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Author Topic: Credit crunch costs '$1 trillion'  (Read 425 times)
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« on: April 09, 01:57 AM »

Credit crunch costs '$1 trillion' 
By Steve Schifferes
Economics reporter, BBC News 


 
Mr Strauss-Kahn will head IMF talks in Washington.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned that potential losses from the credit crunch will reach $945bn (£472bn) and could be even higher.

The IMF says that losses are spreading from sub-prime mortgage assets to other sectors, such as commercial property, consumer credit, and company debt.

It says that there was a "collective failure" to appreciate the risky borrowing by financial institutions.

And it warns that tough measures and government intervention may be needed.

The IMF's Global Stability Report warns that "despite unprecedented intervention by major central banks, financial markets remain under considerable strain, now compounded by a more worrisome macroeconomic environment, weakly capitalised institutions, and broad-based deleveraging."

  The effects of the credit crunch are likely to be broader, deeper and more protracted than previously expected

IMF Global Stability Report

The IMF, which oversees the global economy, says that the effects of the credit crunch are likely to be "broader, deeper and more protracted" than in previous downturns, due to the "degree of securitisation and leverage in the financial system".

"Leading indicators point to a tightening of credit conditions across many economic activities," said Jaime Caruana, head of the IMF's Monetary and Capital Markets Department, and author of the report.

The report has been released ahead of a gathering of world financial leaders at the IMF's spring meeting in Washington D.C. this weekend.

On Wednesday the IMF is also expected to downgrade its forecast for the world economy, and accept that a sharp slowdown is likely in the US.

Who's to blame?

The report blames lax regulation by governments and poor supervision by banks for allowing the situation to develop.

And it warns that national governments must prepare contingency plans "for dealing with large stocks of impaired assets" if "writedowns lead to significant negative effects on the real economy".

The report is sharply critical of banks and other financial institutions, which it accuses of "excessive risk-taking" and "weak underwriting" .

It says they were "too complacent" about liquidity risks - the problems that would happen if they ran out of ready cash - and too ready to rely on wholesale money markets and central banks to help them if they got into trouble.

And its says that there was a failure of banks' risk management systems to appreciate that the new "structured finance vehicles" that they used to offload their risky sub-prime investments were not really viable.

It says that the new instruments increased the danger of a "liquidity spiral" in which markets and institutions' funding problems reinforced each other.

And it warns that banks will have to concentrate on rebuilding their balance sheets by raising additional funds and limiting future lending.

Tougher regulation

The IMF says that financial sector supervision and regulation "lagged behind the rapid innovation and shifts in business models, leaving scope for excessive risk-taking" and says more fundamental changes are needed in the medium term.

But it warns against "a rush to regulate" which could stifle innovation and make the credit crunch worse.

 
The supervision of banks has been found wanting, the IMF says

However, it says that there should be tougher rules to stop banks putting assets off the balance sheet, and requiring banks to put aside more capital to protect against losses.

It points out that it is not securitisation itself, but "lax underwriting standards in the US mortgage market, the extension of securitisation into increasingly complex and difficult to understand structures based on increasingly lower quality assets", and low interest rates which led to a situation where "risks were insufficiently appreciated".

And it suggests that central banks will have to take into account worries about excessive asset prices, such as house price bubbles, when setting interest rates.

Government intervention

In recent days, both the US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and IMF boss Dominique Strauss-Kahn have both urged major changes in international and national financial regulation.

Last week, Mr Paulson proposed a major shake-up of the US system of financial regulation, giving more power to the central bank, the Fed, to intervene to rescue stricken banks and other financial institutions.

And on Monday, Mr Strauss-Kahn said that the need for public intervention to tackle the credit crunch at the global level was "becoming more evident" every day.

This, along with more intervention in the banking sector, would offer a "third line of defence", Mr Strauss-Kahn said.
 
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« Reply #1 on: May 14, 12:04 PM »

The number of homeowners facing repossession orders after failing to keep up with mortgage payments is up, says the Ministry of Justice.

It says the number of orders made by the courts in England and Wales at an early stage of the repossession process rose 17% in the first quarter of 2008.

There were 27,530 orders made, up from 23,438 in the same period of 2007.

The credit crunch has led to more expensive repayments for new mortgages and a cut in the availability of deals.

Claims and orders

The number of mortgage possession claims - the first stage of the repossession process when homeowners are threatened with action - was also up.

There were 38,688 claims in the first three months of the year compared with 33,344 in the same period of 2007, a rise of 16%. This was also 7% higher than the final three months of 2007.
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« Reply #2 on: July 01, 12:30 PM »

Fed loans $75bn more to aid banks 
 
The Fed has been auctioning loans to banks since mid-December
The US central bank has auctioned a further $75bn (£38bn) of short-term loans to help the financial sector.

Offers for $90.88bn-worth of loans from 77 bidders were tabled during the auction, the Federal Reserve said.

The auction, the 15th since December, is part of the Fed's attempts to help banks through the credit crunch.

Banks have been reluctant to lend to each other since the crisis, sparked by a collapse of the US sub-prime mortgage market, took hold of the market.

Monday's auction came days after the Fed decided to leave US interest rates on hold at 2% despite signs of falling consumer confidence and continuing problems in the housing market.

But further figures released on Tuesday did little to stem fears for the property market.

According to the Commerce Department construction spending fell 0.4% in May - its 11th consecutive monthly fall.
 
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Tags: Finance  IMF  Credit 
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