'europe'에 해당되는 글 12건

  1. 2008.10.07 Europe Doubles Bank Deposit Guarantee by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.10.05 European leaders vow unity against financial mayhem by CEOinIRVINE
PARIS, Oct. 7 -- European finance ministers on Tuesday more than doubled the guarantee on bank deposits to 50,000 Euros ($68,000) to help restore confidence in the continent's shaken banking system, even as ripples from the ongoing crisis claimed another casualty in Iceland and pummeled banking stocks in London.

Meeting in Luxembourg amid calls for a more coordinated response to the crisis, the ministers failed to come to terms on any broader proposals beyond raising the deposit guarantee from the current 20,000 Euros ($27,000).

The ministers, representing the 15 countries that use the Euro, said in a statement that they would continue monitoring the situation and coordinate their individual responses. The EU nations "all commit to take all necessary measures to enhance the soundness and stability of our banking system and to protect the deposits of individual savers," the statement said, the Associated Press reported from Luxembourg.


The increase in deposit insurance across the Eurozone replaces a patchwork of guarantees that emerged after Ireland acted unilaterally last week, creating a sense of confusion surrounding Europe's country-by-country response to the crisis.

There have been calls for even more significant action on the part of the Eurozone countries, but some nations -- most notably Germany -- have been hesitant to join in a common response.

As the ministers met, the crisis continued to ripple through the financial sector both inside and outside of the Eurozone.

Iceland nationalized Landsbanki, the nation's second largest bank, pegged its plummeting currency to the Euro, and announced it was negotiating with Russia for a loan. Prime Minister Geir Haarde was quoted by the BBC as saying the steps were needed to avoid "national bankruptcy."

In Moscow, officials announced they would make an additional $36 billion available to bolster Russian banks after a previous bailout efforts proved unable to restore confidence in the country's economy.


Media reports in London, meanwhile, indicated that the government was preparing an emergency plan to invest nearly 45 billion pounds ($80 billion) of public funds into several large banks -- news that sent U.K. bank shares tumbling.

The EU action followed one of the worst days ever on world stock markets amid fears that government responses to the global financial crisis, including the U.S. bailout and inconsistent moves by European leaders, would not be sufficient to prevent a worldwide recession.

The day opened with heavy losses in Asia and the Middle East, followed by record losses in Europe and sharp drops in Latin America before the closing bell finally sounded to end another dismal day on Wall Street.

Central banks continued to pump billions of dollars into money markets in hopes of unlocking seized-up credit markets. The Bank of England will inject an additional 40 billion pounds, equivalent to about $70 billion, on Tuesday, according to Alistair Darling, Britain's chancellor of the exchequer, or finance minister.


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PARIS, Oct 4 (Reuters) - European leaders vowed after crisis talks on Saturday to do all they could to fend off the financial mayhem that snowballed out of Wall Street and is now hitting banks in Europe.

They made statements of principle rather than proposing new concrete measures to deal with the worst financial crisis since the 1930s.

"We jointly commit to ensure the soundness and stability of our banking and financial system and will take all the necessary measures to achieve this objective," said a joint statement issued from the meeting in Paris.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, host, said that he and the leaders of Germany, Britain and Italy had agreed governments needed to act in a coordinated manner.

But he said he had never gone as far as to propose a pan-European crisis fund for banks -- something Berlin had balked at when talk of it surfaced a few days ago.

"We have taken a solemn undertaking as heads of states and government to support the banks and financial institutions in the face of this crisis," he told a joint news conference held with other leaders. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, keen not to become bankroller-in-chief as governments seek a joint response to the worst crisis since the 1930s, said those who caused the trouble must be made to help sort it out.

She stuck to that basic message at the news conference where leaders took turns to stress the need to restore confidence and work with other countries on short- and long-term strategy.

Sarkozy invited the three other leaders to the meeting in the hope of showing unity to restore confidence in the banking sector and an economy on the brink of recession in much of the developed world.

British Prime minister Gordon Brown said no sound and solvent bank would be allowed to fail for lack of liquidity and repeated the point at the news conference.

"We will continue to do whatever is necessary," he said.

The summit follows approval on Friday by the U.S. Congress of a $700-billion bank bailout plan to tackle a crisis sparked by a housing market collapse and a surge in bad mortgage debt.

"My administration will move as quickly as possible, but the benefits of this package will not all be felt immediately," U.S. President George W. Bush said in a radio address.

The fall-out from the crisis has redrawn the banking landscape on both sides of the Atlantic, paralysed wholesale money markets and caused huge volatility on stock markets.

As the leaders spoke, Belgium and Luxembourg were racing to find a buyer for what remained of bank and insurance group Fortis after the Netherlands government nationalised the bulk of the troubled Benelux outfit's Dutch businesses in a rush operation on Friday.

Officials said emergency meetings were taking place in Belgium about the rump left after the 16.8 billion euro nationalisation by the Dutch, which took place less than a week after a first rescue attempt in which the three governments injected 11.2 billion euros ($15.4 billion).

Luxembourg's economy minister said French bank BNP Paribas (other-otc: BNPQY.PK - news - people ) was one possible bidder for parts of Fortis and a solution had to be found by the end of the weekend.

IRISH PRECEDENT

The leaders in Paris highlighted several issues that needed to be addressed at a broader level, including a meeting of euro zone and EU finance ministers on Monday and Tuesday and, as soon as possible, a meeting of leaders of the G8 group of developed economic powers.

Among them was a call for restraints on executive pay and a pledge to work in the weeks ahead on the question of bank deposit insurance.

That is likely to focus on whether governments across the European Union should raise bank deposit protection levels to restore confidence.

Ireland annoyed some this week by promising to guarantee all bank deposits, a move that prompted some depositors in Britain to move savings to branches of Irish banks. In other countries, the protection level can be as low as 20,000 euros.

Merkel said that the European Central Bank and European Commission had been asked to discuss the matter with Dublin.

The four countries at the Paris summit are the four largest in Europe and also members of the G7 and G8 clubs of major industrial powers.

The G7 includes the United States, Japan and Canada as well and the G8 includes Russia as well.

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet and Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman and spokesman for the finance ministers of the euro currency zone, also attended the Paris summit, as did European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso.

The $700 billion bail-out approved by the U.S. Congress is earmarked to buy up assets that turned toxic when the U.S. housing market and sub-prime mortgage market collapsed.

Stocks, which had been higher before the vote, dropped, with the S&P 500 index closing at its lowest level in almost four years as investors focused less on recession risk rather than the hope of relief.

(Writing by Brian Love; Editing by Richard Balmforth) (reporting by Iain Rogers in Berlin, Matt Falloon in London, Philip Blenkinsop in Brussels, Michele Sinner in Luxembourg, Ilona Wissenbach, Tamora Vidaillet, Crispian Balmer in Paris)

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