1, as a result of the state's cash crisis. Student grants are also affected.

    Reporting from Sacramento -- State Controller John Chiang announced today that his office would suspend tax refunds, welfare checks, student grants and other payments owed to Californians starting Feb. 1, as a result of the state's cash crisis.

    Chiang said he had no choice but to stop making some $3.7 billion in payments in the absence of action by the governor and lawmakers to close the state's nearly $42-billion budget deficit. More than half of those payments are tax refunds.

    The controller said the suspended payments could be rolled into IOUs if California still lacked sufficient cash to pay its bills come March or April.

    "I take this action with great reluctance," Chiang said at a news conference in his office. But he said that without action to close the deficit, "there is no way to make it through February unscathed."

    The payments to be frozen include nearly $2 billion in tax refunds; $300 million in cash grants for needy families and the aged, blind and disabled; and $13 million in grants for college students.

    California controller to suspend tax refunds, welfare checks, student grants - Los Angeles Times

  22. #1097
    bkkandrew
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    Another hedge fund bust, boss does a bunk (at least his name wasn't Made-off or fund called Grabit & Scarper...)

    SARASOTA - Investors in a Sarasota-based hedge fund could be out $350 million, and the man behind it has vanished.

    Managers of the fund are telling clients that their money is gone, and they do not know if any will be recovered.

    Fund principal Arthur G. Nadel, a prominent player in Sarasota social and philanthropic circles, disappeared this week. His wife, Peg, filed a missing person report with law enforcement after finding a suicide note.

    Investors — from individuals to the Sarasota YMCA Foundation — in the funds branded Viking, Valhalla and Scoop were stunned this week to learn they may be victims in what could become the largest investment swindle in Southwest Florida history.

    Despite the carnage on Wall Street last year, investors had been told their investments earned more than 8 percent as of November
    Sarasota Fund Manager, Possibly $350 Million, Gone

  23. #1098
    Thailand Expat

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    California rates among the tenth biggest economies in the world and its broke,-- bankrupt. So far in debt it is unable to pay its citizens even basic entitlements like welfare benefits and tax refunds. Pity they dont have their own currency or else they could print money and borrow their way out of debt.

  24. #1099
    bkkandrew
    Guest

    Whilst In Club-Euro....

    .

    Trichet Vision Unravels as Italy, Spain Debt Shunned (Update1)



    By Emma Ross-Thomas


    Jan. 16 (Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet’s vision of economies converging behind the shield of a shared currency may be unraveling.

    The gap between the interest rates Spain, Italy, Greece and Portugal must pay investors to borrow for 10 years and the rate charged to Germany has ballooned to the widest since before they joined the euro. The difference may grow further as Europe’s worst recession since World War II hurts budgets and credit ratings across the region.

    Diverging bond yields hurt Trichet’s argument that the ECB’s inflation-fighting mandate ushered in an era of stability for nations that once suffered rampant price growth. They also make it tougher for the ECB, which cut its key rate to a record yesterday, to set one benchmark for all 16 euro nations. That may delay recovery as governments try to fund stimulus plans.

    “It will act as an additional braking mechanism on these economies,” said Julian Callow, chief European economist at Barclays Capital in London. “For the ECB it makes it harder to determine the future evolution of the economy.”

    Trichet has asserted that the ECB, which was modeled on the Bundesbank, and the prospect of euro membership helped some nations import the credibility built up by Germany in the decades after World War II. In May, Trichet said the euro prompted a “convergence of market interest rates” to the level set by “the most credible national currencies” before monetary union.

    Bond Yields

    The yield on Spain’s 10-year bond averaged 8.5 percent in the six years before it joined the euro and the gap with the equivalent German bond was 246 basis points. In the next eight years, the average yield fell to 4.5 percent and the spread to 13 basis points.

    That convergence is now being thrown into reverse. In the past week, Standard & Poor’s has downgraded Greece’s credit rating, and those of Portugal and Spain are also under threat.

    The difference between the Spanish and German 10-year bonds rose to 115 basis points today, the highest since 1997. The spread on Italy’s bond was also the most in 12 years and the Greek spread was the most since 1999.
    Investors are becoming more discerning about who they lend to as shrinking economies force governments to increase budget deficits. Greece’s shortfall may widen to 3 percent of gross domestic product next year, Ireland’s to 7.2 percent and Portugal’s to 3.3 percent, the European Commission said in November. Standard & Poor’s said Jan. 12 that Spain’s deficit could top 6 percent this year.

    Toll on Currency

    The worsening economic outlook is pushing the euro lower. The currency has lost 6 percent against the Swiss franc, 4 percent versus the yen and 4 percent compared with the dollar in the past month. It has declined 8 percent versus the pound since Dec. 30, when it reached an all-time high of 98 pence.

    As well as spoiling Trichet’s dream of a more-united European economy, the differing borrowing costs mean rate cuts will have a more uneven impact across the region and restrain recoveries in some countries.

    Trichet said yesterday officials were “observing the market spreads,” which were related in part to the broader financial market turmoil. The widening spreads underlined the importance of governments keeping within European budget rules, he said.

    The ECB cut its main rate by a half point to 2 percent yesterday, which matches the record low set between 2003 and 2005. Trichet told Japanese broadcaster NHK in an interview broadcast today that while the bank is likely to cut interest rates further, it will not reduce the benchmark to zero.

    ‘Question Mark’

    “There is a question mark about a much more patchy upswing,” said Ken Wattret, senior economist at BNP Paribas SA in London. “The divergence of economies will continue to raise questions about whether monetary union is functioning.”

    That last debate has received a fresh airing among those who question whether the single currency is ultimately sustainable without a common fiscal policy. Harvard University economist Martin Feldstein, who was skeptical of the euro from the start, said in November that diverging bond yields suggest investors “regard a breakup as a real possibility.”

    While part of the recent trading may amount to a bet the bloc will splinter, the probability remains “very, very small, given the political will and the perceived complications of someone leaving,” said Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London.

    ‘Inconceivable’

    Spanish Finance Minister Pedro Solbes said Jan. 13 the idea of a country leaving the euro zone was “inconceivable.” Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti said yesterday the euro project was “totally sustainable.”

    Continued here:

    Bloomberg.com: Exclusive

    I earlier said that there was a 25% risk of Euro break up. I believe it to be nearing 50:50 now. When any politician/banker says something is "Inconceivable", it usually means it is, in fact, inevitable...

  25. #1100
    bkkandrew
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    A cartoonist's view of action to prevent the bankruptcy in the UK:


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