| •Main  |  • Drop Box  |  • Chat   |  • forum  |  • links  |  • YoNews   |  • Archives  |  • Contact  |  • Join Forum  |  • Donate  |  • Quick Post   |  

Occasion2b - first place on earth to see tomorrow   





Drag button to toolbar
or bookmarks to
post from any where




Full size


• General Discussion

• Pandemic Flu

Yonews Page

YoNews Portal

• All Things Prepper

• Game Area

• Archives









Status
Status

The sun Today


Right click and view
for larger image










Welcome, . Please login or register. Or not
         ~ Guest posting on ~
May 22, 2012    11:54:31 PM                                

• View most recent posts.

Please login with username and password

   Search:       Advanced search
  * Home Search Calendar Login Register

                   

Pages:[1] Print Start new topic
beast
Hero Member
Posts: 9388


Occasion2B
WWW
The worst of the global financial crisis is yet to come
« Aug 19, 2008    02:22:56 AM »
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The worst of the global financial crisis is yet to come and a large U.S. bank will fail in the next few months as the world's biggest economy hits further troubles, former IMF chief economist Kenneth Rogoff said on Tuesday.

"The U.S. is not out of the woods. I think the financial crisis is at the halfway point, perhaps. I would even go further to say 'the worst is to come'," he told a financial conference.

"We are not just going to see mid-sized banks go under in the next few months, we are going to see a whopper, we are going to see a big one, one of the big investment banks or big banks," said Rogoff, who is an economics professor at Harvard University and was the International Monetary Fund's chief economist from 2001 to 2004.

"We have to see more consolidation in the financial sector before this is over," he said, when asked for early signs of an end to the crisis.

"Probably Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac -- despite what U.S. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said -- these giant mortgage guarantee agencies are not going to exist in their present form in a few years."

Rogoff's comments come as investors dumped shares of the largest U.S. home funding companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on Monday after a newspaper report said government officials may have no choice but to effectively nationalize the U.S. housing finance titans.

A government move to recapitalize the two companies by injecting funds could wipe out existing common stock holders, the weekend Barron's story said. Preferred shareholders and even holders of the two government-sponsored entities' $19 billion of subordinated debt would also suffer losses.

Rogoff said multi-billion dollar investments by sovereign wealth funds from Asia and the Middle East in western financial firms may not necessarily result in large profits because they had not taken into account the broader market conditions that the industry faces.

"There was this view early on in the crisis that sovereign wealth funds could save everybody. Investment banks did something stupid, they lost money in the sub-prime, they are great buys, sovereign wealth funds come in and make a lot of money by buying them.

"That view neglects the point that the financial system has become very bloated in size and needed to shrink," Rogoff told the conference in Singapore, whose wealth funds GIC and Temasek have invested billions in Merrill Lynch and Citigroup

In response to the sharp U.S. housing retrenchment and turmoil in credit markets, the U.S. Federal Reserve has reduced interest rates by a cumulative 3.25 percentage points to 2 percent since mid-September.

Rogoff said the U.S. Federal Reserve was wrong to cut interest rates as "dramatically" as it did.

"Cutting interest rates is going to lead to a lot of inflation in the next few years in the United States."


Source: http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/226615,large-us-bank-collapse-seen-ahead.html
Reply with quote
Pages: [1] Print Start new topic 
« previous next »
Jump to:  

Powered by SMF 1.1.16 | SMF © 2011, Simple Machines
Twitter Mod created by 2by2host.com - a web hosting company
| Sitemap