Thursday 08 January 2009

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Britain unveils bailout for banks

Wednesday 08 October 2008

The British government announced Wednesday a bank-rescue plan including a 50-billion-pound partial privatisation of banks and a 200-billion-pound credit line. Despite the move, London's FTSE 100 index fell 1.64% at the start of trading.

Wednesday 08 October 2008

Britain's government Wednesday announced a part-nationalisation of the country's eight main banks with a bailout worth up to 50 billion pounds (64 billion euros, 87 billion dollars).
  
The package also includes a 200-billion-pound credit line for banks including Royal Bank of Scotland, HSBC and Barclays, the Treasury said in a statement.
  
The government said it would use up to 50 billion pounds of taxpayers' money to buy major stakes in the banks, which also include HBOS, Lloyds TSB, Standard Chartered, Abbey and Nationwide Building Society.
  
"Following discussions convened by HM Treasury... major UK banks and the largest building society have confirmed their participation in a government-supported recapitalisation scheme," the statement said.
  
Finance minister Alistair Darling said that the move his Labour government was making was a bold measure in response to "extraordinary times."
  
He told Sky News: "The taxpayers' interest is being protected. I'm very clear that in return for all this, the taxpayer has got to see some upside."
  
Chancellor of the Exchequer Darling said he still did not "rule anything out" but he said the bailout package "will go a long way."
  
He denied that he had dithered, which critics say caused bank shares to plunge in London trading since Monday amid uncertainty over the government's intentions.
  
"I wanted to announce it when the time was right, when we had got everything sorted out, we had a scheme that worked and the big banks were signed up to it," Darling said.
  
"And we actually finished these discussions only a few hours ago."
  
Shares in RBS, Barclays and Lloyds TSB had plummeted in trading Tuesday.
  
RBS, which owns NatWest, was worst-hit, plunging more than 39 percent, while Barclays was down just over nine percent and Lloyds TSB fell almost 13 percent.
  
Tuesday's losses took the collapse in RBS' stock to about 80 percent in the year since the credit crunch began with the collapse of the US subprime home loan market.
  
Just 12 months ago, RBS was riding high, leading a consortium in an attempted 100-billion-dollar takeover of Dutch bank ABN Amro.
  
London's FTSE 100 index of top shares fell 1.64 percent to 4,529.64 points at the start of trading on Wednesday immediately after the announcement of the rescue plan.
  
Britain has already fully nationalised two British banks since the credit crunch began a year ago -- Bradford


 

  • 14/10/2008 18:56:58 Alert a moderator

    financial markets

    i am not sure what caused G. Britain's problems, but ours is caused by a number of factors some of the bigger factors i think are #1- corruption in our financial sectors as well as by some senators that blocked adequate oversite. # 2- illegal immigration sucking us dry in many areas to the tune of ten"s of Billions per year. and # 3- spending over $ 700,000,000,000 per year buying imported oil when we have more oil here than Saudi Arabia has. we can keep that money here and help our economy and develope solar, wind and geo thermal ect. ect. alternatives. send the illegal aliensback to whence they came and encourage them to return if they wish through legal methods. of course there are other detriments and cures but i think the three economy killers i mentioned are probably the worst. I hope and pray we can all get back on our feet again. NObama

  • 08/10/2008 19:15:53 Alert a moderator

    The other shoe has dropped!

    In reality the financial debacle in the UK is MUCH MUCH worse than the USA. Britain is only slightly behind the US in having the biggest deficit on the planet. The main differences being that the US is a much larger country with a bigger population - so per capita the bailout cost is far far less for Americans. The USA still produces much of its own food, unlike the UK. The USA still has the rump of a manufacturing base, unlike the UK. In the US only about 1 in 20 jobs is is finance-related jobs, about 1 in 5 in the UK. The USA still can produce many of the raw materials required by industry itself whereas the UK has to import & pay for nearly everything. UK infrastructure has not been maintained as the privatised industries have raped the nation just like the banks. A severe winter & resulting power cuts with increasing unemploymnet will make the UK highly vulnerable to social unrest.

  • 08/10/2008 10:49:11 Alert a moderator

    u.k bank rescue package

    why should the public risk their money propping up unsafe banks, it was not the public who got us into this state, it was greedy, incompetant bankers. if this does not work whats next? i think what we are seeing is the fall of capitalism...triggered by the biggest capitalist ever, the U.S.A. !!!! get your money out of the bank while you still can.

  • 08/10/2008 09:41:21 Alert a moderator

    Government support fo british banks

    As usual, Brown& Darling have reacted with too little, too late. When decisive action is required, they panic and dither. Nothing is ever so bad that the two stooge can't make it worse!!

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