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[Marxism] Barclay's loses 25 percent of value in stock plunge -- bank crisis in new phase
Just an indication that the crash part of this crash, as distinct from the
sharply deeper than usual cyclical recession, may not be over yet.
Fred Feldman
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/jan/16/barclays-bank-shares-in-new-c
ollapse
Barclays shares in new collapse as bank crisis enters second phase
Phillip Inman and Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk,
Friday 16 January 2009 20.34 GMT
The dive in Barclays shares was fuelled by rumours spread by short-sellers.
Photograph: Daniel Hambury/EPA
Shares in Barclays and Royal Bank of Scotland plummeted as huge losses at
two of America's biggest financial institutions sparked fresh fears for the
future of Britain's banking industry.
In a frantic hour of trading, Barclays lost almost a quarter of its value -
marking the second wave of a banking crisis that has already dragged the
industry to the edge of collapse. The dramatic fall, which also shook the
newly merged Lloyds TSB and HBOS, forced banking chiefs to cancel a planned
summit in the City and triggered a flurry of emergency meetings in
Whitehall.
Alistair Darling, the chancellor, met Adair Turner, the chairman of the FSA,
the main financial regulator, while Gordon Brown met Mervyn King, the
governor of the Bank of England, to assess the damage after a week of
devastating news for the banking industry.
Barclays denied it faced financial problems and rushed out a statement to
the New York stock exchange before trading closed. The bank, which is due to
report its figures next month, said profits before tax for 2008 after all
charges and costs should be well above forecasts of £5.3bn. The bank's tier
one capital ratio should be 6.5% at the end of the year and the total
capital ratio will be 9.1%, putting it in line with many of its peers.
Analysts said Barclays had suffered a severe loss of confidence following
speculation that it faces further losses on hundreds of billions of pounds
worth of toxic investments. Concerns that the main City regulator had added
to the bank's woes by lifting a ban on short-selling was dismissed by the
government, but were leaped on by opposition MPs as an indication of
government incompetence. Some City traders said the dive in Barclays shares
had been fuelled by rumours of the bank's imminent nationalisation spread by
short-sellers who profit from falling prices.
Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrat treasury spokesman, said it was
"absolutely extraordinary" that the ban had been lifted. "Another wave of
speculative pressure is the very last thing that is needed," he said. But
Barclays shares have been falling all week, along with those of the other
major banks, as investors come to terms with further bailouts by the US
government and a raft of gloomy predictions for the UK economy.
Citigroup, Bank of America and Merrill Lynch revealed losses over three
months of $25bn (£17bn) between them. Yesterday Citigroup sought extra
funds from the US treasury and is being forced to break itself up as the
price of its rescue. Bank of America, which bought the largest mortgage
lender in the US last year at the height of the sub-prime crisis, also
announced large write-downs on its assets, mainly sub-prime home loans. The
US government has promised $800bn of extra funds after the Senate released
the second tranche of a $750bn bailout yesterday.
The scale of the support for the US banking system has shocked even the
hardened operators in the City and triggered soul-searching among investors,
many of whom have seen the value of their holdings sink by 90% since a peak
in early 2007. Many investors expect the banks' 2008 results next month will
involve multi-million pound write-downs in a wide range of assets caused by
the credit crunch. Auditors have already told the government they are
reluctant to sign off the accounts of banks and many other companies because
of funding worries. Analysts at RBS predicted banks would be unprofitable
until 2011.
The Treasury has become aware in recent days of a general loss of confidence
in the banks' capacity to escape from with credit crunch. Last night it
indicated that plans to bolster the industry would be brought forward,
possibly to early next week. A range of options to kick-start lending,
including a scheme ring fence $200bn in toxic assets, will be discussed with
the big banks at a meeting on Sunday.
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- Thread context:
- Re: [Marxism] Sam Farber and other, better, things..., (continued)
- [Marxism] Barclay's loses 25 percent of value in stock plunge -- bank crisis in new phase,
Fred Feldman Sat 17 Jan 2009, 01:46 GMT
- [Marxism] The crisis in Ireland and Ireland's Greens,
Anthony Boynton Sat 17 Jan 2009, 00:35 GMT
- Re: [Marxism] Zirin: Israeli basketball team forced to flee from rainof shoes,
Mehmet Cagatay Sat 17 Jan 2009, 00:23 GMT
- [Marxism] Greek protests/US Arms shipments,
sobuadhaigh Fri 16 Jan 2009, 22:51 GMT
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