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Latest update: 01/10/2008
- banking - financial crisis
French PM Fillon speaks up to reassure investors
French Prime Minister Francois Fillon warned that banks are vulnerable given the global financial crisis but assured savers and investors of the state's determination to prevent bankruptcies, in an interview with the economic daily Les Echos.
French Prime Minister Francois Fillon has warned in an interview to appear Wednesday that the country's banks are vulnerable given the global financial crisis, which he compared to the Great Depression.
Fillon, however, said in the interview with Les Echos business newspaper that the state would not allow any banks to fail.
"French banks are not insulated from difficulties if a large European bank collapses," he said. "For that reason, we are assuring the French people of the state's absolute guarantee of the French banking system."
The prime minister said "we are totally mobilised... We will not rule out any solution... There will be no bankruptcies."
Fillon said the state could take action in the same way it did with Dexia, which became the latest European bank to require a bailout Tuesday, with Belgium, France and Luxembourg pumping 6.4 billion euros into the group.
Dexia's troubles came amid a growing storm in the global financial sector, with the US government trying to get a 700-billion-dollar rescue package passed in a bid to limit the turmoil.
"The crisis we are facing is serious because we have a financial crisis equivalent to that of 1929 that is in addition to an oil crisis similar to the one in 1973," Fillon said.




























